Muslims have been getting kicked off flights at an increasingly alarming rate in the last few months. The justification for removing Muslims from flights has varied from case to case, but many seem to be based solely on harmful stereotypes.

Zainab Chaudry, an outreach manager at the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), says the organization has received around a dozen complaints about discriminatory treatment in the last year, a number much higher than any year in recent memory.

Chaudry believes this upswing in discrimination can be attributed to the toxic political climate in the United Statesinfo-icon. "I can tell you this has been the most Islamophobic election season that we've witnessed in recent historyinfo-icon," she says. "Even post-9/11 the first presidential election we did not witness this kind of backlash and intolerance towards Muslims and Arabs."

The election has helped to further normalize Islamophobia, which Chaudry believes has led to a climate in which "a lot of people who normally would not have exhibited that bigotry now feel more comfortably expressing their intolerance."

Yet Chaudry also believes that airlines are to blame, as several cases of removal from planes seem to have no explanation beyond discrimination. Southwest Airlines is statistically the worst offender, she says, though she notes that all airlines are failing to take necessary steps to reduce discrimination-based instances of removal. Chaudry says these steps should include airlines more aggressively disciplining employees responsible for these ejections, as well as offering diversity training to all employees.

CAIR is encouraging those who feel they were discriminated against by airlines to report the incidents. CAIR has also published an article, "Flying While Musliminfo-icon or Arab: Know Your Rights," outlining steps that those affected by discriminatory treatment should take.

Below is a continuously updated timeline of incidents in which people were kicked off, barred from or harassed during flights since November 2015.

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