Arrest of 14-Year-Old Student for Making a Clock:
The Fruits of Sustained Fearmongering and Anti-Muslim Animus
By Glenn Greenwald
September 17, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "The
Intercept"
There are
sprawling industries and self-proclaimed career “terrorism
experts” in the U.S. that profit
greatly by deliberately exaggerating the threat of
Terrorism and keeping Americans in a state of abject fear of
“radical Islam.” There are all sorts of polemicists who build their
public platforms by demonizing Muslims and scoffing at concerns
over “Islamaphobia,” with the most toxic ones insisting that such a
thing does not even exist, even as the mere presence of mosques is
opposed across the country, or even as they are physically attacked.
The U.S. government just formally
renewed the “State of Emergency” it declared in the aftermath of
9/11 for the 14th time since that attack occurred, ensuring
that the country remains in a state of permanent, endless war,
subjected to powers that are still classified as “extraordinary”
even though they have become entirely normalized. As a result of all
of this, a minority group of
close to 3 million people is routinely targeted with bigotry and
legal persecution in the Home of the Free, while fear and hysteria
reign supreme in the Land of the Brave.
What
happened in Irving, Texas, yesterday to a 14-year-old Muslim
high school freshman is far from the worst instance, but it is
highly illustrative of the rotted fruit of this sustained climate of
cultivated fear and demonization. The Dallas Morning News
reports that “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,” but “instead, the school phoned
police.”
Despite insisting that he made the clock to
impress his engineering teacher, consistent with his long-time
interest in “inventing stuff,” Ahmed was arrested by the police
and led out of school with his hands cuffed behind him. When he
was brought into the room to be questioned by the four police
officers who had been dispatched to the school, one of them — who
had never previously seen him — said: “Yup. That’s who I thought it
was.” As a result, he “felt suddenly conscious of his brown skin and
his name — one of the most common in the Muslim religion.”
On Twitter, Anil Dash
published a photo, provided by the boy’s family, taken as he was
led out in cuffs. Note that he’s wearing a NASA shirt:
Photo: Anil Dash/Twitter
There’s absolutely no evidence that this was
anything more than a clock, nor any indication of any kind that the
talented and inventive freshman built it as anything other than a
school project. But even now, “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.” According
to the
BBC, “police spokesman James McLellan said that, throughout the
interview, Ahmed had maintained that he built only a clock, but said
the boy was unable to give a ‘broader explanation’ as to what it
would be used for.”
The Dallas Morning News let Ahmed speak
for himself by posting a video of him recounting what happened.
Behold the Terrorist Mastermind:
The behavior here is nothing short of demented.
And it’s easy to mock, which in turn has the effect of belittling it
and casting it as some sort of bizarre aberration. But it’s not
that. It’s the opposite of aberrational. It’s the natural,
inevitable byproduct of the culture of fear and demonization that
has festered and been continuously inflamed for many years. The
circumstances that led to this are systemic and cultural, not
aberrational.
The mayor of Irving, Beth Van Duyne, became
a beloved national hero to America’s anti-Muslim fanatics when,
last February, she seized on a fraudulent online chain letter,
which claimed that area imams had created a special court based on
sharia law. In response, Mayor Van Duyne posted
a Facebook rant in which she vowed to “fight with every fiber of
my being” the nonexistent “sharia court.” One anti-Muslim website
gushed that Irving “is being called ‘ground zero’ in the battle
to prevent Islamic law from gaining a foothold, no matter how small,
in the U.S. legal system” and hailed her as “the mayor who stood up
to the Muslim Brotherhood.”
That
led to support for a bill introduced in the Texas State
Legislature banning the use of foreign law, which its sponsor made
clear was targeted at least in part at these “sharia courts.” The
Irving City Council went out of its way to
enact a resolution supporting the state bill. It was
enacted in June. One of the City Council members who opposed the
bill — William “Bill” Mahone, who “denounced the vote and urged
Irving to ’embrace the Muslims'” — then
lost his seat in the city election “by a wide margin.” I’ve
spoken to Muslim groups in Irving and there is a small but thriving
community there, which in turn has produced intense anti-Muslim
animus.
Just like Ahmed’s arrest, Irving is representative of
the U.S. broadly, not aberrational. The U.S. just a few years ago
went into a shameful fit of mass hysteria over a proposed Islamic
community center near Ground Zero — as though Muslims generally were
guilty of that attack — but since then, in obscurity, ordinary
mosques have
faced all sorts of opposition from their mere existence, or once
they do exist,
physical menacing and violence. A 2014 Pew Poll
found that Americans feel more negatively toward Muslims than
any other religious group in the country.
There are all sorts of obvious, extreme harms that
come from being a nation at permanent war. Your country ends up
killing huge numbers of innocent people all over the world. Vast
resources are drained away from individuals and programs of social
good into the pockets of weapons manufacturers. Core freedoms are
inexorably and inevitably eroded — seized — in its name. The groups
being targeted are marginalized and demonized in order to
maximize fear levels and tolerance for violence.
But perhaps the worst of all harms is how endless
war degrades the culture and populace of the country that
perpetrates it. You can’t have a government that has spent decades
waging various forms of war against predominantly Muslim countries
— bombing
seven of them in the last six years alone — and then act
surprised when a Muslim 14-year-old triggers vindictive fear and
persecution because he makes a clock for school. That’s no more
surprising than watching carrots sprout after you plant carrot seeds
in fertile ground and then carefully water them. It’s natural and
inevitable, not surprising or at all difficult to understand.
Glenn Greenwald is a journalist, constitutional
lawyer, and author of four New York
Times best-selling books on politics and law. His most
recent book, No Place to Hide, is about the U.S.
surveillance state and his experiences reporting on the Snowden
documents around the world. Prior to his collaboration with Pierre
Omidyar, Glenn’s column was featured at The
Guardian and Salon.
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