Sunday, March 22, 2015

Interview with Marianne Sciucco






Judith
Hi Marianne, many thanks for coming to Author 911 today to talk about your book.
I know you are a writer and nurse but you describe yourself as a writer who became a nurse.  Can you explain what you mean by that?

Marianne
Thanks for inviting me to speak to your readers, Judith.  It’s always a pleasure to share space with another author.  All my life I've dreamed of being a writer. As a young girl, I fell in love with books and yearned to create my own, to one day see my name on its cover as author, to find it on a library shelf or in a book store, to catch someone reading it. In high school I dreamed of becoming a reporter – a foreign correspondent, at that! In college, I worked as a reporter for my college newspaper at the University of Massachusetts at Boston, and as a stringer for several local dailies.  I thought that with hard work, determination, skill, and talent I would see my dream come true. That did not happen. Fresh out of school with an English degree, I was unable to secure any type of stable employment as a reporter. I struggled for a couple of years, but eventually grew desperate because I was broke and had to support myself and pay off student loans. I then took a job with a national non-profit health agency and freelanced as a reporter and as a production assistant for some smaller papers. This proved unsatisfying and I drifted into other jobs and finally gave up writing and reporting for good. This was the early 90’s, and the country was in the midst of a nursing crisis. I’d never dreamed of becoming a nurse, in fact, I balked at the idea when it was suggested in high school, but as an adult, I realized this might be an opportunity for me to gain stable. After working in a hospital for a few years, one of the nurse managers started a newsletter for the nursing department. I volunteered to help and soon I was running the whole thing! This reignited my desire to write and I started penning articles, one of which was published in a nursing journal. Encouraged, I embarked on my first novel. It took 11 years, but I self-published that book and am now working on another. I’ve also published three short stories. So, although I love being a nurse and it has been a rewarding career for me on many levels, I am at heart a writer. This will always be how I define myself.

Judith
Please tell me about your background.

Marianne
I grew up in the suburbs of Boston with three younger brothers.  We were fortunate in that we had parents who loved us and gave us a good home. Sadly, my father passed away at the young age of 45, forcing me to grow up overnight. I was just 15 and the oldest. My mother depended on me to help care for my brothers after school while she worked. This was difficult, in that I had my own agenda – what teenage girl doesn’t? My mother is a strong woman who raised me to be strong as well. She insisted that I pursue my dreams and has supported me at every step, whether I was writing, selling Tupperware (what a great way to get through school), establishing myself as a resident of Cape Cod (what a great place to live), or going to nursing school in New York. She’s my best friend and number one fan. My only wish is that we lived close to each other so I could see her more often.

Judith
Tell me about your book and the inspiration for that book.

Marianne
Blue Hydrangeas is the story of a pair of elderly Cape Cod innkeepers struggling with the wife’s Alzheimer’s.  A couple I met in my work as a hospital case manager, a fascinating couple in their 80’s, was my inspiration. She was a lovely woman, so pretty, and had Alzheimer’s. I’d ask her a question and she’d try to answer, but then say, “Oh, I’m so mixed up,” and laugh.  Her husband was frail, an amiable sort of guy, and devoted to her.  My job was to assist with the discharge plan, which was for her to go to a local nursing home for rehab (she’d broken her pelvis) the next day. I discussed the arrangements with her, her husband, and their son, who asked me to make sure his parents didn’t leave the hospital without him; he planned to drive them to the nursing home and assist with the admissions process. Later on, I couldn’t stop thinking about that couple, wondering what would happen if they left the hospital without their son. Where would they go?  What would they do?  Thus, the seeds of Blue Hydrangeas were sown, my wild writer’s imagination took off, and the story began to grow.
I worked on this book eleven years.  It sounds crazy, I know, but after I finished what I thought was the final draft and sent it out into the literary market place with no takers, I continued to tweak it, cutting scenes, adding others.  In the midst of all this, I developed repetitive strain injuries from an inappropriate computer workstation at my job, and everything just stopped.  I could no longer write.  I put everything aside for a couple of years.  But the story haunted me, and when I was able to I continued to revise and rework the manuscript.  Two years ago a friend suggested I publish on Kindle and I figured I had nothing to lose.  It took me a year to prepare and publish the book.  My book is unique because there aren’t many novels about Alzheimer’s, although 5.5 million people are suffering from it right now.
Judith
Do you have a regular writing routine? 

Marianne
No, I don’t have a regular writing routine because of the repetitive strain injuries I mentioned earlier.  This includes carpal tunnel syndrome, thoracic outlet syndrome, chronic headaches, and musculoskeletal and nerve pain. If time permits and my pain issues are managed, I may be able to write a few hundred words on my work-in-progress, or a blog post, or an interview. I manage my social media daily via my iPhone and Kindle which are easier to handle. I use Tweetdeck and Buffer to ease the load. A great day for me is to write 2000 words on my novel. To read more about this please visit MyTOSLife or The Balanced Writer.

