Subject: "They would not have printed anything to do with magic."
Author:
Posted on: 2016-03-10 15:41:00 UTC

I beg to differ. ^^ It's difficult to prove (and I've forgotten most of the specifics), but there's a bunch of anecdata suggesting that <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JosephSmith">Mormon founder Joseph Smith was repeatedly featured in papers for his purported/claimed/accused 'magical' acts. This is in the 1820s. It wasn't centralised newspapers, but local rags? Absolutely.

The piece also says that the wand 'kicked like a mule' when waved. Have we ever seen a wand wielded by a Muggle before? Do we actually know whether they have some inbuilt magical effect? Even if it's something as simple as 'tries to make a Muggle wielder drop it', it'd be obvious magic. (Or maybe the pressmen were Muggle-born and never spotted...?)

But yes, MACUSA was clearly in the grip of a paranoid overreaction. I'm guessing (based on previous pieces) that they'd only just reintegrated into the international community. They were the 'new kids', viewed as fairly useless anyway due to their inability to work with the newly-formed national government. They weren't about to do anything that might get them penalised by the International Confederation.

+1 vote for MACUSA being a wizarding power-grab. What d'you want to bet Emily Rassilon Rappaport was also the 13th President, and the 11th, and the 9th...?

hS

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