In New York, while the characters are recalibrated, the structural gaze of surveillance and suspicion persists. Sam (John Abraham) epitomises the figure of an assimilated Muslim. However, in the aftermath of 9/11, this assimilation proves fragile. He is arrested, detained, and tortured, his citizenship rendered void, his belonging revoked. The post-detention Sam is fundamentally altered. His radicalisation does not stem from religious ideology but from the state바카라s violent refusal of his claims to identity and dignity. Once marked by charm and acceptance, his masculinity is reconstituted through resistance바카라a refusal to be erased. His transformation renders him threatening not simply for his actions, but for what he signifies: the failed promise of liberal inclusion, and the high cost of presumed compliance.