It's Time to Stop Xenophobia Already
In a shocking turn of events, two Harlem area high school girls have been detained on suspicion that they were suicide bombers and, according to the US government, an imminent threat to the security of the United States.
Fortunately, one of the girls, an imigrant from Guinea named Adama Bah, was released and was allowed to return to her East Harlem high school without further hassle.
The other girl, a girl whose family is from Bangladesh, is still in a maximum security detention facility and is being given the option of returning to Bangladesh with her family.
If I ever thought the US justice system could sink no lower than it already has, I was horribly wrong. Adama's english teacher described her as:
But then again, everyone who isn't rich and white seems to suddenly be a threat in the eyes of the US government. She's only getting picked on because the federal government doesn't like non-Christians.
It becomes fairly obvious when you look at the fact that her parents run a Muslim trinket store, her father is in trouble for alleged immigration violations (probably also fabricated by the FBI), and she wears a traditional Muslim garb over her casual clothes.
I also feel sorry for the girl from Bangladesh, who seems to be not safe in this "land of the free" and "home of the brave."
So as long as there is no proof whatsoever that she was going to attempt a bombing attack on targets in the United States, she should be arrested forced to rot in a maximum security prison, which is designed for people like the Green River Killer, the Zodiac Killer, and Charles Manson, and not regular young men and women on the streets.
This is illegal and is a disgrace to what we stand for in the US constitution. This must never happen again, and those who have been affected must be compensated for their loss at the hands of an incompetent government.
We must stand up and eradicate the meanace the current administration is creating through their policies.
Fortunately, one of the girls, an imigrant from Guinea named Adama Bah, was released and was allowed to return to her East Harlem high school without further hassle.
The other girl, a girl whose family is from Bangladesh, is still in a maximum security detention facility and is being given the option of returning to Bangladesh with her family.
If I ever thought the US justice system could sink no lower than it already has, I was horribly wrong. Adama's english teacher described her as:
A vibrant, popular teenager who wore jeans under her Islamic garb, ran for student body president, and hung out with the daughter of the PTA president, a Christian girl, when she was not baby-sitting for her younger brothers and sistersSuicide bomber threat indeed. It seems that no one EXCEPT THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT seemed to think she was a security risk.
But then again, everyone who isn't rich and white seems to suddenly be a threat in the eyes of the US government. She's only getting picked on because the federal government doesn't like non-Christians.
It becomes fairly obvious when you look at the fact that her parents run a Muslim trinket store, her father is in trouble for alleged immigration violations (probably also fabricated by the FBI), and she wears a traditional Muslim garb over her casual clothes.
I also feel sorry for the girl from Bangladesh, who seems to be not safe in this "land of the free" and "home of the brave."
So as long as there is no proof whatsoever that she was going to attempt a bombing attack on targets in the United States, she should be arrested forced to rot in a maximum security prison, which is designed for people like the Green River Killer, the Zodiac Killer, and Charles Manson, and not regular young men and women on the streets.
This is illegal and is a disgrace to what we stand for in the US constitution. This must never happen again, and those who have been affected must be compensated for their loss at the hands of an incompetent government.
We must stand up and eradicate the meanace the current administration is creating through their policies.
