One Obama advisor who has not gotten much attention to date is Dalia Mogahed, appointed earlier this year to serve on something called the President’s Advisory Council on Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships. Mogahed, who claims Muslims in America have spent the last eight years “enduring religious racism,” recently made a very disturbing joint appearance on British TV’s “Islam Channel” with an official from Hizb un Tahrir — the Sunni fundamentalist group that wants to impose sharia law2.jpg (384x515, AR: 0.75) as the foundation for establishing a global caliphate. (See here and here.) The theme of the program was that sharia doesn’t really oppress women — in fact, it’s far better for them than Western notions of liberty. (Cinnamon Stillwell has details at the Middle East Forum, here.)
A very different perspective is offered by the Syrian-born American psychiatrist Wafa Sultan in a bracing new book called A God Who Hates, about the bleak life of women in Islamic societies. Andrew Bostom reviews the book at the American Thinker.