Judith

Do you have a WIP?  If so, would you like to share?

Marianne
Like so many writers, I wear many hats, one of which is called “Swim Mom.”  I’ve shuttled my daughter to swim meets and swim practice for years, and now follow her across state lines during her college swimming career. All those hours sitting on cold, metal bleachers waiting to watch her swim for a minute or two gave me more than a sore you-know-what: It inspired me to write a novel about girls’ varsity swimming.

In my current work-in-process Swim Season, the new girl on the team challenges a longstanding school record attached to a $50,000 scholarship. My goal was to write a story about the whole high school swimming experience, to show others who may not be as familiar with the sport how much fun it is and how hard these kids work. I started it four years ago and will soon have a completed manuscript. The plan is to publish sometime this year.

This story is about more than swimming as my young heroine, Aerin, deals with the aftermath of her parents’ divorce, a stepmother and two stepsisters she doesn't want, her mother's PTSD and drug addiction after two tours of duty in the Middle East as an Army nurse, and her best friend's cute twin brother.  Oh, and she's just started senior year in her third high school.  Aerin is a girl you will definitely cheer for. 

Judith

What do you think is the hardest thing about writing?

Marianne
Having time to write is most difficult.  I work in spurts so I don’t always start and complete a project at one sitting. My mind is always working but my hands and arms can’t keep up and it becomes frustrating. Another difficulty is trying not to edit until I’ve completed the first draft. My inner editor is always screaming, but I find it’s better to get the writing out before I start perfecting it.

Judith
What in life inspires you?

Marianne
Life itself inspires me.  The world is beautiful. People are fascinating.

Judith
If you had a magic wand, what would you change?  This can be anything.  Just use your imagination.

Marianne
If I could, I’d wave my magic wand over the world and fill each person’s heart with joy and a desire for peace, ending all wars and violence against other people, so each individual person has the ability to thrive and meet his or her potential without fear or want.


About the Author



A lover of words and books, Marianne Sciucco dreamed of becoming an author when she grew up but became a nurse to avoid poverty. She later brought her two passions together and writes about the intricate lives of people struggling with health and family issues. Her debut novel, “Blue Hydrangeas,” an Alzheimer’s love story, is rated 4.7 stars on Amazon and has more than 70 5-star reviews. A native Bostonian, she lives in New York’s Hudson Valley. You can follow Marianne’s Adventures in Publishing on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest, Google+, and on MarianneSciucco.blogspot.com

Connect Links:
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Buy Links:
Blue Hydrangeas is available in paperback, audiobook and ebook at these and other online booksellers.
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Thursday, March 19, 2015

Monday, March 9, 2015

An Interview with
Simon Oneill



Spinner of Vampire Lore, Dark Fantasy, & Big Foot Fodder

Hello Everyone,
Today we welcome the one and only Simon Oneill, the author of the Phantom Big Foot series and Eternal.  Simon has the greatest range of writing abilities I’ve seen in a writer.

Judith Lucci
Hi Simon, welcome to Author 911 and many thanks for coming here today to talk about your books.  I know how busy you are getting ready to release your new book.

Simon O'Neill
Hello Judith.  I am so happy to be here.  It’s always fun to be with you.

Judith Lucci
Simon, you are one of my favorite writers and people, too, for that matter.  Please tell everyone about your books.

Simon Oneill
Thank you Judith and I love your books too.  I am a Paranormal Fantasy author and dabble in YA and Adult.  My teen series is Duane Dexter's Bigfoot Adventures Parts 1,2,3 where a teenager is altered by aliens to protect a tribe of Bigfoot often with disastrous results.  Magic is Murder is my Monty Pythonesque horror novel set in stunning Cornwall, UK where a celebrity author goes on a killing spree to protect her family secret.  My big release on March 7th was Blood of the Eternal Moon, an erotic gothic romance set in Paris 1925.  Blood of the Eternal Moon is full of demonic possession and gore galore, oh and of course plenty of sex.


Judith Lucci
This is great!  It sounds like your Eternal books on literary steroids.  Your dark fantasies full of gothic images and bloody erotic scenes jump from the page and seduce the reader.
Tell us about your new release although I must say, your Big Foot series is just the greatest too!

Simon Oneill
You are too kind Judith.  Blood of the Eternal Moon is an historical dark fantasy explaining how Eternal Vampires alter our history for its beauty, but their evil servant vampires known as Sucklings will do anything to subvert their efforts and cause chaos and war.  And this time around, a female Eternal is trapped in an asylum where she is hunted by Lucien's Blood Cult.


Judith Lucci
You know, Simon, you have an extraordinary talent for making your characters real and vivid!  Do you see them in your mind as you write them?  When I read your books, I almost feel like I am seeing the video at the same time.

Simon Oneill
My secret Judith is I write them as a screenplay first, full of intense visuals with of course no thought patterns.  Then I add in feelings for more intensity but always in a POV through the character's eyes so the reader feels everything but will not know who the character is until another character interacts with them.  What’s neat is I have a screenplay at hand if requested by LaLa Land.

