A "Muslim version of the "Cosby Show"? First of all, where is there evidence of seething hatred towards Muslims in this country or "Islamophobia"? This country has done everything to avoid domestic conflict in the years following 9/11 and has succeeded magnificently. Yet, the media has ignored the rampant persecutions against Jews and Christians around the world in Muslim nations. For that matter the nation that has such "seething hatred" for Muslims is the safest place on Earth for Muslims. The Ground Zero Mosque opposition is perfectly in line with the sensibilities of modern America. After all, haven't we been raised to consider the sensitivity of others? That we must value the feelings of others in our decisions? Why does this not apply to the mosque and why is opposition hateful? Doesn't an attack that killed over three thousand Americans justify a measure of anxiety and an abundant vigilance? The former and latter characteristics do not add up to "seething hatred", no matter how foolishly a segment acts so as to entice your willful extrapolation. We're at war, not with a faith, but an ideology, a component of a faith. Sitcoms don't win wars or change the course of history. Moreover your assertion that Cosby changed American attitudes towards African Americans is as ignorant a statement as I have ever heard.
Below is a link to the Daily Caller which links to the Mediate video
Katie Couric: ‘Maybe we need a Muslim version of “The Cosby Show”‘ By The Daily Caller
CBS anchor Katie Couric believes a “Muslim version of ‘The Cosby Show’” could open the eyes of Americans and perhaps put an end to all the ”seething hatred many people feel towards all Muslims.”
On her CBSNews.com
web show, Couric
discussed 2010 in review with a panel, and among Couric’s biggest concerns about 2010 was the controversy surrounding the Park51 Islamic Cultural Center project.
“The bigotry expressed against Muslims in this country has been one of the most disturbing
stories to surface,” Couris said. “Of course, a lot of noise was made about the Islamic Center, mosque, down near the World Trade Center, but I think there wasn’t enough sort of careful analysis and evaluation of where this bigotry toward 1.5 billion Muslims worldwide, and how this seething hatred many people feel for all Muslims, which I think is so misdirected, and so wrong — and so disappointing.”
Fellow panelist and
NPR regular Mo Rocca noted that societal changes need to be made when “really smart,” well educated people like him don’t know much about Islam.
“I’m pretty smart, and I can’t tell you … I mean I went to really fancy schools and I cannot tell you five things about Islam. I know almost nothing about a major world religion that sits at the intersection of so many issues that all are undeniably relevant to all of us,” Rocca said.
“Maybe we need a Muslim version of ’The Cosby Show,’” Couric replied. “I know that sounds crazy, I know that sounds crazy. But ‘The Cosby Show’ did so much to change attitudes about African Americans in this country, and I think sometimes people are afraid of what they don’t understand, like you, Mo … If they became part of the
popular culture.”
In 2010, Faisal Shahzad, an American-born Muslim, was arrested for attempting to bomb Times Square. Later in 2010, Farooque Ahmed, a Muslim Pakistani American, was arrested for planning mass bombings of Washington Metrorail stations.
The video of Couric’s 2010 review can be found at
Mediaite.
Read more:
http://dailycaller.com/2010/12/31/katie-couric-maybe-we-need-a-muslim-version-of-the-cosby-show/#ixzz19j6b5uUU
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