The world of right-wing extremism produces people who so deeply
believe in conspiracy theories woven out of fantasies that they stop
being able to distinguish between reality and fantasy – or, in some
cases, satire.
And in the case of Dearborn, Mich., this week, satire was mistaken
for reality by a large number of such people. An article published at a
satirical website mocking right-wing paranoia about Shariah law (Muslim
religious law) being imposed in the United States – headlined “City in Michigan First to Fully Implement Sharia Law” and informing readers that Dearborn was now under Muslim control – was mistaken by a large number of people for the real thing.
Spread widely through social media, the story published at the
National Report satire site – which publishes fake news in the manner of
The Onion, though perhaps more obliquely – sparked an outpouring of
outrage from conservatives who have been warned by a number of
conspiracist anti-Muslim organizations
that Islamic radicals intend to begin imposing “Sharia Law” in the
United States. Thousands of phone calls and E-mails came pouring in to
Dearborn City Hall.
It reached such a boiling point that the Dearborn mayor’s office
issued a statement over the weekend clarifying reality. “Dearborn has
never been, nor ever will be, under sharia law. We are governed by the
U.S. Constitution, the Constitution of the State of Michigan and the
City of Dearborn Charter,” Mayor John O’Reilly said. “We are a city
named after a Revolutionary War hero. We have lost loyal Dearborn
American military service personnel in every war this country has fought
to protect the individual rights we are guaranteed through the U.S.
Constitution.”
The National Report specializes in satire mocking extremist fears,
often by taking them to their illogical conclusion. A similar satirical
piece conned Fox News pundit Anna Kooiman
into believing that President Obama intended to keep the International
Museum of Muslim Cultures open during the government shutdown by paying
for it out of his personal funds. She then went on Fox News’ “Fox and
Friends Weekend” program and told her audience that Obama intended to do
this, adding: “It really doesn’t seem fair.” She later retracted the
remarks.
But the reason the Dearborn satire sparked such a reaction was that
in many ways it told paranoid Muslim-bashers that fears they had warned
about were coming true.
Dearborn in fact has one of the nation’s largest Arab-American
communities by percentage of population, and as such is an active center
of Muslim worship. That in turn has produced a great deal of paranoia
about the town by right-wing conspiracists, especially since 2001. A
2012 Atlantic article, “Dearborn: Where Americans Come to Hate Muslims,” explored the great extent to which the city is a magnet for Muslim-bashers (notably the Islam-hating Florida pastor Terry Jones) and people committing acts of violence as well, including an attempted bombing of a Dearborn mosque.
Mayor O’Reilly blamed the National Report for inspiring the
outpouring from angry conservatives who believed the fake report. “The
National Report’s misguided attempt at humor furthers the goals of some
people who have tried to suggest that the City of Dearborn is
anti-American because our population includes residents who are Muslim,”
the mayor’s statement read. “The National Report is not a news site,
but is only pretending to be one. Its purpose is entertainment. In this
case, its outrageous story, with no basis in fact, has ended up fooling
people in part because it mirrors allegations made by others in the past
with less than humorous intentions.”
Despite the mayor’s comments, it seems hard to believe that so many
people would swallow the National Report’s tall tale, which was replete
with sentences like this one: “The new law could see citizens stoned for
adultery or having a limb amputated for theft. Lesser offenses, such as
drinking alcohol or abortion, could result in flogging and/or caning.
In addition, the law imposes harsh laws with regards to women and allows
for child marriage.”
Attempts at contacting the editors of the National Report were not successful.
Cross-posted at Hatewatch.