Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
March 26, 2014
Marvel comics has decided to try and appeal to Muslims and/or convert their readers to Islam. Ms. Marvel, once a blonde bombshell, is now a devout Pakistani Muslim.
Or, perhaps, to try and make themselves look more politically correct.
Anyway, the new Islamic Ms. Marvel is the biggest thing to happen in comics since there was a gay marriage in Riverdale.
But marketing interracial anal sex to children is so two years ago. Now it is time to get the kids into Islam. After all, once all White countries become Islamic Califates, they are probably going to ban gay marriage and only allow gay sex with little boys.
Gotta get the kids ready for the future.
From the American Bazaar:
Marvel editor Sana Amanat, who has made waves in the industry ever since she joined the publishing giant as an associate editor in 2009 – gave a TEDxTeen talk in which she discussed what inspired her to enter the comic industry and what she hopes her most famous creation, Kamala Khan, will do for children around the world.
The TEDxTeen 2014 event was held at the O2 arena in London, on March 17th. Amanat’s talk, entitled “Myths, Misfits & Masks,” was one of 13 such speeches given at the event, and dealt specifically with the challenges and pride of being a Muslim woman, brought up in America, near the apex of arguably the biggest comic book company in the world.
As “one of the few south Asian comic book editors out there,” as she says in the opening of her talk, Amanat lends a unique perspective to the ever-popular stories about fantastic people and their extraordinary abilities. Amanat talks about how, as an editor, she is able to create these stories and give them a different, more modern spin.
During her talk, Amanat talks about the effect that 9/11 had on shaping her perspective on what it means to be American and Muslim, relating a story of how the day after the terrorist attack, a classmate told her to “tell [her] people to stop attacking us.”
Amanat said “I felt confused, hurt, stunned. ‘Us?’ I thought I was ‘us.’” The experience initially took her from “self-defense to self-doubt, pride to shame,” but Amanat eventually turned all that into something positive, owning her identity and doing what she could to help other young girls embrace their cultures and their individualities.
Last year, Amanat re-imagined the Ms. Marvel character as Kamala Khan, along with writer G. Willow Wilson and artist Adrian Alpona. The character became the first Muslim and Pakistani-American character to ever have its own entire line of comics, and was seen as a revolutionary leap in the comics industry.
Here’s the TedxTeen talk. I especially like the part where she feels so good about herself and is so smug about destroying Western culture.
How exciting it is to live in an age when getting beat up by your husband when you’re ten and then having acid thrown in your face for walking outside is the stuff a heroine is made of.