Excerpt:
In August 2011, a Marietta, Ga. 7th grade teacher gave a three-page homework lesson from InspirEd Educators Inc. of Roswell, Ga. to students to help them discuss pros and cons of school uniforms. "Women in the West do not have the protection of the Sharia as we do," declared a letter from a Saudi wife named Ahlima. "If our marriage has problems, my husband can take another wife rather than divorce me, and I would still be cared for." She's glad that Saudi women "have the Sharia." When parents objected to the assignment's pro-Islam stance, the school district changed the curriculum.
In 2010, Act for America compiled research from former assistant education secretary Diane Ravitch, American Textbook Council and Textbook League on how 38 public school texts handled Islam; last month, Christian Action Network launched a national campaign warning of bias.
While school assignments sugarcoat sharia, the doctrine requires "defense" of community and permits "payback" against perceived enemies like U.S. servicemen and all Israelis, according to influential Muslim Brotherhood jurist Yusuf Qaradawi. Thus a naturalized Kosovo man arrested in Florida Jan. 9 planned an attack to "die in the Islamic way." The Council on Islamic American Relations (CAIR) has long warned members not to aid the FBI and Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC) agents seek more "hate crime" studies --- but eliminations of solid counter terror strategies.