“Fargo’s social justice issues resurface after deadly police shooting”

By Daniel Greenfield
Article Source

You may have heard about the Muslim terrorist attack in Fargo, North Dakota that the media tried to bury.

Mohamad Barakat packed three long guns, four handguns and a vest with magazines in every pocket, as he drove through Fargo, North Dakota. The Downtown Street fair, which claims over 150,000 visitors, was on its second day and 5 minutes away.

Then Mohamad tried to ambush some cops and killed one and wounded others before being shot and killed.

What happened in Fargo was due to the Islamization of the area.

8% of Fargo is foreign born. Much of that population comes from the Middle East and Islamic areas in Africa like Sudan and Somalia.

Fargo’s population shot up from 74,000 in 1990 to 90,000 in 2000 to 128,000 today. Somalis flooded Fargo, as did Iraqis, Bosnians and Bangladeshis. Amid the pure snows rose mosques, ethnic welfare nonprofits, Halal markets and other outposts of the new population.

By 2000, six hundred Somali families occupied Fargo, by 2004, Somalis outnumbered Hispanics in the Fargo public school system. Refugee resettlement, led by Lutheran Social Services, continued bombarding the state with foreign migrants, 70% of them embedded into the Fargo area.

So it should come as no surprise that Fargo is meeting Islamic Die with DEI.

Fargo’s social justice issues resurface after deadly police shooting – Kare11

What better way to frame a Muslim terrorist attack which killed a police officer as “social justice issues” and a “deadly police shooting” as if the police officer had shot Mohamad unprovoked while he was gardening.

“I’m the first-ever,” said Dr. Terry Hogan about his role as the city’s director of diversity, equity and inclusion. He’s a longtime teacher and consultant from Chicago who came out of retirement to make sure every community in Fargo has a voice.

“There was no directions on what they wanted me to do, where they wanted me to go, anything of that nature; however, I did my own action plan,” said Dr. Hogan.

From internal assessments to recruiting more people of color to every department, Hogan has now been working here for two years. He’s still the only person of color in his department of 27 people.

“It’s all about slow and methodical change,” he said.

He denounced the shooting, and then, when days later, there was a newly placed poster in town with the name on it a known hate group.

“When someone is trying, in my view, to capitalize on something, I just have no words for it,” said Dr. Hogan. “Hate is not wanted here.”

He stood in solidarity with the Muslim community. Its leaders say, despite the suspect’s common first name, no one knew him or whether he was affiliated with Islam, a religion leaders say is peaceful.

And if you doubt that, enjoy a peaceful visit to Pakistan, Somalia, Libya, Iran, Iraq, Gaza, Egypt, Turkey, Indonesia, Jordan, Algeria and Afghanistan.