Pamela Geller's 'holy war': The NYT profile highlights

The New York Times shines a spotlight on the anti-Islamic blogger who helped fuel the "Ground Zero mosque" flap. What did we learn?

Pamela Geller calls the New York Times profile on her "extraordinarily nasty and fallacious."
(Image credit: YouTube)

The New York Times published a long profile of Pamela Geller, a firebrand blogger who peddles the idea "that terrorism by Muslims springs not from perversions of Islam but from the religion itself" and who "skyrocketed" to international prominence when she took a lead role in opposing the so-called "Ground Zero mosque." The reviews are mixed: Geller, who was interviewed at length for the profile, criticizes it as "extraordinarily nasty and fallacious"; John Hinderaker at conservative Powerline calls it "not entirely unflattering" or "unsympathetic"; and one-time ally Charles Johnson at Little Green Footballs says The Times "went way too easy on this deranged illiterate bigot." Here, the highlights:

She grew up in an affluent Jewish family on Long Island

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