i love when shitty racists get what they deserve 🙂
what the fuck tho seriously who the fuck says this wtf
Tag: islamophobia
Seriously?
yeah they are serious.
I looked up the article, and actually, it’s rather sweet?
Was that a pun? Anyway I looked up the article it was rather genuine sounding but I think that detail should have been left out.
omg that wasn’t an intentional pun ahaha
i kinda agree. at least, it seemed like a weird mention? *blah blah erased the other stuff i typed here*
idk the guy who made that tweet made a response to ppl such as myself thinking it was positive and stuff if you or anyone cares to read it here x
he’s very likely right and i dont know personally since i usually avoid the daily mail as i think its an unreliable source
The problem is the writer of the article slipped a reference to a terrorist attack in a what is supposed to be nice article about a Muslim woman winning a tv competition. It is rather sneaky and is Islamophobic. It seems like they are trying to hint at something.
They know that there is bias against Muslim people and slipping a reference to terrorism (even if it’s one line) reinforces the association to Muslim people and terrorism. The article was supposed to be about Nadiya Hussain winning bake off and how it is positive for British Muslims the terrorist mention undermines that message and shouldn’t have been there at all.
Seriously?
yeah they are serious.
I looked up the article, and actually, it’s rather sweet?
Was that a pun? Anyway I looked up the article it was rather genuine sounding but I think that detail should have been left out.
they should have left that islamophobic detail out like .. they can never celebrate Muslims achievements without associating us with terrorism.
It makes me sick someone would call it “sweet” when they said that.
why is everyone an islamophobic idiot. fucking hell…
This is Inderjit Singh Mukker, a Sikh man from Chicago who was brutally assaulted on September 8, 2015.
On his way home from the grocery store, his car was tailgated by another. When Inderjit Singh pulled over, the driver of the car behind him came out and began punching Inderjit Singh in the face repeatedly while yelling “go back to your country, terrorist… Bin Laden,” and this continued until he lost consciousness.
14 years after 9-11 our beards and turbans still make us an open target for hatred. Sardaar and hijabi brothers and sister, please be on the lookout and stay safe.
a more important message than the “never forget” posts you’ll see today.
FOR ANON
Ahmad has a clock!
I’m dying!!! These guys have no chill!!! LOVE IT
So, yeah.
This 14-year-old Muslim American student was detained for bringing a homemade clock to school
Ahmed Mohamed, a 14-year-old Muslim student was arrested at his high school in Irving, Texas, after bringing a homemade clock to class, which school officials mistook for a bomb. Mohamed showed his engineering teacher first, but when the alarmed went off later in the day, that’s when the trouble started.
MUST Read & #JeSuisAhmed: Irving 9th-grader arrested after taking homemade clock to school: ‘So you tried to make a bomb?’
By Avi Selk via dallasmorningnews (Photo credit: Vernon Bryant)
IRVING — Ahmed Mohamed — who makes his own radios and repairs his own go-kart — hoped to impress his teachers when he brought a homemade clock to MacArthur High on Monday.
Instead, the school phoned police about Ahmed’s circuit-stuffed pencil case.
So the 14-year-old missed the student council meeting and took a trip in handcuffs to juvenile detention. His clock now sits in an evidence room. Police say they may yet charge him with making a hoax bomb — though they acknowledge he told everyone who would listen that it’s a clock.
In the meantime, Ahmed’s been suspended, his father is upset and the Council on American-Islamic Relations is once again eyeing claims of Islamophobia in Irving.
Box of circuit boards
A box full of circuit boards sits at the foot of Ahmed’s small bed in central Irving. His door marks the border where the Mohamed family’s cramped but lavishly decorated house begins to look like the back room at RadioShack.
“Here in high school, none of the teachers know what I can do,” Ahmed said, fiddling with a cable while a soldering iron dangled from the shelf behind him.
He loved robotics club in middle school and was searching for a similar niche in his first few weeks of high school.
