From YouTube:
During a particularly contentious interview on Sean Hannity’s show tonight, Democratic congressman Keith Ellison launched into an angry tirade against the host, accusing him of being “immoral” and a liar. He told Hannity he continuously says things that aren’t true, pointing to his consistently blaming the massive debt on President Obama. Hannity immediately stopped the interview at this point and told Ellison that having him on was a waste of time.
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Muslim, Democrat and Obamabot!!! What’s the use of being all those things if you can’t act like it? I would have liked Hannity to have asked Ellison how he reconciles the ideals stated in the Declaration of Independence and Bill of Rights with the tenets of his Muslim beliefs.
If you will recall Ellison chose to use a Koran for his first swearing in to the House. Did Ellison choose the Koran for his swearing in because he believes it contains a collection of myths or that it symbolizes the foundation of his own worldview? Our concern is related directly to the nature of the Koran itself. The Koran and the Bible differ fundamentally regarding separation of church and state, the rule of law, and the concept of human rights. Since ideas have consequences one only has to look to the nature of Muslim dominated governments. They comprise a wide variety of regimes where the rule is autocratic and not supportive of individual rights/freedoms.
It is not bigotry or xenophobia to want to know what Ellison considers the source of political legitimacy for governments and what he thinks of the Bill of Rights. It is not ignorance to want to know what Ellison thinks of Muslim states refusing to sign the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and then authoring a Muslim version omitting all the most important individual rights written into the full, infidel version. Does Ellison agree with world Muslim leaders calling for the imposition of Islamic law upon the rest of the world? America needs to know what the Koran teaches and how a Congressman can support the legal and political institutions of the U.S. while at the same time pledging allegiance to the Koran, which does not recognize any of the individual human rights enshrined in our founding documents.