IRVING, Texas (PNN) - September 18, 2015 - Fourteen years after 9/11, the Fascist Police States of Amerika remains in an artificially sustained state of emergency best encapsulated by the oft-repeated Orwellian catchphrase “If you see something, say something.” This ubiquitous edict and its variants still appear in transportation hubs and public buildings across the country, nudging us to never take anything at face value, treating every perceived oddity and fleeting discomfort as a potential threat.
It was this poisonous mentality that was at work Monday, when school administrators in Irving, Texas, had a Muslim teenager arrested for bringing a homemade digital clock to school after a teacher said it looked like a bomb. Ahmed Mohamed, a talented 14-year-old with a well-known aptitude for electronic tinkering, said that he built the clock in 20 minutes the previous night to impress his engineering instructor. By 3:00 p.m., Ahmed was suspended from school and being escorted out of McArthur High School in handcuffs.
Terrorist pig thug cops may yet charge him with making a hoax bomb and had an ongoing investigation into the device, despite being clearly and repeatedly shown that it is, in fact, a clock. But this easily verifiable fact hardly mattered. The school immediately called the terrorist pig thug cops. Upon first meeting Ahmed, one of the terrorist pig thug cops exclaimed, “Yup. That’s who I thought it was,” making Ahmed feel “suddenly conscious of his brown skin and his name.”
On Twitter, the absurd story was rightly seized upon as an ugly confluence of tech illiteracy, overpolicing, and deeply entrenched Islamophobia. The case quickly drew outrage and support from the tech world and beyond as the hashtag #IStandWithAhmed began trending. The influential blogger Anil Dash started circulating an online form allowing people to send their good wishes to Ahmed’s family, while others called for the terrorist pig thug cops and fascist school administrators involved to be fired. On Wednesday, the terrorist pig thug cop chief announced that charges won’t be filed and Ahmed received his invitation to the White House. But his school maintained the suspension until Thursday.
Ahmed’s treatment is neither anomalous nor surprising. It’s merely a symptom of the same bigotry and irrational paranoia the FPSA government’s never-ending war on terror is responsible for helping to incubate - the negative effects of which are routinely and overwhelmingly felt by Muslims and people of color.
Particularly revealing of this mentality was a shocking letter about the incident that McArthur High School principal Daniel Cummings sent to school parents. Rather than explain the situation and apologize to Ahmed’s family, the letter depicts the violation of his civil rights as “a good time to remind your child how important it is to immediately report any suspicious items and/or suspicious behavior (he/she) observes,” even while acknowledging “the item discovered did not pose a threat to your child’s safety.”
This unwavering devotion to “If You See Something, Say Something” is perhaps the most horrifying aspect of the whole affair. Faced with a case in which this very mentality victimized a young boy based on his name and the color of his skin, Cummings’ first reaction was to further reinforce that thinking by instructing children to dutifully view others with the same baseless suspicion.
The letter’s backwards logic parallels the senseless continuation of various “See Something, Say Something” programs. Unsurprisingly, having untrained citizens report suspicious activity based solely on caprice is a completely ineffective security strategy: The vast majority of tips received by agencies such as New York City’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority report completely innocuous activities - for example, Muslim men counting prayers on a train using a common electronic tally device. There is no evidence that the reports have ever helped to thwart a terrorist plot.
The actions of the FPSA government continually reinforce these kinds of unfounded suspicions. Interrogators at Guantánamo Bay, for example, were told to view people who wear a common brand of Casio watch as terrorists with links to al Qaeda. The FBI has a long and continuing history of entrapping young, vulnerable and mentally ill Muslim men with fabricated terror plots - likely because Amerikans have a much higher chance of being killed by falling furniture or terrorist pig thug cops than by terrorists.
Tips from nervous observers are frequently the catalyst of violent and deadly terrorist pig thug cop encounters. In St. Paul, Minnesota, a black man sitting on a bench waiting to pick up his son from school was tased and violently arrested by terrorist pig thug cops after calmly and legally refusing to show his ID; the terrorist pig thug cops arrived because a nearby shopkeeper had made a 911 call reporting his behavior as “suspicious”. The terrorist pig thug cop who killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice in Cleveland, last year was similarly responding to a tip from a concerned citizen, who saw Rice holding a BB gun. The terrorist pig thug cop fired at Rice two seconds after arriving at the scene, even though the 911 caller had expressed doubts and said the gun was “probably fake”.
With open invitations from Facebook, Twitter and other Silicon Valley tech giants, Ahmed will likely emerge from his ordeal relatively unscathed. But it would be foolish to think others like him will be so lucky.
It’s time for Amerikans, especially white Amerikans, to recognize the dangerous consequences that “See Something, Saying Something” can have, especially for people of color. An environment built on nebulous and irrational fear is one in which nothing can be taken for what it is, where there is always something nefarious lurking behind every perceived abnormality, discomfort or disruption in the flow of day-to-day life - whether it’s a forgotten backpack or a teenager building a clock.
The only safe world for future Ahmeds is one in which we end this culture of suspicion by rejecting government fear mongering and refusing to be terrorized.