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Examples: [Collected via e-mail and Twitter, November 2015]@WhiteHouse a Muslim army major Nidel Malik Hasan was a refugee, he is the Fort Hood Shooter — Kimberly Rose (@KimbelyRose) November 20, 2015 Refugee families: Tsarnaev, Hasan #JustSaying #WhatILearnedToday — Donna (@DMR_MI) November 19, 2015 @glennbeck BUT federal Refugee screening promises to be as rigorous as it was for Major Nidal Hasan. — Ryan (@MrRyanOz) November 17, 2015 Origins: A refugee crisis out of Syria throughout 2015 caused divisive discussions on the issue of asylum in Western countries; a 13 November 2015 series of terror attacks in Paris (among other effects) caused widespread fear and suspicion of refugees both in Europe and the United States. On 18 November 2015, the Facebook page of Glenn Beck published the above-reproduced image meme featuring Fort Hood shooter Nidal Hasan. While that post didn't specifically describe Hasan as a refugee, it implicitly stated he was vetted prior to his entry to the United States. Subsequent social media posts claimed Hasan (often compared to the Tsarnaev brothers) was once a refugee, admitted to the United States after a rigorous screening process. Simply put, that wasn't even close to any version of the truth. Hasan was born and raised in Arlington, Virginia, and was thus a United States citizen by birth: It appeared (as with rumors about the Tsarnaevs) that many folks conflated refugee (an individual forced to leave their homeland by circumstance) or asylum seeker (a refugee seeking a safe destination) with Muslim or child of immigrants. As a natural born American citizen, Hasan was neither a refugee nor subject to vetting of any description. Consequently, the entire rumor is based on a false premise.
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