Judith Lucci
Well, it's certainly successful.  What is the most exciting thing happening for you now as a writer - in addition to your new release?

Simon Oneill
The release of Blood of the Eternal Moon has taken me over.  I can't stop thinking about it, dreaming about it, living it, well except for the blood slurping, but it has taken control of me in a way no other book ever has.  There are hints at Hollywood's eyes on the book which has caused a flutter or a million in my tums.


Judith Lucci
Yes, I was hoping you would mention that. What can all of us do to help with that?

Simon Oneill
Like my Author page. My author page is too lowly ranked and needs to be bumped up into 5 figures, that way the big guys in Hollywood will know I have a good fan base.  http://facebook.com/simononeillauthor


Judith Lucci
OK, that’s easy…so we should ask everyone who reads this to like your author page and ask everyone to invite “likes” as well.

Simon Oneill
Yes please, that would be great. http://facebook.com/simononeillauthor


Judith Lucci
So...where do you get your ideas and motivation?

Simon Oneill
Many things really, dreams, Star Trek original series has some great story bases to work from. The episode with the giant apes attacking Spock (miss you dude) inspired our Bigfoot as it was in the hippie era we made Bigfoot hippies.

Judith Lucci
That's neat! Now, I have one final question. Before that, is there anything else you would like to add?

Simon Oneill
I feel I have covered most everything Judith.

Judith Lucci
OK, here goes,
If you had a magic wand and could make one wish, what would it be?

Simon Oneill
I would wish that everyone would wake up vegetarians!

Judith Lucci
You are too funny!! I'm already there so no problem for me!

Simon Oneill
Judith, thank you so much for letting me come today. I loved spending time with you, you Big Foot Babe.

Judith Lucci
Thank you for coming, Simon. I’m so excited about your new release. I’ll get it tomorrow. I know it’ll be fantastic as the others.

Simon's Contacts:
Duane Dexter's Bigfoot Adventures Part1
http://amzn.to/1L8kv57  UK
http://amzn.to/1za5X1O  US

Duane Dexter's Bigfoot Adventures Part 2
http://amzn.to/1yhb74Q  UK
http://amzn.to/15HMUPr  US

Duane Dexter's Bigfoot Adventures Part 3
http://amzn.to/1xfHC3k  UK
http://amzn.to/1yGNYu7  US

Old Indian Legend tells us that man who tells tall tales is not
necessarily a tall man.  Old Indian Legend tells us man who is
invisible cannot be seen. Old Indian Legend tells us man who makes a
guess sometimes guesses wrong.

Magic Is Murder
http://amzn.to/1Db9hH7  UK
http://amzn.to/15PLMs8  US

If there's one thing I can't abide is a blackmailer, unless I'm the one
doing the blackmailing.

Blood of the Eternal Moon
http://amzn.to/1M5m0ic US
http://amzn.to/1AIp0u9 UK



http://twitter.com/simoneillauthor
http://facebook.com/simononeillauthor









Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Belladonna - the choice of Assassins


Belladonna
The Drug of Stealth Assassinations


Belladonna is an herbaceous plant that has had many uses since the Middle Ages.  Belladonna has been used throughout history as a weapon for stealth assassination. It’s been used as an agent in cosmetics, a weapon of war and murder weapon. It is rumored that Agrippina, Empress of Rome used Belladonna for murder, as did the Emperor Claudius. Marie Jeanneret, a Swiss nurse was convicted of the murder of seven patients in the mid-1800, using Belladonna as her weapon. There’s also Dr. Robert Buchanan who murdered his wife with morphine and put atropine, a Belladonna derivative, in her eyes to overcome the pinpoint often seen with morphine use.
Mass Murder Anyone?
Want to murder an army? Soak some arrows in a Belladonna solution and poison the opposing side. The enemy will suffer a long painful death. Supposedly, Duncan I who later became King Macbeth of Scotland, poisoned an entire army of Danes with liquor poisoned by Belladonna berries.  It’s also good in tea as the berries are sweet and the tea goes down easily. Yum, Belladonna tea, ladies?
More About the Plant
Belladonna’s leaves and roots are used to make medicine. The name “belladonna” means “beautiful lady,” and was chosen because belladonna berry juice was used in Italy to enlarge the pupils of women, giving them a striking appearance. This was not a good idea, because belladonna can be poisonous, but, nevertheless, the ladies were lovely as long as they lasted.
Belladonna is also one of the most toxic plants found in the world and often grows in our own back yards.  All parts of the plant contain tropane alkaloids. The berries pose the greatest danger to children because they have a sweet taste and are easily mistaken for blueberries. The consumption of two to five berries by a human adult is lethal. The root of the plant is the most toxic part and ingestion of a single leaf can be fatal to an adult.
Belladonna is also toxic to many domestic animals, causing narcosis and paralysis. However, cattle and rabbits eat the plant without suffering harmful effects. In humans, its anticholinergic properties cause the disruption of cognitive capacities, such as memory and learning and people may convulse and seize from its effects

How does it work?

