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WND’s Flip-Flop on No-Fly Lists

Posted on September 16, 2019

WND fretted in a Sept. 5 article:

In a case brought by the Hamas-founded Council on American-Islamic Relations, a federal judge ruled the FBI’s “no fly” watchlist of “known or suspected terrorists” violates the constitutional rights of the people placed on it.

U.S. District Judge Anthony Trenga, who was appointed by President George W. Bush, granted summary judgment Wednesday to nearly two dozen Muslim U.S. citizens who had challenged the list with the help of CAIR, the Washington Times reported.

The judge is seeking additional legal briefs before deciding on a remedy, the Times said.

[…]

Gadeir Abbas, a CAIR senior litigation attorney, said he will ask the judge to severely curtail how the government compiles and uses its list, the Times reported.

“Innocent people should be beyond the reach of the watchlist system,” Abbas said. “We think that’s what the Constitution requires.”

This is a flip-flop — WND has a history of complaining that the no-fly list being used against non-Muslims. In a December 2015 article, WND worried that if a proposal that people on the no-fly list were prohibited from purchasing firearms, “America could see U.S. Marines, congressmen, journalists and even federal air marshals mistakenly stripped of their firearms,” going on to warn that “thousands of innocent people have been mistakenly linked to U.S. terror watchlists. Some experts and critics contend the federal list process contains many errors and relies on an overly broad standard of reasonable suspicion.”

In a June 2016 article, Garth Kant lectured:

The problem is not a disagreement over whether people on terror watch lists should have guns.

Nobody thinks they should.

Not President Obama. Not Hillary Clinton. Not Donald Trump. Not the NRA.

The problem is the lists.

And that’s where the NRA and the ACLU agree.

[…]

So, everyone agrees terrorist shouldn’t have guns.

What they don’t agree upon, is who may be a terrorist.

And whether to rely upon a government watch list as the definitive word on who is, and who is not, a terrorism suspect.

[…]

But while San Bernardino, California, terrorist Syed Rizwan Farook managed to fly to Pakistan and Saudi Arabia under the radar of federal authorities in 2014, thousands of innocent people have been mistakenly linked to U.S. terror watchlists. Some experts and critics contend the federal list process contains many errors and relies on an overly broad standard of reasonable suspicion.

But it seems that WND is unhappy that a pro-Muslim group is making those very same points.

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