Bill expresses a view in one of his posts that I think encapsulates what many Americans that didn’t know or pay much attention to Islam and Muslims pre-9/11 feel in the post 9/11 world.
You can read it over at his blog Ceruleanbill.
Muslim, writer, RN, embodying a safer space
Bill expresses a view in one of his posts that I think encapsulates what many Americans that didn’t know or pay much attention to Islam and Muslims pre-9/11 feel in the post 9/11 world.
You can read it over at his blog Ceruleanbill.
Yup, that’s me, the prototypical ‘murrican.
But I tried really hard, writing that, to be honest. Hope that helps.
I was going to use a different title because I didn’t exactly want to convey that you are a stereotypical [non-Muslim] American because Muslims are also American. In the end, pith won out.
I think your sincerity and honesty came through in your post, that’s why I linked to it.
Well, you know what they say: Be sincere. If you can fake that, you’ve got it made. (g)
Salaam Alaikum Muslim Apple,
Thanks for pointing us to Bill’s post. I thought it was very good and asked some good questions. I will be checking out his blog more often.
As I know you are a bigot — no, no, a WORDPRESS bigot (g)– you might find this of interest– http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,127826-c,internetutilities/article.html
Take care.
I think the use of term bigot coupled with a link had your last comment flagged as spam by Akismet. Thanks for the link. Before beginning my blog, I did some research to see which blogging software to use and experimented with WordPress, Blogger, and Squarespace.
I am irritated on occasion by the limitations of blogger, and don’t like the way some competitors implement functions such as commenting, but for me the deal-maker is the cost.