Belladonna has chemicals that can block functions of the body's nervous system particularly the parasympathetic nervous system.  It can cause dilated pupils and blurred, vision, an increased heart rate, loss of balance, great thirst, confusion, hallucinations, delirium, and convulsions.

Spies, as well as taste-testers hired by kings to sample food to check for poison, learned that it’s possible to develop a tolerance to belladonna. One can become immune to its poisonous capabilities by taking small sips of a brew made from the plant over time. After a while a tolerance would build and an assassin could demonstrate a drink was safe to consume, while his victim would swallow the poison willingly and die. It is also quite tasty as a fermented beverage.
Medical Users of Belladonna

Though widely regarded as unsafe, belladonna is used as a sedative, to stop bronchial spasms in asthma and whooping cough, and as a cold and hay fever remedy.  It is also used for Parkinson's disease, colic, motion sickness, and as a painkiller.

Belladonna is used in ointments that are applied to the skin for joint pain (rheumatism), leg  pain caused by a disc in the backbone pushing on the sciatic nerve (sciatica), and nerve pain (neuralgia).  Belladonna is also used in plasters (medicine-filled gauze applied to the skin) for treating psychiatric disorders, a behavior disorder called hyperkinesis, excessive sweating (hyperhidrosis), and bronchial asthma.
So, if your next book, if you want to become a stealth assassin, consider a brew or Belladonna tea, or perhaps a taste of fermented Belladonna in cut glass crystal.
Yum, what a tasty way to go…and so easy!
Until next time,
Judith











Saturday, February 21, 2015


Friends, please enjoy my interview with Khalid Muhammad, author of The Agency Rules:Never An Easy Day at the Office.

 The Truth about Global Terrorism

 




Judith Lucci:

Good Morning, Khalid.  Thanks so much for joining us on Author 911.  You are someone I have followed and admired for several years now.  Can you tell me a little about your background?

 

Khalid Muhammad:

Good morning, Judith. It’s a pleasure to join you and thank you for the opportunity to discuss global terrorism with your audience.

 

My background is a bit confused for most people. I was born in Pakistan, raised and educated in the United States. I worked in the US for about 8 years before moving back to Pakistan to pursue business opportunities in the emerging markets. I’ve been here since.

 

Judith Lucci:

You are certainly my expert for all things Jihad and became so once I read your book.  How have you become such an expert in Jihad behavior?

 

Khalid Muhammad:

That’s great to hear, especially with the number of people in the media that pretend to know what they are talking about when it comes to jihadi behavior. I think more people like me have to start talking about Islam and jihad to counter the negative and false perception that is being put out in the media from the uninformed who are reading websites with little understanding of the history and context of the verses of the Qu’ran.

 

My expertise, as you put it, comes from living in Pakistan and experiencing the “fake jihad” that is waged in the name of Islam. Many people have been deceived into believing that Islam is a violent religion, but they have no understanding of the context, history or traditions during the time of the Prophet Muhammad when they make that characterization. The Prophet wore many different hats during His life, including a head of state, a military commander and the founder of a religious school of thought. When you look at the Qu’ran and Hadiths as being the history of His life during each of those roles, they whole conversation takes a different color.

 

Judith Lucci:

How did you experience this, particularly being educated in the US?

 

Khalid Muhammad:

As part of my book series, I was able to talk to a number of people in the military, government, religious scholars and former jihadis to get an understanding of the different points of view. In addition, when you live in a country that has been ravaged by the pseudo-jihadists with their suicide bombers, car bombs and IEDs, you gain expertise quite quickly.

 

It’s quite horrifying to listen to different imams talk about what jihad means to Islam and Muslims, but they seem to all forget that the most important jihad is the one that each Muslim must fight within themselves to become a better person. They seem to all be focused on the armed conflict, the justifications for such and the responsibility that we have as Muslims to fight it.

 

I was blessed to have both a Saudi and an Egyptian as teachers during my primary years, who taught me that Islam is not a violent religion and that we, as Muslims, must constantly be fighting to learn and understand more about our faith to be better Muslims. They never told me that armed jihad was the primary role or first response to any injustice.

 

Judith Lucci:

I know that you are quite outspoken about jihad and your feelings are quite clear in you excellent and extradinary book, The Agency Rules.  I suppose your  writing is a lynchpin?

 

Khalid Muhammad:

I believe that it is a requirement for Muslims that have an understanding of the real teachings to speak out and counter those who would like to misinterpret our faith. Agency Rules, my debut spy thriller and series, is the foundation of helping people to understand how people are deceived into believing that taking up arms is the only solution to the injustices that people feel.

