The olive-skinned, burly Baz hails from Dearborn, the hometown of Henry Ford and the capital of Arab America. His story begins at 10 years old, when he and the rest of his Muslim family watch their television in horror as airplanes fly into the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. Events unfold from there as U.S. Arabs and Muslims find themselves falling under intense suspicion and ostracism in the days, months and years following the attacks.Henry Ford, BTW, is the American who probably did the most to spread that poisonous tract, Protocols of the Elders of Zion. No coincidence that that piece of excrement, a supposed touchstone of Jewry's evil, was much beloved by Hitler and remains a perennial bestseller in many Muslim quarters.
"Obviously, it's affecting everybody," said Johns, who grew up in nearby suburbs in a Lebanese Christian household and got into comics when he discovered his uncle's old collection in his Arabic grandmother's attic. "One of the things I really wanted to show was its effect on Simon and his family in a very negative way."
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Post-9/11 "Islamophobia" Gives Rise to the First Superhero from Dearbornistan
For guilt-ridden leftists, the true victims of 9/11 aren't the true victims of 9/11, the people killed by devout Muslims in the grip of the jihad imperative. They're the folks who are the victims of "Islamophobia." And how better to salve this guilt than by transforming one of the faux victims into a hero--a superhero, no less:
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