dailybeast | “For decades, America’s Muslim community has endured blanket
portrayals that focus on one thing, not their families or individual
achievements or even anything about Islam,” she said Wednesday. “Nope,
just one thing: terrorism. Particularly after 9/11, profiling became a
near American obsession for anybody Brown—god forbid with a beard or
headscarf, whether they were Muslim or not, traveling through an airport
could be hell. Physical attacks on not just Muslims, but Sikhs, who are
not Muslim, increased.”
After noting how prevalent anti-Muslim
stereotypes have been in media and entertainment, Reid then wondered
aloud why there was a double standard when it came to describing
extremism among white right-wingers compared to Muslim terrorism, taking
aim at how the president has radicalized his base.
“It’s the
misportrayal that is the problem,” she stated. “We’re all too quick to
call out those who radicalize young men who are vulnerable. There have
been treatments of this all over cable news for years. But when white
Christians are radicalized, we don’t react the same way. When was the
last time Donald Trump or anyone in his campaign was asked if they are
willing to condemn the Boogaloo Boys by name?”
Touching on her own
remarks, Reid was largely unapologetic, insisting that her comments
were taken in bad faith and misconstrued.
“I asked that question
on Monday, and there was a lot of conversation, particularly online
after the segment aired, some of which was frankly not in good faith,”
the ReidOut host declared. “But some of the conversation
reflected the genuine feelings of people who have been subjected to the
kind of stereotyping that I just described.”
“And who take matters
like this to heart because of it,” she continued. “And we should all be
sensitive to that, and I certainly should have been sensitive to that.”
She then turned to Newsweek
editor-at-large Naveed Jamali, who was her guest during the Monday
discussion, and said it was “not exactly the most artful way of asking
that question, obviously, based on the reaction.”
“The way that I framed it obviously didn’t work,” she added.
Besides
Jamali, Reid also brought on Dalia Mogahed, the director of research
for The Institute for Social Policy and Understanding, to discuss
whether Reid made a “fair analogy."
Mogahed, for her part, said
that Reid has “always given Muslim voices a fair shake” before noting
that while the MSNBC host “intended” to ask a fair question, the way “it
landed” was “unintentionally saying that Muslims were inherently
violent.”
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