| 
						
						
							
							
							Lincoln Daily News 
							welcomes letters of appreciation, information and 
							opinion on matters pertaining to the community. 
							 
							  
							
							
							Controversial issues: 
							
							
							As a 
							community we need to be able to talk openly about 
							matters that affect the quality of our lives. The 
							most effective and least offensive manner to get 
							your point across is to stick to the issue 
							and refrain from commenting on another person's 
							opinion. Letters that deviate from focusing on the 
							issue may be rejected or edited and marked as such. 
              
              Submit a letter to the editor online | 
                    You may also send your letters by email to  
                    ldneditor@lincolndailynews.com 
                    or by U.S. postal mail:
                     
              Letters to the EditorLincoln Daily News
 601 Keokuk St.
 Lincoln, IL  62656
 
              Letters must include the writer's 
              name, telephone number, and postal address or email address (we 
              will not publish address or phone number information). 
              Lincoln Daily News reserves the right to edit letters to 
              reduce their size or to correct obvious errors.
              Lincoln Daily News reserves the right to reject any letter for 
              any reason. Lincoln Daily News will publish as 
              many acceptable letters as space allows. | 
        
            |  To the editor: I am writing in response to Mr. Killebrew’s recent 
			article on “Denying the Obvious” which calls for “facing the truth” 
			about the danger of “repeated calls for Islamic groups in America to 
			elevate Sharia law over the Constitutional law of American 
			jurisprudence.” He begins the piece by highlighting the incidence of 
			Muslim Chaplains praying in the US House of Representatives and less 
			than subtly infers that such occurrences place all Americans in 
			danger from ISIL or ISIS extremist actions that are currently being 
			perpetrated abroad. I encourage LDN and its editorial section to be 
			more thoughtful and intellectually honest before publishing such 
			partisan and prejudicial non-sense. Mr. Killebrew’s argument 
			suggests that the practice of Islam by Muslim peoples are dangerous 
			to our society by virtue of equating them to the horrible actions 
			perpetrated by the participants of the same faith.
 
			
			 
			I wonder how Mr. Killebrew would feel if adherents to Christianity 
			in Lincoln, IL were equated as dangerous due to actions on the part 
			of other Christians? Should Christians in Lincoln be considered in 
			light of the actions of Episcopal and Catholic Priests and Nuns 
			implicated in participation in the Rwandan Genocide, Presbyterian 
			and Methodists soldiers in the Nazi Army, or of 17th and 18th 
			century European-American Missionaries who spread measles and 
			smallpox through blankets to Native Americans? Would he consider it 
			fair for others to view all local church members as dangerous to 
			children after a elder or deacon (or two) were convicted of child 
			abuse? I am sure he would respond that such overextensions and 
			illogical conclusions would be ridiculous, and he would be right. 
			Such debate tactics are also ridiculous when applied to our Muslim 
			neighbors. Mr. Killebrew is fond of quoting Scripture in his 
			articles and should be familiar with the verse that states “The 
			measure you use shall be used against you.”
 
 I too am a Christian, and do not embrace Islamic faith principles, 
			but I do embrace Muslim people as Christ first embraced me, 
			therefore I refused to mischaracterize or exaggerate their 
			individual expressions of their faith and will oppose others who do 
			so in the name of truth. I live in a country where freedom of 
			religion is a founding Constitutional principle, and I celebrate 
			that I can freely chose Christ and that they can freely chose other 
			faith practices. I invite LDN’s editorial section to join me in 
			celebrating this constitutional right by examining its publication 
			practices on such topics not for “political correctness” but for 
			truth.
 
            [to top of second column in this letter] | 
            
			 
            I want to state that all Christians do not believe that hyperbolic 
			rhetoric and talking points from Faux News are representative of our 
			faith, though I can understand why my Muslim friends and 
			acquaintances might begin to believe differently. I further propose 
			that if Mr. Killebrew’s true concern is combating the minority of 
			extremists here and abroad, he should stop exaggerating the truth of 
			the young Muslim’s plight, and begin by building relationships with 
			vulnerable individuals especially teenagers, and combating their 
			vulnerability to the gang-like community offered by ISIS and its 
			counterparts. Strong sociological and psychological research 
			suggests such groups are attractive to children and teenagers who 
			are isolated, marginalized and treated prejudicially. 
			Mischaracterization and hyperbolic exaggeration in the media only 
			feed that recruitment mill. If he is truly concerned about Sharia 
			law being imposed on local and national processes, I offer to join 
			him in opposing that the first time it becomes an issue in Lincoln, 
			or even in Illinois law, but I suspect it will be a while till we 
			picket and protest together as I am not aware of any such plans in 
			the making on a local, state or even national level. Stating 
			something is a danger doesn’t make it so. However it does create a 
			hostile environment that shuts down actual dialogue and 
			relationships (on individual and community levels), the real avenues 
			for change.
 
             
			I respectfully request that the editorial section of the LDNs 
			thoughtfully consider attention to the more relevant difficulties 
			facing our beautiful town. There are many dangers, inequalities, 
			injustices and opportunities for change which deserve attention much 
			closer to home and the editorial space of the LDN is wasting 
			opportunity for meaningful impact by publishing pieces that simply 
			echo national pseudo-news. If I wish to hear partisan talking 
			points, I will watch cable news.
 
 Tara C Samples, Ph.D., LCP
 [Posted 
			November 21, 2014]
             
            
            Click here to send a note to the editor about this letter.
			 |