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Times hack exploits deaf people to smear Muslims. Until a deaf person delivers a viral takedown.

James Wright by James Wright
9 August 2018
in Trending, UK
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Times columnist Iain Martin, who describes himself as a “hack/commentator”, seemingly tried to exploit deaf people to smear Muslims on 8 August:

Many reasons to dislike the burka, but disrespect of the deaf (who often need to see faces to follow communication) always high on the list

— Iain Martin (@iainmartin1) August 8, 2018

That was until deaf journalist Josh Salisbury fought back with a viral takedown:

https://twitter.com/josh_salisbury/status/1027189359316017153

Told.

And Salisbury wasn’t finished:

https://twitter.com/josh_salisbury/status/1027215026149642242

There has been an ongoing debate about Muslim veils since comments from Boris Johnson. The former foreign secretary provoked widespread media coverage after penning a Telegraph [paywall] article comparing veiled Muslims to “letter boxes” and a “bank robber”. While saying he ‘dislikes the burqa’, Martin wrote Johnson’s words were “poorly chosen”.

Johnson now faces a disciplinary panel as a result of his remarks. But the Conservative Party chair will appoint three of the panel members.

Martin gets told, episode 2

Salisbury wasn’t the only deaf person to speak out against the Times columnist:

https://twitter.com/geordieprincezz/status/1027133998596845571

And people didn’t think much of Martin’s comeback:

https://twitter.com/coffeespoonie/status/1027257960022589442

Not every deaf person thought the same:

Surprised at all the nasty responses to this sensible and correct tweet. Deaf people, like me, read facial expression and lips to help communication. Proven fact. What’s the problem everyone?

— LR (@lsrlinda) August 8, 2018

Austerity has hit deaf people hard

The thing is, Martin might help deaf people more if he spoke out about huge cuts to deaf people’s education:

Iain I welcome your genuine concern for the deaf community
Perhaps raising awareness of the £4million cuts to deaf children's educational support might be a more effective use of your position to help themhttps://t.co/1nhHPXNlBH
You know rather than using it to stir up division

— Steven Jackson (@jeacko) August 8, 2018

In 2018, a third of councils in England are making cuts of £4m to deaf children’s support services. Families have called specialist teachers a “life-line” for their deaf children.

But Martin is apparently using deaf people to bash Muslims, rather than tackling damaging Conservative austerity. Fortunately, members of that community were around to shut him down.

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Featured image via BBC/YouTube

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