Dallas Mayor ‘More Fearful’ Of White Terrorists Than Syrian Refugees

He kind of has a point.

Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings (D) isn’t afraid of the Syrian refugees fleeing a civil war in the Middle East. He's more concerned about the white men who grab military-grade firearms and shoot up public venues.

“I am more fearful of large gatherings of white men that come into schools, theaters and shoot people up, but we don’t isolate young white men on this issue,” Rawlings told MSNBC on Saturday, addressing the recent claims by a number of public figures that the U.S. needs to turn away refugees from war-torn Syria because some of them could be terrorists planning an attack.

Many members of Congress, along with a number of governors and Republican presidential candidates, have said they don’t think it’s a good idea for the U.S. to accept Syrian refugees in light of the recent terrorist attacks in Paris. Last Thursday, a bill that would likely halt the admission of Syrian refugees into the country passed in the House with overwhelming support.

But as Rawlings pointed out to MSNBC, refugees seeking to enter the U.S. actually go through a rigorous screening process that can take between 18 and 24 months. The process includes in-person interviews and in-depth background checks performed by the FBI, the State Department and the Department of Homeland Security. And there have been barely any cases of refugees conspiring to aid a foreign terrorist organization since the Sept. 11 attacks. Twelve of the 785,000 refugees accepted into the U.S. since 9/11 have since been arrested or removed because of terrorism concerns -- accounting for about one thousandth of 1 percent of the total.

Since the attacks in Paris, many Arabs and Muslims have been openly discriminated against in the U.S. Rawlings noted that Western hostility toward Middle Eastern refugees will only help the self-styled Islamic State, the militant organization that has claimed responsibility for the Paris attacks and that seeks to radicalize moderate Muslims and drive a wedge between societies.

“ISIS is no more Islamic than the Nazi senior staff was Christian, and we have got to differentiate between those,” he said.

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The Huffington Post

In the U.S., the term "terrorist" has become practically synonymous with "foreign Islamic extremist" since Sept. 11, even though self-identified Muslims have hardly had a monopoly on acts of terror in the U.S. and Europe in the past several decades. Historically and in recent years, white terrorists have always been more dangerous to U.S. citizens than foreign terrorists of other races or ethnicities.

The first federal anti-terrorism law was devised in 1871 in response to the Ku Klux Klan. And according to a study released in June by the New America Foundation, at least 48 people have been killed in the U.S. by radical anti-government groups or white supremacists since the Sept. 11 attacks -- almost twice as many as were killed by self-identified jihadists in that time.

Last month, in response to growing threats, the Department of Justice created a new unit to combat domestic terrorism. Local law enforcement agencies have also reported being more concerned with the activities of right-wing extremist groups than Islamic extremists in their jurisdictions.

Rawlings is one of many mayors who are welcoming Syrian refugees into their cities despite the governors of their states opposing the gesture (something the governors don't actually have the authority to enforce). Rawlings said Monday that he believes both he and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R), who has said the state should refuse Syrian refugees, care deeply about the safety of Dallas. 

"We want to get rid of ISIS. We all agree with that," Rawlings said. "ISIS wants us to be divided on this issue. ISIS wants us to demonize these refugees, wants us to alienate these children."  

