Liar, liar pants on fire. Canadian ‘hate crime’ claim unravels

 

Fake ‘hate crime’ allegations by Muslims are dangerous. They are dangerous not only because they can lead to innocent people being punished for ‘crimes’ they did not commit, but also because these fake grievances are used by Islamic groups to further the interests of Islam in our societies and to gain unwarranted legal privileges for Islam.

One of the most recent cases of a ‘hate crime’ that has most likely been faked to come to my attention is from the United States. According to the respected conservative leaning outlet the Daily Caller (h/t ROP) and the equally respected independent journalist Andy Ngo, a Canadian hockey coach who worked across the border in in Michigan, USA, faked a message criticising him for being Muslim.

The hockey coach, Talha Javaid aged 23 claimed that he had received a message via text on his phone, which he alleged was from the father of one of his hockey team members, that said that Javaid should ‘resign’ and that it would be better if a ‘Muslim was not coaching the kids’. This message, as could be expected, elicited an outpouring of support for Javaid along with the usual virtue signalling about ‘Islamophobia’.

However it seems that things are not exactly as Javaid has painted them. A few days after Javaid tweeted about the alleged incident, Andy Ngo of the Post Millennial site and a local TV station in Michigan did some digging. What they found cast a lot of doubt as to whether or not Javaid was telling the truth.

Mr Ngo screengrabbed Javaid’s original comment, which was lucky as Javaid has since removed it, and the TV station contacted the hockey rink that Javaid alleged he coached the particular child at. It was at this point that it started to fall apart for Javaid. The TV station found that the team that Javaid alleged the child played for didn’t exist. Both the TV station and the Post Millennial contacted the hockey rink and the team and were both told by the rink that Javaid had not only not coached a hockey group there but also that the rink had never heard of Javaid.

With the denials from the hockey rink that they have ever had any connection with Javaid along with the fact that Javaid has locked down all his social media accounts and is refusing to answer questions from journalists, it’s a pretty safe bet to say that this is yet another fake ‘hate crime’. Further confirmation that this allegation by Javaid is false comes from the Post Millennial who are claiming that Javaid has ‘form’ for making ‘hate crime’ allegations. According to the Post Millennial, back in 2017 Javaid put out a very similar claim that he had received a message, this time attached to his car, that Javaid said contained anti-Muslim statements along with the term ‘MAGA’. Again Javaid went public with his claim yet suspiciously nobody was ever apprehended for this action,despite his car being presumably parked in the very large, and possibly CCTV monitored, car park at the Tecumseh Arena where Javaid alleged the incident occurred.

From what I’ve read about this case, this looks like another in a long line of cases where Muslims have faked ‘hate crimes’ in order to be perceived by the general public as ‘victims’ of crime. This is a very widespread problem and has occurred in the USA, Canada and the United Kingdom amongst other places. This problem is now so common and appears in so many different places that it should be considered as wise and sensible to take all claims of Muslim victimhood with a very large pinch of salt. The oft-practised frauds by Muslims aiming to claim ‘victimhood’ by faking ‘hate crimes’ should not only mean that these ‘hate crime’ claims be treated with suspicion, but should also galvanise the public in those nations that have them,to have the easily exploited ‘hate crime’ legislation removed from their statute books.