Posts tagged with “Islamophobia”

Posted 5 months ago

beenthinking:

monsterbeard:

spytap:stfupenguins:farhaaan:

25 Dumbest Comments On Lowe’s Facebook Page About “All-American Muslim”

“All-American Muslim” is a new series on TLC (The Learning Channel) that follows five Muslim families living in Dearborn, Michigan.

Lowe’s pulled all of their advertising from the show because a Christian Evangelical group was angry about the network’s positive portrayal of Muslim culture.

Classy

Why are we censoring these people’s names? They posted publicly on a corporate facebook page under their own names and therefore obviously wanted their views to be attributable - I say let’s let them.

This makes me really sad.  I mean, obviously it’s sad that there are people who think Muslims are bad people, or who are openly prejudiced and hostile toward anyone who is different.  I don’t really care where Lowe’s advertises, but I immediately care if Lowe’s UNadvertises for such a terrible reason.

But then there’s also the response, which seems to be “look at all these dumb people who hate Muslims and now love Lowe’s.”  Which is 1) easy 2) unproductive, 3) kind of the same hateful attitude in return?

Vocal minorities are generally only good at being vocal, not becoming larger.  So here’s a very vocal minority of people putting up offensive comments while there are vastly more who completely disagree with those comments entirely. 

It’s a bit ridiculous any of this is hotly contested in the first place.  We’re talking about a national hardware chain pulling ads from a TLC television show, which isn’t exactly the cultural zeitgeist.  Lowe’s has every right to pull their ads from wherever, and then claim the consumer response from that action, whether positive or negative.

While a show about American Muslim families might be found offensive by some subset of subhumans in Florida, there’s also the flip side of the fact that TLC is making a show about American Muslims in the first place (E.g. “Look at these creatures.  Isn’t it weird to think Muslims exist IN AMERICA?  And they also go to Taco Bell or the Gap?  My horizons are broadened!”), which leaves me with feeling like I shouldn’t even bother being upset with Lowe’s itself.

But if you strip all of that away, we’re left with the fact that Lowe’s pulled its ads because a group in Florida protested that the show was “propaganda that riskily hides the Islamic agenda’s clear and present danger to American liberties and traditional values,” which is insane both in the obvious respect and also as if every TV show was not already propaganda of some kind (TLC’s being, hey, check out these people you think are weird and become obsessed with them.  It has, after all, been quite successful.)

Anyway, to get to my point, instead of a list of the 25 dumbest comments on a facebook page, why not a campaign to get Home Depot to advertise on the show?  I mean, at this point the whole thing is too hot for a corporate entity to touch, but if anything, at least Lowe’s could be shown how ignorant their decision was and also it would be a win for Home Depot and the show itself.  It’s not that I necessarily like Home Depot or want to push a big box store over your local hardware store, but we’re talking about national advertisers so our options are pretty limited.

So anyway, Home Depot can be contacted at their contact page, or their Facebook page, or their twitter account @homedepot Tell them to support real American values, to support respectful understanding of different cultures and encourage diversity and tolerance.  Tell them whatever you want, if you want.  Might as well, right?

We’ve been talking lately about how incredibly important it is to be constructive and I thought this was a small and perfect example. Sure, I’m tempted to say Lowe’s is a bunch of reactionary cowards for pulling their advertising, but that’s not really the point. The point is, what do I want to do about it as a result (other than add to the cacophony of bitching about a company I don’t patronize and how it affects a show I’ve never seen). A huge part of the reason I stopped working in politics was the obsessive focus on the zero sum game. It wasn’t about building anything - it became so much about how we could tear down what anyone else was attempting to build and perhaps even hobble them in the process.

These days, I am working to pay less attention to our collective anger and more to what productivity or inspiration that energy could fuel. I know a lot of things are a mess…. but that doesn’t make the world full of bad people and it sure as hell doesn’t abdicate us from our personal responsibility to climb in the mire and help sort it all out.

No one’s going to do this for us, you know?

“These days, I am working to pay less attention to our collective anger and more to what productivity or inspiration that energy could fuel. I know a lot of things are a mess…. but that doesn’t make the world full of bad people and it sure as hell doesn’t abdicate us from our personal responsibility to climb in the mire and help sort it all out.”

Let this be the new ethos of this decade.

Posted 1 year ago
Posted 1 year ago

For shame.