 

I tend to be more outspoken than most because I won’t allow my religion to be misused to lead people to their death for someone else’s private war, cause or blind arrogance, which is the case with most of the “jihadi leaders.” They never fight on the front lines, they hide far away from where the battle is actually happening.

 

It escapes me how someone who firmly believes that their primary cause in life is to be a martyr for their religion takes a cowardly position and sends others to die in their place.

 

Judith Lucci:

I know that you believe that three events are responsible for the Muslim world today. Can you share them so we can better understand?

 

Khalid Muhammad:

Definitely. While many people will try to list many, many more than three, you can boil the core problems in the Muslim world down to three.

 

First, we have the influx of wealthy countries that are using other countries to fight proxy wars for them. The wealthy countries that I am talking about are Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates, where members of the royal families and wealthy industrialists are funding terrorism around the world. The Saudis alone have spent somewhere in the neighborhood of $100 million to spread their extremely fundamentalist Wahhabi version of Islam to every corner of the world, and that is outside what they spend during the wars that they create for others to fight. Until these countries are brought to book by the international community, they will continue to spread their brand of Islam around the world and all of the moderate Muslims will pay for it with their lives and their respect.

 

Second, we have the failed democratic systems in the Middle East. I have always found it interesting that we have two options in the Muslim countries – we are either dictatorships supported by Western powers, as long as they are useful, or we are puppet democracies that are client-states for the international lenders to push them into conditions that they can never escape from. I say puppet democracies because we never get the politicians into office that are sincere to the nation, rather we get the ones that are intent on filling their offshore bank accounts, enjoying lavish lifestyles and robbing the people of their country of basic, fundamental services.

 

What is sad is that the international lenders and the Western powers know full well what is happening, but just don’t have the power to force these governments to do anything to stop it. The mantra of democracy cuts deep on both sides of the equation.

 

Third, the civilian judiciary is a farce and is easily corrupted for power, influence or position. They are also unwilling to sentence the real criminals because their gravy train would end. We have seen it in Pakistan for decades. Judges who, under the pressure of a political or religious party, will make decisions that are untenable under the law. We have politicians that have committed massive levels of corruption, but they are free and sitting in our Parliament today because the judiciary is beholden to them for their positions. We have terrorists that have been freed by the civilian judiciary because of lack of evidence, fear of reprisals and many other excuses, but it all boils down to them not being able to dispense justice.

 

When there is no justice, the opportunities for civil unrest expand exponentially.

 

Now, all Muslims understand that Sharia law is one of the fairest legal systems because it not only takes the crime, but the reasons for the crime into account. A person who is unemployed and steals food to feed his family would not be punished for theft under Sharia law, whereas someone who has wealthy who steals would feel the full punishment for their crimes. But with numerous sects and schools of thought residing within the same country, whose interpretation of Sharia law do you follow? And that is another problem all together.

 

Judith Lucci:

Are jihad appealing to young people who are not educated?  I read somewhere that people involved in jihad reated it as a job, with pay raised, vacation, etc.  Is that true?

 

Khalid Muhammad:

It’s not so much that it appeals to them, but it is the only route because they don’t have the same opportunities as others. Let me explain the dynamic so that your readers can better understand.

 

There is a family of 6 that earns $10 a day, if they are lucky. From that $10 a day, they must feed their children, pay their bills, find a place to live, eat, take care of medical expenses, educate their children and save some money for the future. Now, take into account that the average school tuition is around $70 per month, not including books, uniform and all the extra curricular activities, so let’s round that number up to around $100 per month per child. With 4 children, that’s $400 in just education with a $300 a month salary, if they are lucky.

 

Now compare that with the average middle class Pakistani who is able to get a good job because they have a decent education, send their children to private schools and provide opportunities that the poor children will never have. What’s worse is that many of the poor parents, and sometimes children, will work in these households as maids and drivers and see the lavishness of the lifestyles and the sheer wastage where they can’t even afford to put food on the table for their children.

 

These are the people that are sending their children to madrassahs, which are religious schools where the school takes up the responsibility of feeding, clothing, and educating the children. I’m not going to say all madrassahs are bad, but so many of them are.

 

They will teach children from a young age that what others do is against the teachings of Islam. From wearing western clothing to not living a pious life by the standards of the madrassah imam will all become part of the education that the children get. They are also fed a steady stream of hatred for other sects and religious groups because they don’t share the same belief structure as the one being taught in the madrassah.

 

And then the jihadi and extremist groups come looking for recruits. Many of the students are identified and selected by their own instructors for these groups.

 

It’s a vicious cycle that can’t be stopped until we get more controls on the governments to re-invest into the government schools that have collapsed due to their own corruption.

 

Judith Lucci:

You know, Khalid, all of this must be a cultural shock to you and devasting at the same time.  Do you feel alone or are there others who share your feelings and b eliefs?

 

Khalid Muhammad:

Of course it’s devastating to me, and to many other Pakistanis that work hard to try and change the course of this problem. I started a school in my home district of Swat, where the Taliban once had control, for underprivileged children where we not only teach them for free, but we pay them a salary to come to school and send food to their homes so that they will not be forced into child labor to help make ends meet.

