
by James A. Bacon
George Mason University has issued No Trespass Orders against two leaders of the university’s Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) organization, Jena and Noor Chanaa. In writing about the inevitable controversy, The Washington Post led with the angle that faculty, staff, students, and advocacy groups are accusing the university police of acting improperly in banning the two women and also in searching their family’s home.
Only by the fourth paragraph does the Post get around to noting that, oh, by the way, here’s what police found in the Chanaa home: four guns, 20 magazines with 30 bullets each, Hamas and Hezbollah flags, and arm patches in Arabic which, when translated, read โKill them where they stand,โ and patches that call for “death to Jews and America.”
The discovery of an arms cache hasn’t stopped self-styled defenders of Muslim rights from bestowing victimhood upon the sisters — see this open letter — and it hasn’t stopped the WaPo from using their claims to distract from news of armed pro-Palestinian militants in Northern Virginia.
“This case reeks of racial and religious profiling,โ said Abdel-Rahman Hamed, the familyโs attorney, in a statement. โThe items found were part of a historical collection, not evidence of any threat. โฆ This is yet another example of the police state targeting American Muslims without cause.โ
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