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Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Why 9/11 mosque is harbinger of future horror



World Net Daily (WND) is releasing a classic on Islamic terrorism by Chuck Morse: “The Nazi Connection to Islamic Terrorism: Adolf Hitler and Haj Amin Al-Husseini.” The current price is a near steal at $12.95.

I don’t know if the timing of the re-release of Morse’s book to coincide with the atrocity of Muslim to ties to Radical Islam building a Mosque in the shadow of Ground Zero where Islamic terrorists murdered over 3000 people between airline passengers and people unlucky enough to get stuck at the World Trade Center (WTC) is purposeful or not. WND has been wise enough to use this controversy to re-release the Morse book connecting Nazism and Islamic terrorism as part of exposing the idiocy to allow a Ground Zero Mosque to be built.

Here is the WND blogger promotion of “The Nazi Connection to Islamic Terrorism.”

JRH 8/11/10
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Why 9/11 mosque is harbinger of future horror

Sent by WorldNetDaily
Sent: 8/10/2010 12:15 PM


Author who exposed Nazi influence on Islam issues warning

As Muslims everywhere prepare to forgo food and drink during daylight hours once Ramadan starts next Wednesday, the author of a new highly controversial book says they should have "given up something far more harmful – their steady diet of Nazi ideology" decades ago.

Chuck Morse's acclaimed work, "The Nazi Connection to Islamic Terrorism: Adolf Hitler and Haj Amin Al-Husseini," which Amazon has priced as high as $286, is being rereleased with fresh content and rare images by WND Books Aug. 10.

In the rising shadow of a city-approved mosque at Ground Zero, Americans especially need to know about radical Islam's relationship with Nazi ideology, says Morse.

"Even after the horrors of Sept. 11, too many Americans have yet to understand the true nature of the enemy that this country and the Western democracies must face," he says. "America is tolerant. It is the Islamo-Fascist enemy that needs to display tolerance, not America.

"At first glance," Morse continues, "it should be conceded that it is the right of an American religious organization to build a mosque wherever it chooses, but what if that organization has ties to a group that is on the State Department terrorist watch list?


"Would it be all right to build a Shinto shrine at Pearl Harbor or would opposition to such a shrine be anti-Japanese? Is it OK for Americans to oppose a group that incites anti-Semitism, violence against their opponents, the subjugation of women, the beheading of homosexuals and other illegal practices?"


In "The Nazi Connection to Islamic Terrorism," Morse establishes the strong link between Adolf Hitler's Nazi movement and the roots of modern Islamic jihadists. He plumbs the ideology of al-Husseini, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem and a key Nazi collaborator, and shows how Nazi teachings infected Arab politics in the 20th century and guide radical Islam today.


Such tactics of intimidation remain on display in the campaign to erect a mosque at Ground Zero.


"Some liberal supporters of the 'Cordoba Project' are leveling the charge of 'bigotry' against opponents," said Morse. "Is it bigotry to inquire about the background of the builders? Is it bigotry to criticize the symbolism of a mosque on top of the ruins of one of America's most important buildings, destroyed by Muslims? Would it have been bigotry to have criticized Nazism or Soviet Communism or would such criticism have been anti-German or anti-Russian? Can one criticize radical Islam without being accused of being against moderate and secular Muslims?"


In "The Nazi Connection to Islamic Terrorism," the direct ties between Hitler and al-Husseini, the man Yasser Arafat referred to as "uncle," are laid bare – along with the Nazi influence on Islamic terrorism and its contemporary figures. The book describes a leadership path from the original Muslim Brotherhood to today's power figures in Egypt, Syria and the Palestinian Authority. It includes never-before-published photographs of al-Husseini and Hitler, his Nazi-Arabic troops, and, at his funeral, the late Arafat.

"When you hear Middle East leaders like Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad calling for extermination of Israel and you wonder where all that hatred begins, this book provides the answer," says Joseph Farah, publisher and founder of WND Books and a former Middle East correspondent. "Today's most dangerous, fanatical, genocidal and anti-Jewish Muslim leaders were inspired - and sometimes even lifted to power and prominence - by the Nazi Party of Hitler's Germany. The proof is in this book."


"Morse's work holds some sobering lessons," said Farah.


Those sobering lessons are only beginning, warns Morse.

"The building of such a mosque," says Morse, "with a minaret casting a shadow near a location in which Islamo-Fascists killed thousands of Americans, would be a national disgrace and a travesty. Such a building would constitute a breach of national security at a time when American men and women in uniform are fighting and dying in a war against an enemy that would draw aid and comfort from such a development."


Morse is an accomplished author of several books dealing with issues affecting Israel. He is a renowned radio talk-show host, co-hosting "The Fairness Doctrine" along with Patrick O’Heffernan in New England. He was also a candidate for U.S. Congress in the 4th District of Massachusetts in 2004.

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Chuck Morse is a veteran radio talk show host and syndicated columnist who is regularly featured on WorldNetDaily.com. His columns have been published in compilations including Thunder Out of Boston, Why I’m a Right-Wing Extremist, The Difference Between us and Them – America confronts the Leftist-Islamist Axis of Evil, and The Gramsci Factor – 59 Socialists in Congress. Morse is formerly the CEO of City Metro Enterprises and was a candidate for U.S. Congress in 2004 and 2006. He currently lives in Boston with his wife and daughter.

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NOTE: WORD spell check was used to edit spelling mistakes from the original.

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