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December 2009

Fear of Racial Profiling Enabled Ft. Hood Terror

he ideologically-driven effort of U.S. elites to create a multicultural population with diverse loyalties erupted in murder and terror at Fort Hood, Texas, last month when authorities say U.S. Army Major Nidal Malik Hasan, who is the Muslim son of Middle Eastern immigrants, went on a shooting rampage, killing 13 Americans and wounding as many as two dozen or more others.

Federal intelligence agencies were well aware of the accused shooter's un-American inclinations as well as his numerous contacts with a known recruiter for Osama bin Laden's Al Qaeda terror network. But they took no action against Hasan for fear of being accused of "racial profiling," which is regarded as a politically incorrect racist violation of the government's official multiculturalist ideology.

One government investigator told Fox News that intelligence officials would have been "crucified" by their superiors if they had launched a full-scale probe into the intercepted e-mails Hasan had reportedly exchanged with Yemen-based radical Muslim Imam Anwar al Awlaki, identified by the CIA as an Al Qaeda recruiter.

ABC News reported that in one of those e-mails, Hasan told Awlaki, "I can't wait to join you" in the afterlife.

"It sounds like code words, that he's actually either offering himself up or that he's already crossed that line in his own mind," said Lt. Col. Tony Shaffer, a military analyst at the Center for Advanced Defense Studies.

Even before the e-mails were discovered, Hasan, who witnesses say shouted "Allahu Akbar!" -- Arabic for "God is great!" -- was reportedly well known among other soldiers for being sympathetic to America's Muslim's enemies in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Dr. Val Finnell, a classmate of Hasan's at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Scienes in Bethesda, Maryland, said Hasan often expressed the view that Muslims were being unfairly attacked by the U.S. Finnell said Hasan repeatedly told classmates he was "a Muslim first and an American second."

This failure of diversity-blinded U.S. authorities to protect American lives from immigrants and their offspring with foreign loyalties was not the first time that left-wing ideology prevented U.S. officials from acting. Middle American News reported in July 2002 that fear of being accused of "racial profiling" also prevented the FBI from taking action against the Arab immigrant terrorists responsible for the 9-11 attacks when they were enrolled in flight training schools.

When FBI agents in Phoenix warned in a memo that suspected Al Qaeda operatives were attending flight schools in the U.S., officals in Washington refused to grant special warrants for agents to investigate further.

In testimony before Congress examing the FBI's intelligence-gathering prior to 9-11, FBI Director Robert Mueller gingerly admitted, "I've seen indications of concerns about taking certain action, because that action may be preceived as profiling." He added, "A person who was involved in the process articulated that as a possible concern."

Based on Census, data, demographers estimate the number of Muslims in the U.S. ranges from 4 million to 7 million, most of whom are foreign born.