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Images Show How Syrian Refugees Live And Why They Left
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A man is helping out a baby as refugees from Afghanistan and Syria disembark from in a life boat on the shores of Lesbos near Skala Sikaminias, Greece on Nov. 10, 2015. Lesbos, the Greek vacation island in the Aegean Sea between Turkey and Greece, faces massive refugee flows from the Middle East countries. (credit:Etienne De Malglaive via Getty Images)
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A general view of a make-shift camp set up by mainly Syrian refugees at the Porte de Saint-Ouen in Paris, early on Oct. 2, 2015. (credit:JOEL SAGET via Getty Images)
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Lebanese forces walk at a burnt unofficial Syrian refugee camp in the Al-Marj area of Lebanon's eastern Bekaa Valley, after a fire ripped through it on June 1, 2015, killing a baby and injuring several others. (credit:STR via Getty Images)
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A sick refugee is pulled while walking and waiting for a chance to cross the Serbian-Croatian border at the refugee camp of Bapska. (credit:Pacific Press via Getty Images)
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A man rests as he waits with other migrants and refugees at a registration camp after crossing the Greece-Macedonia border near Gevgelija on Nov. 14, 2015. (credit:DIMITAR DILKOFF via Getty Images)
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Doctors Without Borders staff assist a young girl in a wheelchair as she enters, along with other migrants and refugees, a registration camp after crossing the Greek-Macedonian border near Gevgelija on Nov. 12, 2015. (credit:ROBERT ATANASOVSKI via Getty Images)
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A Syrian woman changes her child's diaper as migrants and refugees queue at a camp to register after crossing the Greek-Macedonian border near Gevgelija on Sept. 22, 2015. (credit:NIKOLAY DOYCHINOV via Getty Images)
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Residents sit in a French class at the "Jungle," a migrant and refugee camp in Calais, on Oct. 30, 2015. (credit:PHILIPPE HUGUEN via Getty Images)
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Syrian migrants and refugees march along the highway toward the Turkish-Greek border at Edirne on Sept. 18, 2015. (credit:BULENT KILIC via Getty Images)
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A photo taken on Nov. 5, 2015 shows the "Jungle" migrants camp in Calais. (credit:PHILIPPE HUGUEN via Getty Images)
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A woman stands at the entrance of a tent in a makeshift camp in Grande-Synthe, France, on Oct. 20, 2015. (credit:PHILIPPE HUGUEN via Getty Images)
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Syrian refugee kids, fled from their homes due to civil war in their homeland, play in Yayladagi YIBO camp in Hatay province of Turkey, on Oct. 25, 2015. (credit:Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
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A photo taken on Nov. 12, 2015, shows a view of part of the "New Jungle" migrant camp in Calais. (credit:DENIS CHARLET via Getty Images)
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Migrants walk through a mud path of the "New Jungle" migrant camp in Calais, where thousands of refugees live with the hope of crossing the Channel to the U.K., on Oct. 21, 2015. (credit:PHILIPPE HUGUEN via Getty Images)
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An explosion rocks Syrian city of Kobani during a reported suicide car bomb attack by the militants of Islamic State group on a People's Protection Unit position in the city center of Kobani, as seen from the outskirts of Suruc, on the Turkey-Syria border, Oct. 20, 2014 in Sanliurfa province, Turkey. (credit:Gokhan Sahin via Getty Images)
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A Syrian man walks amid destruction in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo on April 10, 2013. (credit:DIMITAR DILKOFF via Getty Images)
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A man carries a young girl who was injured in a reported barrel-bomb attack by government forces on June 3, 2014, in Kallaseh district in the northern city of Aleppo. (credit:BARAA AL-HALABI via Getty Images)
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A displaced Syrian child in a makeshift camp for Syrian refugees only miles from the on Nov. 12, 2013, in Majdal Anjar, Lebanon, only miles from the Syrian border. (credit:Spencer Platt via Getty Images)
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Syrian government troops sit atop a tank as they drive past a damaged building in Mleiha on the outskirts of the capital Damascus on Aug. 15, 2014. (credit:LOUAI BESHARA via Getty Images)
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Syrian children search for their belongings at a school following airstrikes by Syrian government forces on Dec. 22, 2013, in the northern Syrian city of Marea on the outskirts of Aleppo. (credit:AFP via Getty Images)
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A Syrian man holds a crying girl as he gestures following an air strike by government forces on the Sahour neighbourhood of the northern Syrian city of Aleppo on March 6, 2014. (credit:AFP via Getty Images)
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A boy rides his cycles in the streets of the destroyed Syrian town of Kobane, also known as Ain al-Arab, Syria, on June 20, 2015. (credit:Ahmet Sik via Getty Images)
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A picture taken on Oct.14, 2014, shows a large explosion allegedly hitting a Syrian army military outpost in the southern part of the city of Maarat al-Numan in the Idlib province. (credit:GHAITH OMRAN via Getty Images)
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Syrian girls, carrying school bags provided by UNICEF, walk past the rubble of destroyed buildings on their way home from school on March 7, 2015, in al-Shaar neighborhood, in the rebel-held side of the northern Syrian city of Aleppo. (credit:ZEIN AL-RIFAI via Getty Images)
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Syrian schoolchildren stand next to a pile of classroom desks as they attend school in the Syrian Kurdish town of Kobane, also known as Ain al-Arab, on March 25, 2015. (credit:YASIN AKGUL via Getty Images)
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Men search for their relatives among the bodies of Syrian civilians executed and dumped in the Quweiq river, in the grounds of the courtyard of the Yarmouk School, in the Bustan al-Qasr district of Aleppo on Jan. 30, 2013. (credit:AFP via Getty Images)
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A Syrian Kurdish boy sits on a destroyed tank in the Syrian town of Kobane, also known as Ain al-Arab, on March 27, 2015. (credit:YASIN AKGUL via Getty Images)

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