Friday, 27 Sep 2024

Rashida Tlaib was unfairly smeared by CNN’s Jake Tapper and Dana Bash | Arwa Mahdawi

Rashida Tlaib was unfairly smeared by CNN’s Jake Tapper and Dana Bash | Arwa Mahdawi


Rashida Tlaib was unfairly smeared by CNN’s Jake Tapper and Dana Bash | Arwa Mahdawi

Here's a handy tip: before you comment on an article, read the whole damn thing. Don't just read the headline, don't just read a paragraph someone screenshot and put on social media - read the whole thing. This one weird trick is very helpful when it comes to ensuring you're not taking something dangerously out of context or just making up facts entirely.

This advice isn't addressed to you, dear reader. I'm sure that you don't need to be told something so basic. Rather it is addressed to everyone - including some very prominent cable news anchors - who has spent the last few days spreading inflammatory misinformation about the Michigan congresswoman Rashida Tlaib. It's addressed to everyone who has falsely and dangerously claimed that Tlaib said that the Michigan attorney general, Dana Nessel, only filed charges against pro-Palestinian activists at the University of Michigan because she is Jewish. Which, if this is what Tlaib actually said, would obviously be an outrageous statement.

But here's what actually happened: on 13 September Tlaib had an interview with Steve Neavling from the Detroit Metro Times where she talked about crackdowns on pro-Palestinian protests. In this interview Tlaib criticized Nessel for filing charges against pro-Palestinian protesters at the University of Michigan when her office hadn't done the same in relation to other protests. Tlaib said the following:

Nowhere in the interview did Tlaib mention anything about Nessel's personal identity, but Neavling's article frames Tlaib's quote with a sentence explaining "Nessel is the first Jewish person to be elected Attorney General of Michigan."

Neavling has since made clear that sentence was not meant to insinuate Tlaib was talking about Nessel being Jewish when she talked about biases; rather Tlaib was referring to anti-Palestinian attitudes that are pervasive in US institutions. Further on in the original interview, Tlaib also explains what she thinks influenced Nessel's decision to charge pro-Palestinian protestors, suggesting the attorney general was being pressured by university authorities.

To recap: absolutely nowhere in the original interview did Tlaib say Nessel charged pro-Palestinian protesters because she's Jewish. And yet that inflammatory claim has spread dangerously far and wide. On Friday, Nessel herself addressed it in a tweet also referencing a cartoon implying Tlaib was a member of Hezbollah.

"Rashida's religion should not be used in a cartoon to imply that she's a terrorist. It's Islamophobic and wrong. Just as Rashida should not use my religion to imply I cannot perform my job fairly as Attorney General. It's anti-Semitic and wrong," wrote Nessel on X.

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