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Old 13-06-11, 09:54 AM
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Default Gay Girl in Damascus a 40-year-old married man living in Edinburgh

Gay Girl in Damascus a 40-year-old married man living in Edinburgh - Telegraph

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A Gay Girl In Damascus, dubbed a "lesbian's thoughts on life, the universe and so on" and supposedly written by a Syrian-American teacher, was in fact by Tom MacMaster, a graduate student.

He pretended to be Amina Arraf, who was said to have been born in Virginia in October 1975, with Northern Irish roots and ancestors who fought in the American war of Independence.

She attracted fans around the world with a post in April titled 'My Father, The Hero', in which she recounted in gripping detail how her father had saved her from Syrian security forces.

"She is my daughter," she recalled him saying after being asked if he knew about her sexuality. "She is who she is and if you want her, you must take me as well."

The piece led major media outlets to publish what they thought were interviews with Miss Arraf – who also had a six-month online relationship with a woman in Canada – conducted over email.

However, doubts about her story were raised last week by Andy Carvin, an executive from National Public Radio in the US, after Miss Arraf was reported by her "cousin" to have been kidnapped.

Mr Carvin, who has emerged as an expert on the Arab Spring uprisings, wrote: "I began to ask around on Twitter if anyone had met her in person, and I couldn't find anyone who had".

A photograph given to newspapers for publication by Miss Arraf then turned out to be of a young woman from London.

Over the weekend it emerged an address given by Miss Arraf in an online discussion group was owned by Mr MacMaster, originally from Georgia, who is working for a master's degree at Edinburgh.

Computers used to send emails from Amina were traced to the university, and it was discovered that a photo on the blog was previously published online by Mr MacMaster's wife, Britta Froelicher.

Last night, in a post titled 'Apology to readers', Mr MacMaster – whose thesis is on seventh-century Constantinople – confessed to being the blog's author.

"I never expected this level of attention," he said. "While the narrative voıce may have been fictional, the facts on this blog are true and not misleading as to the situation on the ground".

Mr Carvin wrote on Twitter that he was "trying to calculate the number of people Tom hurt – by pretending he was Amina and by taking attention away from Syrians."


This is especially funny given that we've had lefty commentators treating "Amina" as if she were the next thing to God for the last few weeks.

I thought she sounded like a narcissistic arse, and you're not allowed to say that about oppressed minorities, but now I can - yay!
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Old 13-06-11, 06:41 PM
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Gay Girl in Damascus hoaxer acted out of 'vanity' | World news | The Guardian

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The male American PhD student who confessed to being an internet hoaxer masquerading as a lesbian blogger in Damascus has spoken publicly about the reasons behind his deception, saying he was motivated, in part, by his own "vanity".

Gay activists in Syria and further afield have reacted furiously to the revelation that the blog, A Gay Girl in Damascus, was written not by a 35-year-old woman kidnapped by security forces last week, but by Tom MacMaster, a married, 40-year-old American studying at Edinburgh University.

Speaking via Skype video to the Guardian, MacMaster, who is on holiday in Istanbul with his wife, expressed some contrition for the blog, which he began in February after constructing an elaborate web identity for Amina Abdallah Aral al Omari, a fictional lesbian Syrian, over more than four years.

He said: "I regret that a lot of people feel that I led them on. I regret that ... a number of people are seeing my hoax as distracting from real news, real stories about Syria and real concerns of real, actual, on-the-ground bloggers, where people will doubt their veracity."

Informed that Syria's official news agency, Sana, has leapt on the controversy, claiming the fictional blog had perpetuated "continuous fabrications and lies against Syria in term of kidnapping bloggers and activists", MacMaster said: "Yep. I regret that."

He had started the blog, he said, because he believed online posts about the Syrian and Israel-Palestinian situations would earn "some deference from obnoxious men" if written under an Arab woman's name rather than under his own, where "someone would immediately ask: why do you hate America? why do you hate freedom? This sort of thing."

He had made her a lesbian, he said, in an attempt "to develop my writing conversation skills ... It's a challenge. I liked the challenge.

"I also had the thing that I like to write, and my own vanity is ... if you want to compliment me, tell you like my writing ... That's how to make me happy."

But why had he exchanged many hundreds of emails with a woman in Canada, Sandra Bagaria, who believed herself to be having a romantic relationship with the blogger?

"I feel really guilty about that ... I got caught up in the moment and it seemed ... fun. And I feel a little like shit about that." He denied having been sexually excited by the interaction: "I don't want to go into that aspect particularly of it."

The student, who was later photographed by the Guardian at an address in Istanbul, confirming his location there, denied having ever met Jelena Lecic, a London woman whose photographs he appropriated from the internet and passed off as images of Amina.

"I found her photo on Facebook a while back and ... when I saw her photo, I was like, that is Amina ... So I just nabbed her photos and was using her."

During the course of his deception MacMaster masqueraded as "Amina" in direct communication with a number of news organisations, including the Guardian, whose correspondent in Syria had taken detailed steps, at some risk to the journalist, to meet the blogger. MacMaster had emailed the correspondent with a photograph, purportedly of Amina, which was in fact of Lecic.

