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9/11 and Its Affects on Americans Views on Islam

2023-06-18 20:15:09

"Who are you?" (Eggers 206) was the first sentence Abdulrahman Zeitoun asked from the police, and when he got out of the guns he owned from 5010 Claiborne, they sent him and his friends to their I surrounded it with a gun. He stopped at home and called his wife Casey once a day, and fled with Arizona's hurricane "Katrina" with four children. They were hurricanes in the city of New Orleans where they lived. . Abitorah Zeitoun stayed home to protect many of the property he and his family needed, for 16 years since moving to town.

Recognition of American people about Islam has become even more negative since 9/11. But the views of Arab and Muslim people are moderate and most people still do not represent the mainstream thinking within Muslim, yet a common ground between Islam and the West I think. When asked how the US military is trying to reduce the US military and negotiate with the Taliban, 69% said that he agreed with the Obama administration's plan to strengthen the Afghan army. 50% of Americans believe that the United States is investing too much in the war in Afghanistan, but 57% believe that the first decision to enter Afghanistan is correct. At the moment, the majority (73%) wants the United States to reduce the number of troops in Afghanistan, but less than half (44%) wish the army to withdraw completely.

For over a decade, American Muslims have condemned the actions of 9/11 terrorists and defended Islam as a religion of peace. They hope to exercise constitutional rights, freedom of speech and oppose specific US foreign policy, but they are concerned about the influence of acts which they believe attacks the law of the Patriot Act and other civil liberties I'm worried. At the same time, other Americans are struggling to understand that Muslim and Muslim militants talk to businesses, schools, and neighborhoods, the latter seeking more terrible action against the United States. The right-wing evangelical speech on Islam is driven by events including international terrorism by Muslims. Since the 9.11 incident, Islamic phobia is actually a fear of Islam, and steadily growing in the United States.