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A separate study found that since 9/11, 804 people from around the world
were charged in U.S. federal court with terrorism. Some 273 of them were U.S. citizens, almost triple the
number from any other nation, according to the New York University Center on Law and Security. Such crimes are enabled by the generation-old web of communication
-- direct overseas telephone calls, e-mail, live video chats across the ether from continent to continent
-- that makes winning hearts and minds in a distant locale easier than ever before. "The radical cleric doesn't have to be in Connecticut to radicalize people in Connecticut," Khan says. "YouTube is the new Afghanistan." Schanzer said his research indicates that America is less vulnerable to large attacks like the one on the World Trade Center, "but it's possible we are more exposed now to smaller-scale events." Little things, though, sometimes lead to large consequences. Schanzer cautions against the natural instinct to overreact to small attacks "in a way that changes the character of our country and undermines our ability to project our values across the world." "The more we distance Muslim-Americans from the mainstream of society and make them feel like outcasts or discriminated against, in some ways we're in a self-perpetuating cycle," he says. "We're increasing the likelihood of individuals from that community being alienated." So how can we break the cycle? In an increasingly intricate world where multiple cultural identities are everywhere, that's hardly a straightforward question. Because the American dream, always an elusive beast, is more complicated than ever. "Assimilation is not the answer," Abdo says. "There isn't an answer. The way each Muslim responds to globalized Islam can't be controlled, calculated or predicted." ___ On the Net: Geneive Abdo http://www.geneiveabdo.com/ Schanzer study: http://bit.ly/a6HFMh Center on Law and Security study:
http://bit.ly/dCocGR
[Associated
Press;
Jesse Washington covers
race and ethnicity for The Associated Press. He is reachable at
jwashington@ap.org or
http://www.twitter.com/jessewashington.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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