Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Hating Hate is Not Hate Speech: PayPal Reverses Decision to Cut off Atlas Shrugs, Freedom Defense Initiative, and Stop Islamization of America Sites

B"H

I am glad that PayPal has come to the realization that hating hate is not hate speech!

PayPal had sent these bloggers letters to inform them that their sites were "hate" sites, and they would be ending their relationship with them.

Now, mostly because of all the negative publicity, PayPal has reversed their decision and reinstated these sites.

There is a significant difference between fighting against the hate speech of others and promoting hate.  The bloggers in question were fighting against the hate speech of others.  However, the pro-hate forces of terrorist Islam were quick to attack those sites as promoting hate speech, and they had a quick ally in PayPal.

We all must be constantly vigilant about the free speech rights of every American and how the terrorists are trying to use our own free society and our right to litigation against us in their psychological war against America.

We cannot let one violation of these rights go, or they will all soon fall.

M


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PayPal reverses jihad against Muslim-watch sites
Company had cut off Atlas Shrugs for 'hate speech'

http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=166869


The Internet money-exchange PayPal has reportedly reversed an earlier decision to cut services to a trio of websites that track and resist the spreading influence of Islam in America.

Popular activist, author and blogger Pamela Geller of Atlas Shrugs, who has also  been involved in founding the Freedom Defense Initiative and Stop Islamization of America, received intimidating letters from PayPal that claimed the websites "promote hate" and "racial intolerance."

"The little money that Atlas generates (I have no large donors) is about to be cut off. Apparently the jihad is hard at work trying to kill free speech, preventing the truth from making its way to those in pursuit of it," Geller reported on Atlas Shrugs. "Truth is the new hate speech."

Geller explained that Paypal contributions helped pay for her recent, controversial "Leaving Islam?" bus ads, as well as rallies and the news coverage she provides on Atlas Shrugs.

Fellow Islam monitor Robert Spencer of Jihad Watch   defended Geller, arguing her websites aren't "hate speech," but only politically incorrect.

"This is an issue with much larger implications than just a few PayPal accounts," writes Spencer on Jihad Watch. "This is a question of whether people with politically incorrect opinions will be denied access to services.

"Businesses are free to refuse to deal with whomever they choose to, except where regulated by law," Spencer argues. "But when they won't  do business with someone because they dislike her political opinions, the potential for abuse is enormous, and the possibility of making it economically unfeasible to hold political opinions that are unpopular with the political elites becomes immediate and real."

According to Geller, PayPal sent her letters explaining the websites had violated the company's policy, which bans use of PayPal for items that "promote hate, violence, racial intolerance or the financial exploitation of a crime."

In order to comply, Geller reports, she was required to remove PayPal as a payment option from her websites, as well as all references to the company, its logo and shopping-cart features.

Now, however, Geller reports an executive with the company called  and explained the decision was in error and that financial services to the websites could resume.

Nonetheless, Geller says, that's "not good enough."

"What recourse do smaller websites have?" Geller writes. "My soapbox is pretty big, but what about small blogs? … If a site is designated a 'hate site,' who decides?"

Geller had objected to PayPal's earlier decision, arguing other sites in clear violation of the company's usage policy still have PayPal  buttons – such as "inciters to violence and Jewish genocide" RevolutionMuslim.com and an eBay seller marketing DVDs by Imam Anwar al-Awlaki, a terrorism preacher nicknamed the "bin Laden of the Internet."

"If they are going to allow jihadis to raise dough using PayPal,"  Geller writes, "what's the point of any hate-speech designation?"

Before the decision was reversed, the Council on American-Islamic  Relations issued a press release applauding PayPal's action, labeling Atlas Shrugs an "anti-Islam hate site."

CAIR, notably, had filed a complaint against Geller and Spencer's  Stop Islamization of America initiative to  put "Leaving Islam?" signs on public buses   in Miami, Fla.

Ads pulled from Miami transit buses after CAIR complained

Though the ads were pulled from the buses at first, Geller and Spencer turned to the law offices  of David Yerushalmi, P.C., and the Thomas  More Law Center , who were together able to successfully  get the signs reinstated .

As  WND reported , however, a more recent effort to place the "Leaving Islam?" signs on buses in Detroit was squashed by the city's transit agency.

Geller, Spencer and the Thomas More Law Center filed a suit last month against the Suburban Mobility Authority for Regional Transportation, which had sold space for atheist ads reading, "Don't Believe in God? You are not alone," but is now prohibiting the Stop Islamization of America ads offering Muslims assistance in leaving the Islam faith.

"In Detroit, government officials grant atheists the right to express a view that God does not exist, not worrying about offending Christians," said Robert Muise, the senior trial counsel for Thomas More. "Yet, these same politically correct officials censor speech that might offend Muslims.

"Such blatant discrimination is offensive, and it violates our Constitution," he said.

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