As you can read, a chapter of the highly controversial Islamist group CAIR posted an announcement that Best Buy was a key sponsor of their 2012 banquet on January 23rd. But, what makes this so much worse was CAIR Minnesota's action last November, when they blasted two Muslims who spoke out about terror-recruiting that was going on in Minnesota! Read CAIR Claims 2 Metro Somali Leaders are Anti-Muslim.
In CAIR's letter they wrote:
"...The training brochure refers to Al Shabaab as an “Islamic extremist terrorism” organization and fails to distinguish between Islam and terrorism. One of the presenters is also referred to as a speaker on “Islamic extremism.” The Muslim community rejects this biased labeling of a religion practiced by over 1.4 billion people worldwide.
Here CAIR refused to acknowledge there are Islamic extremists! What's worse is the letter was signed by a number of Islamic groups in Minnesota. Refusing to discuss Islamic extremism is a problem for many Muslims in America. I should point out that rulings made by the Figh Council of the global inter-govenment Islamist organization, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (formally Conference), stated it's forbidden to call legitimate martyrdom acts terrorism (see archive of ruling below).
I asked Best Buy if it was true about their sponsorship. Below is my third attempt which I posted today:
I'm going to post my question again. CAIR Minnesota announced on their FB page you are the Platinum sponsor for their banquet this year. In November, CAIR Minnesota went after two Muslims who dared spoke out about terror-recruting in this state. They were called anti-Muslim by CAIR MN. My question is are you a Platinum sponsor for their banquet?
Screenshot of my question January 3, 2012:
We shall see what happens with my question. Will they answer it?
UPDATE 2/7/12: My question isn't on the Best Buy Facebook page anymore.
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Also see:
The Figh Council of the OIC, a Saudi-based and backed global Islamist inter-government organization clarified their fatwa on terrorismL
"...The Islamic Fiqh Council asserts that jihad and martyr operations done to defend the Islamic creed, dignity, freedom and the sovereignty of states is not considered terrorism but a basic form of necessary defense for legitimate rights...."


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