 

There is another organization called The Citizen’s Foundation, which builds schools in these underprivileged communities and provides free education to children so that they will have opportunities to improve their lives from what their parents live with. I think they just had one girl earn a scholarship to Harvard and another who is going to another university in the US.

 

There is a hospital network that has been setup to provide free medical care to this same economic bracket. Medications are free. Operations are free. Check-ups are free. The whole hospital operates on donations from domestic and ex-patriate Pakistanis.

 

These things were unheard of just a few years ago, so there are people doing things to improve the situation that jihadi and terrorist groups use to recruit and indoctrinate, but it’s slow because it’s citizens coming together and not the government.

 

Judith Lucci:

It is devastating to see your country so corrupt and spreading hatred.  How can it change?  If you had a magic wand, how would you fix things?

 

Khalid Muhammad:

That would have to be one serious magic wand to fix all the ills that we have in Pakistan, or any Muslim country for that matter.

 

I guess I would start with removing the existing crop of politicians from the equation and putting them before a court that could sentence them for their crimes. We have a Prime Minister currently, that is worth billions of dollars, but only pays $50 in taxes each year. That’s just not possible without lying, cheating and a little help from people he has appointed during his 2 previous terms as Prime Minister. When all the politicians, bureaucrats, judges and generals are forced to justify their assets and the courts seize what is stolen, the country will no longer need to take the loans that it requires just to run the day to day operations. That would be the first wave of my magic wand.

 

The second thing I would do is re-think the entire educational system in the country. We need to re-establish the government school system and make it the best educational system in the country. I would force everyone in government, from the elected to the appointed, to enroll their children in the government school system, rather than allow them to attend private schools. When your own child’s future is dependent on the quality of the education, things will improve immediately.

 

Third, I would start a nation re-education campaign for adults. This would be two pronged. The first prong would be selective to provide proper vocational training to those adults who don’t have an interest in education but run general stores, repair shops and other essential services for the people. The second prong would be a national education program that would re-teach the basic tenets and principles of Islam and being a Muslim, without the hate and misinterpretation. This would change the way people deal with people.

 

Lastly, I would bring the masjids under governmental and community control. Today, masjids in Pakistan are only answerable to the imam that leads them. Compare that to the Middle Eastern countries, where the Ministry of Religious Affairs appoints every imam, approved every Friday sermon and has people that monitor that the masjid is not being used for extremist or terrorist activities. Even though we have a Ministry for Religious Affairs, they are too busy enjoying the perks that they get to care one bit about what is happening under their noses. In many cases, it’s one of the fire-brand mullahs that heads the ministry so how do you stop the spread of hate?

 

Judith Lucci:

Can we change our topic a bit?  Tell me a bit about terror groups, how they are formed, how they are recruited and how funded..

 

Khalid Muhammad:

There are essentially three types of terror groups operating in the world today, each one has it’s own characteristics and objectives, which also determine the methods they use and where their funding originates from.

 

First, there is the jihadi group, which is essentially interested in re-establishing the Khilafat, whatever that means to them. They are primarily driven by eliminating the Western, or immoral, influences from Muslim society. These are the ones that will smash televisions, computers, burn DVD and music shops because, in their opinion, this is where the immorality comes from. Some of these jihadi groups are freedom fighters, but the bulk of them are just mercenaries sent in to fight proxy wars. They are funded in two ways. The most common is through the deep state organizations, i.e. intelligence services, who provide cover for their activities. Some are funded heavily by foreign players, which can range from rival intelligence services to foreign countries looking to achieve a goal of their own.

 

The second type of terror group, and the one most common in today’s environment, is the politically motivated group. I say politically motivated because while they will hold on to Islam, or any other religion, as their basis, their goals are completely related to political objectives. To give you an example, this would be the Taliban in Pakistan and Afghanistan, ISIS in Iraq and al-Qaeda to a greater extent. When we talk about politically motivated groups, we are talking about those who are interested in disrupting the normal affairs of the state to achieve a political objective. Sometimes that objective will be the implementation of their version of Sharia law, other times it will be to dislodge the current government from power. In our case, in the Middle East and Indian sub-continent, this is the most common group that we see operating. The fighters are lured with the promise of a strong Islamic state, but in the end, it’s all a power grab. Their funding comes from foreign countries and wealthy individuals. With the Pakistani Taliban, better known as the TTP, much like this parent organization in Afghanistan, the funding comes from Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states. These countries have an abundance of dormant capital and are looking to establish themselves as the power players in the region. It’s also well known that the politically motivated terror groups are funded through front organization charities that collect money and drop it right into the laps of these fighters. Their goal is to spread this interpretation of Islam through the countries where they can take advantage of poor judicial systems, weak educational institutions and overall corrupt governments. The interesting part of the equation is that they are funding both the terror groups and mainstream political parties, if not the state itself, to draw attention away from their own covert actions.

