Satirical Fail: CAIR Creates Make-Believe Cure for 'Islamophobia'

Alissa Lopez | June 30, 2016

 

 

The Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) has made a pitiable attempt at creating a satirical commercial about Islamophobia, which ABC News shared online.

The organization created a make-believe medicine called "Islamophobin." According to the box it is meant to be a “multi-system relief for chronic Islamophobia” and will help to "spread love."

Dear Cair: feel free to spread more love to radicalized Islamic jihadis and tell us out that goes.

Oh… wait. You won’t be able to tell us, because chances are they will kill you if you don’t conform to their lifestyle.

The tablets are meant to cure people of their “blind ignorance, unthinkable bigotry, irrational fear of Muslims” and “U.S. presidential election year scapegoating.” The faux prescription instructs the user to “take two and call a Muslim in the morning.”

Listen, if being worried about extremists brainwashing individuals in America, or of radicalized individuals coming into this country via refugee pools or by illegally hopping the border in order to kill thousands people in the name of Allah makes me "Islamophobic," than so be it. These concerns are not irrational, and they are not hateful. They are justified.

Does CAIR need people to remind them of the Orlando shooting? The San Bernardino shooting? 9/11?

Pull your heads out of the sand, CAIR. And try again, because this fake advertisement was far from funny.