Gay activists in Syria have reacted with fury to the revelation of the blogger's true identity and to the suggestion that MacMaster had written it in an attempt to help their cause.

"There are bloggers in Syria who are trying as hard as they can to report news and stories from the country," wrote Sami Hamwi, a pseudonym for the Damascus editor of GayMiddleEast.com. "We have to deal with [more] difficulties than you can imagine. What you have done has harmed many, put us all in danger, and made us worry about our LGBT [lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender] activism. Add to that that it might have caused doubts about the authenticity of our blogs, stories, and us."

MacMaster told the Guardian: "I am not happy about that. And I understand their concern ... I don't want to put anybody at risk, or increased risk. And in actual fact, some of my self-justification was that in having a completely fictional character being bold and forward, then it makes it easier for real people. Which is probably just a self-justification, but it was something that crossed my mind."

His post last Monday, in which he posed as a cousin of the blogger claiming she had been kidnapped by Syrian security services, "was, stupidly, my sort of 'away message'", written as he and his wife left for a holiday in Istanbul, he said.

MacMaster's wife, Britta Froelicher, is studying at the University of St Andrews for a PhD in Syrian economic development. He said she had not participated in the fiction. "She is a student of that region - Syria, specifically. She is extremely knowledgeable and obviously a great consultant for such a project. But I am the sole author."

Why was the going-away message "stupid"? "I wanted to shut down the whole blog for a while, and I was thinking I would phase out the character, and having her abducted was not the way to do it." He had intended, he said, to post in a few days that Amina "had been released, had left the country and was not going to blog any more".

As questions about the identity of the mysterious blogger became more acute in the days after her supposed abduction, a number of individuals and bloggers, among them journalists from the website Electronic Intifada (EI), traced internet leads that increasingly pointed to MacMaster.


Confronted by EI and by the Washington Post, MacMaster originally denied involvement, before admitting the hoax in a confessional post on the blog on Sunday. In that post, MacMaster said his intention had been in part to expose "the often superficial coverage of the Middle East and the pervasiveness of new forms of liberal orientalism".

Wasn't there a very bitter irony, the Guardian asked, that a supposedly young Arab lesbian woman had been exposed as being the fictional creation of a heterosexual American man, and lacking an authentic voice of her own? MacMaster replied: "I am very aware the irony is 20 layers thick."

Did he accept that it was difficult to criticise the media for their coverage of the Middle East when he had lied explicitly to several news organisations? "Yeah, absolutely ... I don't feel incredibly happy with myself, you know. I wish in retrospect I would have done things very, very differently."
Pfffftt. The least he could have done is have the balls to express no regret. "Yeah, I was basically just trolling a bunch of Foxtards on the internet, then it got all bown up out of proportion and I realised that the left is just as deluded but because they're better educated you notice it less. So in the end I thought I'd try yanking their chain for a while too, and it's basically just pretty fun to roleplay a hot, persecuted lesbian, especially when you look like Brian Blessed. Basically: gotcha."

My hero is Léo Taxil.
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Old 13-06-11, 08:05 PM
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I think both attitudes can be respectable.

And, as opposed to Leo Taxil, I think he did harm, if not the LGBT community in Syria (they're fucked up anyhow), then at least Sandra Bagaria... That's not nice. Apologising for it is not wrong.

As to the left delusions, you'll have to point them out to me. The fact that they can fall victim to a decently done con isn't really proof of anything one way or the other, imho.
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Old 13-06-11, 10:19 PM
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New Liberal orientalism - they all immediately had a collective orgasm at the idea of a gay, female Arab. It's like three oppressed minorities in one!
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Old 13-06-11, 10:43 PM
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Yeah - like, imagine being Jewish, gay and with Communist leanings in the Germany during the 30s...

OTOH, such people did exist.

What I am trying to say is that it's easy to pour scorn on well-meaning but self-important people. And, yeah, I know that sometimes people help others just to feel superior. But, from an utilitarian/objective point of view, even that is still better than feeling superior by humiliating and breaking and destroying people who just happen to be different.

So, sorry, but I'll take the left caviar over the right baton...
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Old 14-06-11, 09:08 AM
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But they're only in favour of designated victims as long as they stick to their appointed role. Look at the abuse that black Tory candidates get. If "Amina" had identified herself as "trustafarian, dog-lover, economics grad" or any other set of features she wouldn't have got nearly the same attention as she did through her oh-sob-what-a-victim-I-am schtick.
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Old 14-06-11, 09:19 AM
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Second lesbian blogger exposed as a man | Media | The Guardian

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A second supposedly leading lesbian blogger was exposed as a man masquerading as a gay woman, a day after the Gay Girl in Damascus blog was revealed to be the fictional creation of a married male student from Edinburgh.

Paula Brooks, who claimed to be the executive editor of a US-based lesbian site LezGetReal.com, told the Washington Post that "she", too, was a man – in this case, a 58-year-old retired construction worker from Ohio called Bill Graber.

The LezGetReal blogger's identity began to come into question last week as doubts over the Gay Girl in Damascus blog intensified, voiced, among others, by the feminist blogger Liz Henry, who writes at BlogHer.com.

