Last August, the director of CAIR St. Louis, Faizan Syed, wrote on their website that Muslims should realize the urgent need to monitor social media and then he gave a few of his ideas for monitoring it in a post titled Social Media Task Force http://www.cair-stlouis.com/component/k2/item/28-social-media-task-force (UPDATE 2/21/2013: Syed has removed this page but see my PDF of it below).
The picture above is a screen shot taken from a video of him found on his YouTube page. Syed, who was born in Pakistan and moved to the U.S. in 1991, suggested the creation of a Muslim youth association who would monitor the media. This group would counter negative Islamic messages on the internet instantly and aggressively. But, what really stood out was what he wrote under the section "I have few suggestions to make in this regard" (5th bullet):
"Report anti Islamic and anti Muslim content on the internet to appropriate authorities to take action to remove it and go after those who post it online and prosecute and take actions according to the Shariah ruling."
Take action according to the Shariah ruling? Is this man serious? I mean - in some Islamic countries this could mean death. No doubt, Syed's recent talk titled Shariah Coming to a Court Near You was to convince others they have absoutely nothing to worry about with sharia law.

Simply astonishing.
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Also see:
A pdf of the CAIR webpage: Download Prosecuteantiislamwww-cair-stlouis-com

If one is in the Middle East, Sharia law is part of country's legal system, but when one is in another country, like the US, or Canada, one has to follow their legal system, which does not include Sharia law. I don't think anyone would like it if people moved to the Middle East, and demanded their legal system be used instead of the law of said middle eastern country. One cannot impose or even suggest Sharia law in a country that does not use it; that is morally wrong. This is a country whose constitution gives them the freedom of speech and peaceful protests.
Posted by: Barbara Laughton Sauder Pecze | February 25, 2013 at 04:34 PM