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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> Mubarak Ali Gilani, the shadowy founder of Muslims of the Americas, is
believed to be living in Pakistan. (Christian Action Network)Christian Action
Network vows to bring Gilani, founder of Muslims of the Americas, into
a U.S. court if the $30 million defamation suit proceeds. (Christian Action
Network)Gilani, who is believed to be in his eighties, fires a weapon
in a training video made by Muslims of the Americas. (Christian Action
Network)Muslims of the Americas has rural bases in several states, including
South Carolina and New York.The shadowy leader of an American Muslim organization
accused of running terror training camps in the U.S. could find himself
being questioned under oath if his outfit follows through on its $30
million defamation suit against the Christian group that leveled the charges
in a best-selling book.Muslims of the Americas, a group founded in the
1980s by elusive Pakistani Sheikh Mubarak Ali Gilani, is suing the Christian
Action Network for defamation and libel following CANs recent publication
of the book Twilight in America: The Untold Story of Islamist Terrorist
Training Camps Inside America. Co-authored by CAN founder Martin Mawyer
and Patti Pierucci, the book accuses MOA of acting as a front
for the radical Islamist group Jamaat al-Fuqra.In the suit, filed this year
in federal court in Albany, N.Y., the Muslim group accuses Mawyer, Pierucci
and CAN of "malicious, repetitious and continuous pronouncements and
money only when businesses agree to take them."Businesses are not clamoring
for this, to say the least," Farley said. "This is basically growing
the size and scope of government to create an entirely new currency
system."Farley noted that the price of gold saw a significant drop in
early April, its biggest one-day plunge since 1983. He said allowing gold
and silver as legal payment at grocery stores and other businesses would
prove too unpredictable."Anybody who thinks gold or silver is a safe place
to put your money had better think again," he said.The Senate had
previously passed Senate Bill 1439, but it was sent back for final
approval after the House amendment passed.Utah became the first state to
allow gold or silver payments in 2011. Lawmakers in Minnesota, North Carolina,
Idaho, South Carolina, Colorado and other states have debated copycat laws
in recent years. The Maine Senate and House recently rejected a similar
measure.Gold-backed money fell out of favor during World War I because the
U.S. and many other countries needed to print more cash to pay
for the war. President Richard Nixon formally abandoned the gold standard
in 1971.
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