Before starting the Gay Girl in Damascus blog in February, Tom MacMaster, the Edinburgh student masquerading as Amina Abdullah Araf al Omari, had written posts on LezGetReal.com.

Graber, masquerading as Brooks, had supplied information to a number of news outlets, including the Guardian, which pointed towards an Edinburgh IP address for the Amina blog.

But the LezGetReal editor's own conduct increasingly led to questions over her own identity. Material released online on Sunday, which resulted in an admission by MacMaster that he was Amina, also raised questions about Brooks, including speculation over whether the two were creations of the same person.

MacMaster, in a contrite blog post on Monday, even apologised to "Paula Brooks" as a handful of named victims of his deception.

Challenged on Monday by the Washington Post, Graber said he had started the blog after witnessing the mistreatment of close lesbian friends.

"I didn't start this with my name because … I thought people wouldn't take it seriously, me being a straight man," he said. He said his interaction with Amina was purely coincidental, "a major sock-puppet hoax crash[ing] into a major sock-puppet hoax." "Sock puppet" is the term used by bloggers to describe a fake persona adopted by a blogger who may also be posting under another name.

Amina often "flirted" with Brooks, the paper said – with neither man apparently realising that the other was also a man pretending to be a lesbian.

Brooks told reporters that "she" was deaf, and so telephone interviews had to be conducted through her "father".

The Guardian spoke a number of times to a man masquerading as Brooks's father, after which suspicions were raised that Brooks was a man and was also potentially posing as Amina.

Further investigations established that, rather like the supposed young woman in Syria, even close associates had never met Brooks, and that her claims to have a PhD in archaeology from Bryn Mawr college, a masters from Gallaudet University and a BA from Duke University, were false.

In an email to the Guardian on Thursday, during our investigations, Brooks said: "Now I have a real day job … and a real off blog life … and I will be real annoyed if you intrude in that … you get my message?" The blogger, who claimed to have three children, said her "father" was "totally up [her] ass" following the paper's inquiries.

In another email Graber/Brooks wrote: "Let me be clear here … we are both the victim of this 'woman's' scam."

Challenged directly by email on Sunday, before MacMaster's admission, about the allegations that she was Amina, Brooks confirmed that "she" was an avatar, or false identity, and directed this reporter to a blog dated 2007 that described a woman's experience of coming out.

It was headed with the following Shakespeare quotation: "To thine own self be true, and it must follow, as the night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man."

Melanie Nathan, an LGBT and human rights advocate who was a partner in LezGetReal.com and had also been taken in by Graber, told the Guardian of her feelings of betrayal.

"I left the site because I believed that Amina 'the Gay Girl from Damascus' was not authentic," said Nathan.

"I told Paula – Bill – that Amina was suspect and she went ballistic on me and called me a bigot."

"I was completely taken in. She [Paula] is a person to me, a real person with this persona, with children."

"The whole gay community of bloggers is freaking out right now because everyone in some shape or form has encountered Paula Brooks. It has had a severe impact on the trust among the web of bloggers who are interconnected and work with each other.

"In my opinion, what Graber has done, to be a straight man calling himself a lesbian, is tantamount to impersonating an entire community."

Linda LaVictoire, a contributor at LezGetReal.com who writes as Linda Carbonelli, told the Washington Post: "I was completely taken in. I have been completely taken in for three years."
I bet LN's really a middle-aged trucker with a wife and kids.
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Old 14-06-11, 02:13 PM
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Originally Posted by Zichao View Post
But they're only in favour of designated victims as long as they stick to their appointed role. Look at the abuse that black Tory candidates get.
This is to misunderstand or misrepresent things to an absurd degree. You cease to be a victim if you make it your business to side with the forces of oppression. Should they be immune to criticism merely because they are black? Surely not. So in fact this perfectly consistent treatment, not tokenism at all.
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Old 14-06-11, 09:28 PM
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This is to misunderstand or misrepresent things to an absurd degree. You cease to be a victim if you make it your business to side with the forces of oppression.
I'd have thought that success in the face of discrimination would be something to celebrate.

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Should they be immune to criticism merely because they are black? Surely not. So in fact this perfectly consistent treatment, not tokenism at all.
Should it be okay to call someone a race-traitor for having the temerity to have his own opinions? I thought egalitarianism was all about giving a voice to minorities - you can't fight for that and then insult them because you don't like what they're saying.
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Old 15-06-11, 07:12 AM
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Originally Posted by Zichao View Post
I'd have thought that success in the face of discrimination would be something to celebrate.
It is. But of course, success by lending legitimacy to that discrimination is not. Is it admirable to get on the life-boat by stamping on everyone elses fingers?

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Should it be okay to call someone a race-traitor for having the temerity to have his own opinions?
Such a loaded argument.

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I thought egalitarianism was all about giving a voice to minorities - you can't fight for that and then insult them because you don't like what they're saying.
I'm not sure that "parroting everything the bigots say" counts as "having your own opinions". Indeed, it seems to me like the very opposite.

I'm not sure why this needs explaining. You're no doubt aware of the fate of many Vichy collaborators, surely.
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