Media bias has taken Clock Boy’s story, the boy who brought a clock that looked like a bomb to school and turned it into a one-sided tale of Islamaphobia. Because of the the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), only the Mohammed family has been able to share their side of the story, while the teachers and school administrators have had to keep their side to themselves.
However, a former student, a Muslim female, who graduated from MacArthur High School’s 2015 as valedictorian, has a very different impression of her time at the Texas school. Amena Jamali wrote an email to the MacArthur High principal Dan Cummings which thanked the school and educators for making her feel safe, accepted and able to excel as a Muslim girl.
The school accommodated her religious conviction, allowing her prayer time and dietary needs, as well as allowing her to take a month off for a Haj. Read the truth about this high school and how the media and the Mohammed family want to profit from their attention.
They just wanted to see how east it would be to get a bomb in the schools.
Because Obama intentionally tries his best to p**s off the AMERICAN PEOPLE. It’s so obvious in every action and every word the hypocritical makes.
Will James Kitelinger That was the “only” thing missing from the Bomb device.
He’s not clock boy. He’s bomb boy.
Throw the lawsuit out of court. Burn all the papers and tell them to go to hell. They deserve nothing.
This was a staged event from the begining,thanks to this kids father and Obama’s childish schemes.
Maybe this will blow up in his face
IT IS NOT RACISM!!! you could have been purple and green and you still would have been treated the same way, you putz
Nice story. Glad she felt accepted and allowed to pray. I just hope Christian students are allowed the same measure.
Got this as a suggested post and I’m baffled. The article only presents that other Muslims were treated well, which is great, but it doesn’t disprove that the young man in question was treated poorly. I’m all ears to know the other side of the story, but where is the real evidence? If it was a hoax, wouldn’t the school be eager to present in court? If the school settles, isn’t that a sign that they were in the wrong for this particular instance?