 

The third type of terror group are mercenaries. These are individuals, or organized groups, that travel the region looking for a war to be involved in. We saw great examples of this with the Uzbeks and Tajiks that were part of al-Qaeda, then joined the TTP in Pakistan and finally moved to the Free Syrian Army against the Assad regime. I would not be surprised to find them part of ISIS today. These are guns for hire and go wherever they can get the most bang for their services. Again, these mercenaries are trained and funded by the same countries and individuals that fund the politically motivated terror groups because they are just looking to cause chaos and havoc wherever they go. They are not motivated by religion or political objectives, only money.

 

Judith Lucci:

You mentioned ISIS, who is hot topic in the news currently, do you think much of this would have happened if Sadaam were left in power?

 

Khalid Muhammad:

I was never a big fan of Saddam Hussain, nor of any of the lifelong dictators that the Middle East has. The brutality that Saddam brought to Iraq was inexcusable, but we see the same with Mubarak in Egypt, and I expect that el-Sissi is no different. These were all acceptable options to the West for a long time and that is where most of the Muslim world stumbles on foreign policy. Why is it ok to support a brutal, ruthless dictator when your mantra is democracy for all? You can search the internet and find pictures of all of these dictators with US Presidents, British Prime Ministers and heads of state of any of the developed world. It’s just a contradiction in terms for most of us.

 

But coming back to your question… Would the world have an ISIS today if Saddam had been left in power? I doubt it. No matter what the Western media would like to print, ISIS is a creation that emerged because of the failed state that Iraq became. When the government is no longer in control of large tracks of the country, the military is weak because all the top generals and commanders are gone and the people don’t feel secure with the new system that has been introduced, they will look for another solution for their needs. What we saw happen in Iraq was a re-creation of a system that was never allowed to take hold or fully form. When that happens, you are just asking for the worst outcome.

 

Most of us are expecting the exact same thing to happen in Afghanistan, to be honest.

 

Judith Lucci:

Yes, I agree.

Tell me the profile of a typical suicide bomber.

 

Khalid Muhammad:

There are two profiles of the suicide bomber, neither of which is typical.

 

The religiously motivated one suicide bomber is who believes that he is fighting God's war and has been told that he will only be held responsible for the one that he is there to kill, not the dozens or hundreds of other that die because of his actions. He is madrassah educated and comes from a poor family that has regularly been pushed down by those with wealth. Normally, they don’t any other option for himself other than suicide bombing because there of their limited education and the hate that they have been taught.

 

He has been promised that once he does the deed, his family will receive untold riches, which are never paid. In most cases, the family won't even receive his body because of their disgust over what he did.

 

The second suicide bomber is the tool that is used in war. While he comes from a similar background, he doesn't share the same religious fervor. He wants to fight, but isn't the type to become a martyr. These are typically young children, 12-17, that have a vest strapped to them and they are sent out. Someone else holds the trigger and detonates when they are in the right place.

 

I interviewed some of the 2nd group for my books. They told me about being injected with heroin and turned into drug addicts so that they wouldn't know what was being done to them. They told me stories of sexual abuse. It broke my heart. I don't think I have ever cried as hard as I did after talking to these kids.

 

Judith Lucci:

so misguided, according to my background.  It is difficult, an under statement there.  Get out your wand again, the magic one, and tell me what the West needs to do to help.  Then I want to talk about your books.

 

Khalid Muhammad:

It actually starts with something very simple, stop funding countries that are corrupt. Yes, I know that means Pakistan. But when you cut off their lifelines, these corrupt politicians disappear and we can start building our country right.

 

The West knows that Benazir and Nawaz Sharif (and all their cadres) are corrupt. They have never worked, they own nothing and have millions of dollars in property in Europe and the US. Why don't they ever demand and accounting of where they money came from?

 

When you start to cut them off, you make it better for us. I'll give you another example... less that 2% of Pakistan's politicians pay any taxes. If they are paying their taxes, why are you using your taxpayer money to fund them?

 

The current prime minister, who is worth over $2 billion, paid $50 in taxes last year.

 

Second, invest more in people projects. Rather than funding the government, set up projects through your own embassies and run them yourselves. Build schools, train teachers, build hospitals. Do what the government is supposed to do, rather than giving them the money in the hope that they will do it.

 

It will decrease the anti-Americanism in the countries and build more people-to-people goodwill.

 

 

 

 

 

Judith Lucci:

yes, these make sense.  Are you considering political office?

 

Khalid Muhammad:

I am, but probably 5 years from now. Pakistan is currently going through a shift in thinking. Imran Khan’s protests over the 2013 rigged elections brought the middle class on the streets for the first time and has scared the sitting government, as well as the powers that be. The language that was used to describe my fellow citizens by these crooks sitting in Parliament was disgusting. We were called maids, mechanics, servants, donkeys and many other colorful terms that were infuriating to me, and most citizens.

