A phobia, according to the Merriam-Webster dictionary, is an extremely strong dislike or fear of someone or something. In Western societies, a specific phobia has gripped which is Islamophobia. Many American people grow up with the negative thought of Arabic speaker. Author Wajahat Ali, wrote “Inshallah is Good for Everyone,” published on April 22, 2016, in the The New York Times. Ali is a Pakistani American writer, who was born in Muslim family, found the motivation to write this article after observing Arabic speaker being treated extremely disrespectful and discrimination in the US. He argues that Arabic shouldn’t be seen as threatening as many people think as it is. In fact, “Inshallah is good for everyone” is a perfectly well-written article …show more content…
He outlines the uneven discrimination of Arabic speakers in the US., which draws a clear picture how Arabic people are treated by their outlook rather than understanding the cause. The purpose of this article is to convince its reader that Arabic speakers are not a bad people they are same as all human. Therefore, Ali spends a lot of time in his writing explaining that how his intended audience thinks about Arabic speaker and their reaction. He also explains to its reader the word “inshallah” which means “god willing” by showing the various type of examples. Ali argues that Arabic is just a language that millions of people speak throughout the country. Ali continues by discussing some other events that Arabic speakers had faced extremely disrespectful because of their language. This article helps Ali to convince its reader that they are innocent, and they are harmless. Ali's argument was strengthened by giving the reader a clear example of Arabic speaker being treated unfairly without reason by bigots who find Arabic as