Islam is the real positive change that you need to change for being a better person or a perfect human being, you can change yourself if you read QURAN, IF YOU DO THAT !! you will change this UMMAH, say I am not A Sunni or Shia, BUT I am just a MUSLIM. Be a walking QURAN among human-being AND GUIDE THEM TO THE RIGHT PATH.
One of the possible candidates to serve in Donald Trump’s cabinet has
been photographed carrying documents into a meeting with the
president-elect that outlined aggressive proposals to bar the entry of
Syrian refugees and reinstate a national registry focused on Muslims.
Kris Kobach, currently the secretary of state of Kansas, met with
Trump in Bedminster, New Jersey, on Sunday as part of an ongoing series
of conversations aimed at filling key roles in the pending
administration. Kobach has been rumored to be on the shortlist for
different cabinet positions, but based on the documents captured on
camera by the Associated Press he might be in the running to lead the
Department of Homeland Security.
A closer look at the papers revealed a “strategic plan” for the DHS in the first 365 days of a Trump administration.
At the top of Kobach’s list of recommendations was to “bar the entry of
potential terrorists” and to both update and reimplement a program
instituted by the Bush administration after the September 11 attacks
that tracked individuals from “high-risk areas” of the world.
Known as the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System
(NSEERS), the program was based on the country from which an individual
migrated but was widely regarded by the media at the time as a Muslim
registry. Kobach, who served in the justice department under Bush, was a
chief architect of NSEERS.
Although Trump’s team has denied that the president-elect supports a Muslim registry,
as a candidate he repeatedly expressed his openness to the idea on the
campaign trail. He emphasized the need for a database of Syrian
refugees, but refused on multiple occasions to rule out a Muslim
registry when presented with the question.
Donald Trump: we need to track all Muslims in America – archive video
Reince Priebus, the former chairman of the Republican National
Committee who was recently appointed as Trump’s chief of staff, also
declined to explicitly rule out a Muslim registry during an interview on
Sunday.
“I’m not gonna rule out anything,” Priebus said while on NBC’s Meet
the Press, “but we’re not gonna have a registry based on a religion.”
Trump’s surrogates have sought to frame the database under
consideration as focusing on specific countries, as opposed to a
religion. But if built in the likeness of NSEERS, it would focus on
Muslim-majority countries.
NSEERS required men over the age of 16 from 25 Muslim-majority
countries to register in person with the federal government upon entry,
and additionally mandated that some of those already in the country
register at the Immigration and Naturalization Service. In its nine
years of existence, the program did not result in any known terrorism
charges.
Kobach’s plan, the photograph revealed, also included “extreme
vetting questions for high-risk aliens”, such as whether they “support
Sharia law, jihad, equality of men and women, [and] the United States
Constitution”. Trump similarly embraced an ideological test for Muslims
seeking entry into the US while campaigning for president.
The appointees named by Trump thus far share a record of statements
that cast scrutiny on Muslims at a minimum and in other cases peddle
outright Islamophobia.
Retired Lt GenMichael Flynn, tapped by Trump as his national security adviser, has said “fear of Muslims is rational”
and likened Islam to “a cancer”. Jeff Sessions, the Alabama senator
nominated by Trump to serve as attorney general, argued that the Muslim
ban advocated by Trump was constitutional.
And Mike Pompeo, Trump’s choice to head the CIA, has taken aim at
Islamic leaders for being “complicit” in terrorism by refusing to reject
it, even though Muslim clerics and organizations have regularly
condemned acts of terror.
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