So he decided to do what he’s always done: He built something.
Ahmed’s clock was hardly his most elaborate creation. He said he threw it together in about 20 minutes before bedtime on Sunday: a circuit board and power supply wired to a digital display, all strapped inside a case with a tiger hologram on the front.
He showed it to his engineering teacher first thing Monday morning and didn’t get quite the reaction he’d hoped for.
“He was like, ‘That’s really nice,’” Ahmed said. “‘I would advise you not to show any other teachers.’”
He kept the clock inside his school bag in English class, but the teacher complained when the alarm beeped in the middle of a lesson. Ahmed brought his invention up to show her afterward.
“She was like, it looks like a bomb,” he said.
“I told her, ‘It doesn’t look like a bomb to me.’”
The teacher kept the clock. When the principal and a police officer pulled Ahmed out of sixth period, he suspected he wouldn’t get it back.
They led Ahmed into a room where four other police officers waited. He said an officer he’d never seen before leaned back in his chair and remarked: “Yup. That’s who I thought it was.”
Ahmed felt suddenly conscious of his brown skin and his name — one of the most common in the Muslim religion. But the police kept him busy with questions.
The bell rang at least twice, he said, while the officers searched his belongings and questioned his intentions. The principal threatened to expel him if he didn’t make a written statement, he said.
“They were like, ‘So you tried to make a bomb?’” Ahmed said.
“I told them no, I was trying to make a clock.”
“He said, ‘It looks like a movie bomb to me.’”
Police skepticism
Ahmed never claimed his device was anything but a clock, said police spokesman James McLellan. And police have no reason to think it was dangerous. But officers still didn’t believe Ahmed was giving them the whole story.
“We have no information that he claimed it was a bomb,” McLellan said. “He kept maintaining it was a clock, but there was no broader explanation.”
Asked what broader explanation the boy could have given, the spokesman explained:
“It could reasonably be mistaken as a device if left in a bathroom or under a car. The concern was, what was this thing built for? Do we take him into custody?”
Police led Ahmed out of MacArthur about 3 p.m., his hands cuffed behind him and an officer on each arm. A few students gaped in the halls. He remembers the shocked expression of his student counselor — the one “who knows I’m a good boy.”
Ahmed was spared the inside of a cell. The police sent him out of the juvenile detention center to meet his parents shortly after taking his fingerprints.
They’re still investigating the case, and Ahmed hasn’t been back to school. His family said the principal suspended him for three days.
“They thought, ‘How could someone like this build something like this unless it’s a threat?’” Ahmed said.
An Irving ISD statement gave no details about the case, citing student privacy laws.
‘Invent good things’
“He just wants to invent good things for mankind,” said Ahmed’s father, Mohamed Elhassan Mohamed, who immigrated from Sudan and occasionally returns there to run for president. “But because his name is Mohamed and because of Sept. 11, I think my son got mistreated.”
Mohamed is familiar with anti-Islamic politics. He once made national headlines for debating a Florida pastor who burned a Quran.
But he wasn’t paying much attention this summer when Irving Mayor Beth Van Duyne became a national celebrity in anti-Islamic circles, fueling rumors in speeches that the religious minority was plotting to usurp American laws.
However, the Council on American-Islamic Relations took note.
“This all raises a red flag for us: how Irving’s government entities are operating in the current climate,” said Alia Salem, who directs the council’s North Texas chapter and has spoken to lawyers about Ahmed’s arrest.
“We’re still investigating,” she said, “but it seems pretty egregious.”
Meanwhile, Ahmed is sitting home in his bedroom, tinkering with old gears and electrical converters, pronouncing words like “ethnicity” for what sounds like the first time.
He’s vowed never to take an invention to school again.
Shame on this country for this. I am so angry.
one time a boy tried to pull my hijab off
i punched him in the face
closed fist, short swing, right in the jaw
there is a point where you stop trying to educate people and start making the consequences of their racist bullshit real fuckin clear.