“The passenger, Michael Enright, 21, of Brewster, N.Y., hailed the cab at Second Avenue and East 24th Street around 6 p.m. Tuesday, the police said. Twenty blocks north, they said, he slashed and stabbed the 43-year-old driver in his throat, face and arm.

The driver — identified by the New York Taxi Workers Alliance, a drivers’ group, as Ahmed H. Sharif, 43, a Bangladeshi immigrant — stopped the cab and approached a police officer on Third Avenue near 42nd Street. Mr. Enright was arrested at the scene.

According to the taxi workers’ alliance, Mr. Sharif’s fare started the ride asking him in a friendly way if he was Muslim, whether he was observing Ramadan, and how long he had been in the United States.

After falling silent for a few minutes, the passenger began cursing and screaming, and then yelled, “Assalamu alaikum — consider this a checkpoint!” and slashed Mr. Sharif across the neck, and then on the face from his nose to his upper lip, the alliance said. (“Assalamu alaikum” — “peace be with you” — is a traditional Muslim greeting.)”

I was afraid of this ever since the blindingly ignorant quotes of Sarah Palin and Newt Gingrich, among others, began its course through the news cycles of the past few weeks. Shameful.

Posted 1 year ago

Oh Jon Stewart, in a world of crazies in every corner of opinion and a media industry cocktail mix of loud, ignorant, and dumb voices, I wish I could be as funny about it as you are.

Truly and sincerely with every fiber of my soul, 

Black Polos

Note: Click on permalink to view video.

Posted 1 year ago

Breaking the Silence

Excuse the long post. I’ve been doing a decent job of not discussing the incident of last month in conversation with anyone at all, but it just doesn’t seem to leave my conscience, and so I quoted:

“Nonviolence means avoiding not only external physical violence but also internal violence of spirit. You not only refuse to shoot a man, but you refuse to hate him.”

- Martin Luther King Jr.

Its been a quote I’ve been repeating to myself quite often since last month. I refuse to hate against those who hate who I am and what I stand for. If my past posts have been any indicator, I’ve become more expressive of my thoughts on certain topics since last year. I’ve blogged, linked and reblogged about social issues more frequently than I have before, because in truth I feel that it is important to have an understanding of these things as they do affect the world around us.

Since last semester, I’ve been developing an opinion on near everything, and surely without a doubt as everyone does at some point, I’ve found some who agree with me and some who don’t. Whatever the case may be, usually we still walk away respecting each other’s viewpoints. Yet somehow within a particular topic, seemed to have hit a serious nerve. Serious enough that an anonymous phone call was deemed necessary with a manner of language that would delight a KKK member’s ear.

About a month ago, I picked up the call from an anonymous angry young voice who claimed he knew who I was and what “my kind” had done and, in a nutshell, promised that he would deliver me to the gates of hell in the fastest manner possible. The voice followed up with a battery of anti-Islam slurs that would only come from the mouth of an ignorant soul.

This would be the third time a threat made against me regarding an issue someone has with my identity; once when I was 10, again when I was 17, and here we are now. The first time it had happened I was in fear as it was the first real crack of reality I had seen beyond my innocence. The second time had taught me that hatred and ignorance only feeds itself into others and the only way to fight it is to do more good. What made this third time a bit more shocking was that this particular individual, indirectly wished death upon me.

I realize I’ve made my share of mistakes as anyone else in an imperfect world, but for all the good that I do and have done, is this what I get?

I am a Muslim and I forever will submit myself to God, but does that mean I must be like those who drive around in a Toyota pickup with an AK-47 mounted in the back? No. As a Muslim, would I be this women’s rights abusing, warmongering, U.S. subverting barbarian this anonymous caller claimed me to be? If anything, my religion has influenced me to be the opposite of all of his claims. Just as in other faiths, some people draw more drastic interpretations with little sense of reasoning or context and simply refuse to acknowledge anything that clashes with their own view. Am I one of these people? No and believe me when I say that I am not alone.

Whoever it was, I refuse to hate him nor do I wish vengeance. Pity? Perhaps, but hatred is not an option. What good would that do? Instead I hope that the hatred that has come to know my phone number I hope will someday truly gain an understanding of who I am. 

I only wish the world would repeat after me and believe in every word echoed: I am and I always have been a better person than hatred and ignorance. I believe we all are better than hatred and ignorance. It may seem naive to some, but to those feel that way must understand no one was born wanting to pick up a phone and spout words of hate. No one was born waiting to make a threat of violence. No soul was born wanting to do this.