Statement: Rittenhouse AcquittalFeatured Issue: Rittenhouse Acquittal and the Stench of White PowerUpcoming: MPAC's Free Virtual Convention
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Issue 52: Friday, 19 Nov 2021
THIS WEEK IN DC — Congresswoman Debbie Dingell's HALT (Honoring Abbas Family Legacy To Terminate Drunk Driving) Act Becomes Law; Senate Republicans Stall Confirmation Of Muslim American SBA Nominee Dilawar Syed; Biden Temporarily Hands Powers To Harris During Medical Procedure; Dems' $1.7T Spending Bill Clears House, But Senate Changes Loom; Justice Department To Defend Tech Protections Biden Denounced; Schumer, McConnell Turn Down The Heat On Debt Limit Fight; Senate Leaders Want To Fast-track Debate On Ukraine, Afghanistan, War Powers; FCC To Vote On Allowing Texts To Suicide Hotline; Biden’s War On Inflation Is A Battle To Change Human Behavior.
IN THIS ISSUE
* Statement: Rittenhouse Acquittal
* Featured Issue: Rittenhouse Acquittal and the Stench of White Power
* Upcoming: MPAC's Free Virtual Convention
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Let not today's decision on Kyle Rittenhouse's acquittal sway our work for Justice. This is why solidarity and a collective vision as a community must prevail over an unjust society. This is "The Other America" Martin Luther King Jr. spoke of. We are approaching even more challenging times. We have a Holy Speech that says "Establish weight with justice and fall not short in the balance." (Quran, 55:9)
We now work to create a lobbying coalition that will support our own moral values. Let this moment motivate lawful Speech and Righteousness; do not let it rest in the hearts of the believer. We stand with the oppressed, marginalized, and ignored.
— Umar Hakim-Dey, MPAC's African American Muslim Insight Council Chair
** Rittenhouse Acquittal and the Stench of White Power
By: Prema Rahman, MPAC Policy Analyst
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Image credit: AP
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The acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse reeks of white privilege and further exposes the inherently flawed justice system in America.
The message from the Wisconsin jury is clear: if you are a white man in this nation, you can walk free with blood on your hands. Accountability only comes into question when a suspect or perpetrator is a person of color, with the public vilification and punishment becoming far worse if the person is Black. The hard, unacceptable reality is, had a Black man committed the crimes that Rittenhouse committed, the jury would have found him guilty on all counts.
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Upcoming:
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Join us for MPAC’s free virtual convention on Sunday, Dec 5th! We are excited for this year’s event as we explore our collective journey as Americans, as Muslims, and as a community: the Story of Us.
As we move toward a post-Covid world, join us as we showcase our progress, hear from key figures from entertainment and government, and look to the next chapter in our story.
Reserve your free ticket → ([link removed])
GOOD TO KNOW
* Kyle Rittenhouse is acquitted ([link removed]) of all charges in the trial over killing 2 in Kenosha
* As G.O.P. fights mask and vaccine mandates, Florida takes ([link removed]) the lead
* U.S. is ‘considering ([link removed]) ’ diplomatic boycott of Beijing Olympics, Biden says
* Suspended Texas doctor who promoted ([link removed]) ivermectin as Covid treatment resigns from hospital
* Filmmaker Aizzah Fatima’s talks ([link removed]) making the first Muslim-American romcom
* Arab American MetLife tailgate honors ([link removed]) Jets' Robert Saleh, first Muslim head coach in NFL
- THIS WEEK IN HISTORY -
Nov 16, 1240 - al-'Arabi, Muslim mystic and philosopher (The Meccan Revelations), dies at 75; Nov 16, 1922 - Ottoman Caliph, Sultan Mehmed VI asks the British army for help; Nov 16, 1950 - Egyptian King Faruk demands departure of all British troops; Nov 16, 1955 - Sultan Sidi Mohammed Ben Yussuph V returns to Morocco; Nov 16, 1984 - Imran Khan makes his 1st appearance for NSW Cricket; Nov 16, 1988 - Pakistan's Benazir Bhutto's PPP wins 1st free Pakistani elections in 11 years; Nov 18, 1941 - Mussolini's forces leave Abyssinia (Ethiopia); Nov 19, 1899 - Abu al-Qasim al-Khoei, Iranian influential Shia Islamic scholar, born in Khoy, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran (d. 1992).
Nov 14, 1792 - Captain George Vancouver is first Englishman to enter San Francisco Bay; Nov 14, 1908 - Albert Einstein presents his quantum theory of light; Nov 15, 1727 - NY General assembly permits Jews to omit phrase "upon the faith of a Christian" from abjuration oath; Nov 15, 1777 - Articles of Confederation, the first constitution of the United States, is approved by the Continental Congress; Nov 16, 1985 - President Reagan arrives in Geneva for a summit with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev; Nov 17, 1800 - Congress holds its 1st session in Washington, D.C. in an incomplete Capitol Building; Nov 17, 1962 - US President JFK dedicates Dulles International Airport outside Washington, D.C.; Nov 18, 1872 - Suffragette Susan B. Anthony is arrested by a U.S. Deputy Marshal and charged with illegally voting; Nov 18, 1964 - J. Edgar Hoover describes Martin Luther King as "most notorious liar"; Nov 19, 1805 - Lewis and Clark expedition reaches the Pacific Ocean, first European Americans to cross
the west; Nov 19, 1861 - The first petroleum shipment (1,329 barrels) from the U.S. to Europe leaves Philadelphia, USA, for London, England on the Elizabeth Watts; Nov 20, 1789 - New Jersey is 1st state to ratify Bill of Rights; Nov 20, 1914 - US State Department starts requiring photographs for passports.
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