by Jack Lee
Given the many thousands of undeniable and grossly violent criminals acts committed by Islamic extremists over an extended period of time, the question begs to be asked, is their form of the Islamic religion nothing more than a criminal enterprise?
The FBI defines a criminal enterprise as “a group of individuals with an identified hierarchy, or comparable structure, engaged in significant criminal activity. These organizations often engage in multiple criminal activities and have extensive supporting networks.
The Continuing Criminal Enterprise statute, or Title 21 of the United States Code, Section 848(c)(2), defines a criminal enterprise as any group of six or more people, where one of the six occupies a position of organizer, a supervisory position, or any other position of management with respect to the other five, and which generates substantial income or resources, and is engaged in a continuing series of violations of subchapters I and II of Chapter 13 of Title 21 of the United States Code.”
This definition appears to fit a number of fundamentalist Islamic Mosques here and abroad. If radical Islamic Mosques and their membership are a criminal enterprise, and obviously some are, we should not allow them in the United States and why we do speaks to political correctness taken to an absurd end. Those criminal enterprises ought to be considered for what they are, organized crime, and prosecuted under the RICO act!
Peaceful, lawful, Islamic sects within the U.S.A. deserve to be recognized as not involved with terrorism and protected from being defamed or attacked because of the deeds of those violent sects that are criminal enterprises. And in that case isn’t it reasonable to identify those illegal groups wherever in the world they exist so they can be distanced from the peaceful sects in Islam?