In my humble opinion the method definitely is, and the conveyance of the message and the message itself could use great revision and rework if it is truly aimed at taking down extremists and educating the public in how to fight extremism rather than promoting Islamophobia.You are asking to disprove a negative. If there is anything, please quote the links. I know where his critics are coming from because they are doing nothing about these ills. Is the message wrong?
By the way, as a former atheist and now a Muslim, and at that a Muslim who's participated in three Muslim majority forums over the course of now some years, I will honestly tell you that I have witnessed extremists in actions on these forums, few though their number was; and that experience, apart from being rather unpleasant, has always been very concerning to me because these forums are also frequented of course by impressionable young teenagers. So, I do think we have to fight extremism if for no other reason than to be able to ensure that brainwashing does not occur in the youth to commit acts of terrorism; because in the end, we all lose, regardless of being a believer or nonbeliever. However, if you want to fight extremism or terrorism, you cannot fight it with Islamophobia because the logic of putting out a fire with another fire is illogical by any definition.
However, I will take up your challenge of quoting links because Clarion project I personally find concerning and untrustworthy for many reasons, mainly funding and promotion of terrorist literature and previously well-known biases and erroneous information found in leading articles:
#1) Let's see what the article "Meet The Donors Behind The Clarion Fund’s Islamophobic Documentary ‘The Third Jihad’" says on the subject:
As a liberal, this is alarming to me because Islamophobia is literally being promoted as a means to vote in Republicans who are more for things like trickle-down economics and more prone to making and maintaining disastrous foreign policy decisions because they tend to be pro-war (hawkish) and pro-intervention (pro-U.S. hegemony) in other countries in ways which frankly no ordinary American wants. So, if the message is for everyone regardless of political affiliation and aiming at taking down extremist elements within the Muslim community, why did Clarion project aim to target presidential swing states with their presumably enlightening DVD? In fact, there's even a more thoroughly researched article called "Clarion Responds, As New Details Emerge About 'Radical Islam' DVD" that goes into the depth of what happened and also mentions the pro-Israel connection. Not only that, the Clarion project criticized Obama administration for supposedly easing up on Islamist charities.Clarion burst onto the scene in 2006 with the movie Obsession: Radical Islam’s War Against the West. In 2008, more than 20 million copies of the film were distributed to homes in presidential election swing states thanks to a $17 million donation, reportedly by right-wing and GOP donor Barre Seid. (Another U.S. group that aided the release later denied involvement but was found to be misleading reporters in order to cover up its role. The head of the group now sits on Clarion’s advisory board.)
The earlier article continues:
But the Third Jihad is not Clarion’s latest project: its focus since shifted to Iran with the 2011 doc Iranium. Written and directed by Alex Traiman, “Iranium” prominently features hawkish experts from two right-wing Washington think tanks, Frank Gaffney’s Center for Security Policy and the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
#2) Do you know ISIS releases magazines that it has each month and its English copies are downloaded and then distributed through the medium of Clarion project? I am all for freedom of speech, but let's not confuse the issue of promoting a terrorist magazine as the means of fighting radical Islam. To fight radical Islam (a term of which I'm not exactly a fan by the way), we need more and better speech, not give an open platform to hate speech of terrorists. Because the hate speech itself is not the problem, just a symptom of the problem, the problem being that terrorists are not able to recognize that they've accepted brainwashing of themselves as the way forward into a darker future for themselves.
#3) Clarion project promotes a clash of civilizations theory, setting itself up as the heroic West fighting against ingrained barbarism and sneakiness of Muslims amounting to a great evil. As the article "Clarion Project" once noted, "[a]mong its many questionable claims, the site asserts that "there are 35 Radical Islamic communities spread across the United States" [8] and that the U.S. legal and financial systems have been infiltrated by 'Stealth Jihad.'[9]" I now note, by the way, that the articles called "U.S. Muslim enclaves" and "Stealth Threat" are no longer available on the Clarion project site, though they were once present.
Also, the article highlights how Clarion project also once gave misleading information on foreign policy specific to Iran:
In another post implying that Iran is developing a nuclear weapon, a view not shared by the U.S. intelligence community, the site claims that the concept of mutually assured destruction, which kept a lid on U.S.-Soviet escalations during the Cold War, "is not sufficient to deter Iran from firing [a nuclear weapon] as Radical Muslims see martyrdom as the path to heaven and utter triumph." The post also claimed that "Iranian theologians have decreed that atomic weapons are permissible to use under Islamic law,"[10] even though Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has issued a binding fatwa against the use of such weapons.
Now, as to your statement:
I understand and respect that.I don't disagree in principle with Warpoet regarding generalisations about Muslims.
But from what I've observed, you still have a long way to go on understanding the complexities of the issues and not taking at face value what's seen or written or promoted and being able to distinguish truly fighting extremism and standing up for rights of others based on humanitarian values versus promulgation of Islamophobia under the aegis of misappropriated labels like fighting against "radical Islam" and then basing your conclusions off of those understandings. Just an observation.
Peace.