For this post I'm gonna have to ask all
of you to not put on your Social Justice Warrior t-shirt, form your
own opinion, be honest, and realize that things are not the way they
used to be. A few days ago a 14 year old student in Irving, Texas
named Ahmed Mohamed was arrested for bringing a home made alarm clock to school.
His teacher freaked out thinking it was a bomb, just like I would've,
and called the police which led to his arrest. “I built the clock
to impress my teacher, but when I showed it to her, she thought it
was a threat to her. It was really sad that she took the wrong
impression from it” Ahmed said after being released from a
detention center to his parents.
The school, MacArthur High School, said
that they are willing to allow Ahmed to return to the school but the
family does not want him there and deciding where he'll go instead.
The internet has started the hashtags #IstandWithAhmed and
#EngineersForAhmed because that is what the world does now. President
Barack Obama even invited him to the White House. Why? I'm not sure.
I'm really not.
Even as I write this I am thinking of
so many people in the news that would have loved to meet the
president that suffered tragedies, soldiers that have lost limbs and
their minds, their families, and people who have lost their
livelihoods due to all kinds of crazy things in this country. None of
them have met the president. A kid that was arrested for making an
alarm clock that looked like a bomb will. Go figure.
The school has defended what it did
stating “We do stand behind what the teacher did. Even though that
particular item did not pose an immediately dangerous situation to
the school, we cannot allow items on campus that can be perceived to
pose a threat.” His three day suspension is still in place. The
school also issued a memo to parents and to use this incident as an
“...opportunity to talk with your child about the Student Code of
Conduct and specifically not bringing items to school that are
prohibited. This is a good time to remind your child how important it
is to immediately report any suspicious items and/or suspicious
behavior.”
Was this a case of Islamophobia
(“dislike of or prejudice against Islam or Muslims, especially as a
political force”)? I know I'm in the minority here when I say this,
but I do not think so. Sure, his entire name does not help combined
with what it looks like he brought to school. I'm not blind. I know
how people think. A kid named Ahmed shows up to school with what
appears to be a bomb in todays world where kids kill each other the
way me and others threw rocks and a teacher isn't supposed to freak
out? A few weeks ago I was late for work because there was a
suspicious package on the corner of Laurel Canyon & Ventura Blvd.
Turned out it was VCR parts. Looked nothing like a bomb. What he made
looked just like one.
This does not look anything like what's on your nightstand. |
To me this was a huge misunderstanding
that could've been handled with a short conversation the previous
day. Tell the teacher you made an alarm clock and wanted to show it
to her. Then she could say whether or not that was necessary. That
way you're not arrested, suspended for three days, and changing
schools. I don't like how quickly people jumped on the hate wagon.
When a Black guy is shot by cops I wait to hear the whole story. Why?
To gather facts. I don't think he is innocent because he is Black and
cops beat and kill guys my skin color.
We live in a world where we just had
the fourteen year anniversary of an attack on our country that this
kid happens to be in close proximity to the nationality that did it. We are
currently murdering thousands of people that look like this kid at
this moment. Do you honestly think that didn't cross that teachers
mind when she saw what looked like a damned bomb in her classroom?
Pretend for a moment that you are a free thinking individual and not
a sheep that jumps on every social issue that is popular for the week
and ask yourself what you'd do in her situation. There's a difference between racism, bigotry, Islamophobia, and being extremely cautious.
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