 

I wasn’t part of the protests, but no politician should speak that way about their own citizens. The result is that the nation has now seen what these people actually think of us. We are fodder to them. We are the people they can abuse to get what they want. We pay for their lives of luxury.

 

Second, the army is seriously taking on the terrorism problem in Pakistan and the politicians are more interested in protecting themselves and the terrorists because of their own links to them. Within the next few years, Pakistan will change dramatically and it will be ready for pro-Pakistan leadership to step forward and help build the country to where it should be.

 

With the implementation of military courts, even though they are being challenged in the Supreme Court by the religious groups, many of the politicians are running for the hills now. They know the jig is up with the military courts becoming the definitive forum for terrorism cases in Pakistan.

 

Judith Lucci:

Let's talk Agency Rules, your extraordinary best seller. Tell me about the inspiration

 

Khalid Muhammad:

The inspiration was to tell the real story of Pakistan - what we struggle with everyday as Pakistanis, from the corruption to the dirty mullahs to the black sheep in our military leadership.

 

I got tired of listening to the narrative that was being made about the country in the Western media and decided that we needed our story told. We have been fighting this problem since the 70s when the USSR invaded Afghanistan. It just came to a head after 9/11 and the war turned on us, and so did the world.

 

Judith Lucci:

And you did a stellar job.  How about your need release for the spring...a sequel?

 

Khalid Muhammad:

Thank you so much. The next volume in the series is Scorched Earth, and is due out in March, which will probably anger my readers. With the success of the first book, my editors are pushing me harder to make the second one much better. They are worried about the sophomore stumble. The first book, Never an Easy Day at the Office, brought the reader through the turbulent 90s. This book takes you into 9/11 and the war that we have been fighting since.

 

Judith Lucci:

when writers write about jihad, what is the most common error they make that just drives you nut..

Khalid Muhammad:

They get it wrong. Totally and completely.

 

They don't know jihad because they don't know the religion. Islam teaches that jihad is the first and foremost priority of every Muslim, but that jihad is the internal struggle to be a better person, not to kill others.

 

People have forgotten that and focus on the bloodshed. The Qu'ran also has specific rules that must be followed when it comes to an armed jihad, which no one talks about.

I share those with you later because when you read them you will see that what ISIS and the Taliban are doing is not jihad, nor is it Islam.

 

For example, you can't kill women or children. Period.

 

Yet, the body counts for those two groups is outrageously high

 

Add to that, most of the commentators on jihad talk about how Muslims haven’t condemned the terrorist activities enough. Yet, there are hundreds, if not thousands, of Muslim scholars that have written, spoken and preached about the errors of the terrorists and how it is not connected to Islam at all. But the Western media never covers these statements and finds the most radical to talk about Islam and terrorism.

 

Judith Lucci:

ISIS and Taliban are considered rogue for sure

 

Khalid Muhammad:

Of course! They are rogue. They are sociopaths. They are mass murderers. But they aren’t Islamic or Muslim by any means.

 

There was recently a report issued that highlighted the top 500 Muslims in the various industries and government. Inside that document was a 23-page letter written from 100 Muslim scholars disproving every act of terrorism from ISIS and similar terrorists with the correct verses from the Qu’ran. You can find the letter at http://themuslim500.com/, but you will need to download the entire guide to get it.

 

I do think it’s sad though. When you look at someone like Anders Breivik, who wrote a 1500 page manifesto about how Christianity needs to return to the violence of Vlad the Impaler, the entire mainstream media played it down and screamed that he couldn’t be a Christian, because no Christian would kill someone in God’s name. I guess they forget the abortion clinic bombers, the KKK and Lord’s Resistance Army. But that same standard is not applied across the board to all religions. One Muslim, who was a recent convert, attacks the Canadian Parliament and the media can’t stop talking about Islamist terror. Another group of Muslims who are moving to Afghanistan to join the Taliban ordered “Islam for Dummies” from Amazon before they left, which was revealed by British intelligence. What Muslim is reading that book before they join a holy war?

 

No matter how much the moderate Muslims talk about how these people are not Muslims, the mainstream media doesn’t hear us. We can’t talk louder just so those who hate Muslims will listen, because they won’t listen even if we are on their shows and in their face.

 

 

 

 

Khalid Muhammad:

I want to thank you for taking the time to interview me. There are a great deal of things that the world doesn’t understand when it comes to these animals and more people need to talk to the Muslims that they know, rather than listening to the media telling them things they don’t understand themselves.

 

People need to understand that there are millions of Muslims that are peace-loving, integrated into their communities and reject the actions of the terrorists who claim to be acting in the name of our religion.

 

That’s not us. Those are psychopaths looking for media glorification and they get it each time the media focuses on them for attacking and killing innocent people. There needs to be a change in the language used to talk about these animals. You aren’t going to find support and assistance to fight a war against people in our midst, until you stop counting us as the enemy. No one will step forward to help when we are all considered the enemy.