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To: FJB who wrote (1295200)3/10/2021 12:26:17 AM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

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Mick Mørmøny

  Respond to of 1583681
 
Muslim woman 'made up NY subway hate attack' by Trump fans

15 December 2016



Yasmin Seweid faces up to a year in jail for each charge

A young Muslim woman who reported being harassed on the New York subway by supporters of US President-elect Donald Trump has been arrested for fabricating the story, officials say.

Yasmin Seweid, 18, said three men had called her a "terrorist".

She has been charged with filing a false report and obstructing governmental administration.

She reportedly later admitted to police she had been out drinking and had made up the story as an excuse.

The student originally told police the men had told her to "get out of this country" and to "get the f****** hijab off your head!", NBC reports.

She said they had tried to tear off her headscarf and that no bystanders had intervened during the alleged incident on 1 December. She also said that one of the men had grabbed her bag, breaking the strap.
"It breaks my heart that so many individuals chose to be bystanders while watching me get harassed verbally and physically by these disgusting pigs," she said on Facebook one day later, according to NBC.

But officials reportedly got suspicious when they could not find witnesses or any significant video.

Then, last Friday, the woman was reported missing, in a case that was widely reported on US media. She was found one day later.

She was arrested on Wednesday and admitted fabricating the story to avoid getting into trouble with her parents.

Ms Seweid was arraigned at Manhattan Criminal Court, where she appeared without a veil and with her hair shaved. Unnamed sources told the NY Daily News her parents had forced her to cut her hair over the incident.

Released on Thursday, she faces up to a year in jail for each charge.

In the days after the election of Mr Trump in November, hundreds of alleged cases of intimidation and abuse were reported in the US. Many of the cases were linked to Trump supporters, a monitoring group said.



To: FJB who wrote (1295200)3/10/2021 12:27:46 AM
From: Maple MAGA 1 Recommendation

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Mick Mørmøny

  Respond to of 1583681
 
Until it was found to be a hoax, Toronto girl's hijab made news, not the attack on her'These things do get blown out of proportion when it’s a marginalized or racialized group. ...

(But) the number of actual hate crimes far outweighs the false reports'
Joseph Brean

January 16, 2018



A police car drives near Pauline Johnson Junior Public School in Toronto on Monday, Jan. 15, 2018. PHOTO BY FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS

A few years ago in Toronto, an 11-year-old girl lied to police. She claimed a man tried to abduct her off the street, but she bit his arm and escaped. Two days later, she admitted she made it up. Her identity was never disclosed and nothing much happened.

“She’s only 11, it’s not like she can be charged with criminal mischief,” a police staff sergeant said at the time.

The case of Khawlah Noman, 11, a grade six student at Pauline Johnson Public School, seems similar. She also falsely claimed to have been attacked by a strange man, which police now say did not happen. But it could not have played out more differently.

At 9:15 a.m. last Friday, Noman’s school contacted police to report her claim that, as she walked to school that day with her brother Mohammad Zakariyya, 10, a man assaulted her with scissors, twice a few minutes apart, trying to cut off her hijab. Less than 20 minutes later, the Toronto Police tweeted an alert. The first news story was posted well before 10 a.m., international interest followed soon after and the school was swarmed with reporters.

A Toronto District School Board spokesperson put the media in touch with the child’s mother, Saima Samad, who agreed to do interviews. That is how a child who was thought to be the victim of a hate crime was being interviewed about it inside her own school, identified by name, and invited by reporters to address her alleged attacker on television.

“This was the decision of the family, not the TDSB,” said Ryan Bird, who is also a spokesman for the TDSB.

This was reality justice and it quickly became fake news. There was no scissor-wielding 20-something Asian male with bangs and a hoodie. But the enthusiastic reporting based on scant information fed into the caricature that mainstream media erupts in pious, sympathetic nodding anytime they hear about Islamophobia.

There used to be a news maxim that “Jews are news,” which made sense when anti-Semitism was the greater cultural concern. Now, it is the hijab that is guaranteed clickbait.

“Today we’re experiencing the very same thing with Muslims,” said Karen Mock, an educational psychologist and human rights consultant who chaired the committee that developed the Ontario government’s hate crime strategy. “These things do get blown out of proportion when it’s a marginalized or racialized group.”

“I think the most important thing to get across is the number of actual hate crimes every year far outweighs the false reports,” Mock said.

The instant panic, which drew impassioned responses from leaders at three levels of government, also showed that, no matter whether they are welcomed or vilified, Muslims are used as a test for a nation’s authenticity.

Toronto police say hijab-cutting incident never happened, investigation is closed



A police car drives near Pauline Johnson Junior Public School in Toronto on Monday, Jan. 15, 2018.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said as much, when he commented on the investigation, a few hours after it began.

“My heart goes out to the young girl who was attacked, seemingly for her religion. I can’t imagine how afraid she must have been,” he said. “I want her and her family and her friends and community to know that that is not what Canada is, that is not who Canadians are… We are better than this.”

“The bottom line here is that this story involves a child who made a mistake,” said Ihsaan Gardee, executive director of the National Council of Canadian Muslims. “We doubt she would have foreseen the full consequences of her actions.”

“The failure occurred with the person who lied,” said Brian Levin, director of the Centre for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino. But for politicians, when there are warning signs, like a young person involved, an educational context, a lack of corroboration, “it never hurts to wait a day.”

He said it should not be a surprise that members of the public, including children, will lie, and the official response has to accommodate that possibility. False crime reports are common, usually for things like personal animus, domestic problems, insurance fraud. At the extreme, they constitute serious crime in and of themselves, such as fake bomb threats, or “swatting,” in which a false report is designed to provoke a police reaction.

“Hate crime hoaxes are pretty rare. However, when they do happen, they often involve school or college-aged folks,” said Levin. The motivation, he said, is often “some kind of reputational enhancement,” or a distraction or diversion from something negative in their own life, or a ploy for sympathy.

“This is a double tragedy,” he said. “People don’t hear about every hate crime… What it ends up doing is casting doubt on the far more that don’t make it into the media.”

Mock similarly said the case should not be ignored because a child lied. Perhaps she was being harassed or bullied and no one was listening to her. Perhaps she herself wanted to get rid of her hijab. Perhaps this was meant as a call for help. Could this be crying wolf to the principal, and being unable to walk it back once the news cameras arrived in her school?

“We don’t know and nobody should be passing judgment until we find out,” Mock said.

• Email: jbrean@nationalpost.com | Twitter: JosephBrean



To: FJB who wrote (1295200)3/10/2021 7:17:55 AM
From: Brumar891 Recommendation

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pocotrader

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1583681
 
Way to set the mud people on one another, fubho.



To: FJB who wrote (1295200)3/10/2021 1:42:29 PM
From: Mongo21161 Recommendation

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pocotrader

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1583681