Fighting Jihad: The Battle Against Extremism on Multiple Fronts

Hey there! Today I want to dive into something that’s been on my mind lately – the war against jihad. It’s not just about physical combat; there’s a whole narrative battle happening right under our noses. Let me break down what’s really going on and why it matters to all of us.

The Two-Front War Against Jihad

The fight against jihad isn’t just about missiles and rockets. Sure, that’s part of it – the kinetic part where countries like the US are shooting down Houthi rockets and preventing attacks. But there’s another battlefield that’s just as important: the war of ideas.

This ideological battle is happening on social media, on college campuses, and in the minds of people around the world. Extremists are working overtime to undermine Israel’s right to exist and America’s support for its allies. They’re spreading dangerous ideas through immigration, especially through students coming to American universities.

The Campus Battleground

Right now, there’s a significant case brewing involving Mahmood Khalil, a Columbia University student with a master’s degree. Despite having an American wife who’s eight months pregnant, he’s facing deportation for allegedly spreading jihadist ideology and being involved in vandalism on campus.

The message is clear: the US won’t tolerate jihadists infiltrating American campuses, brainwashing students, and destroying the educational environment from within. As Secretary of State Rubio pointed out, there’s no God-given right to a green card or student visa. When you come to America as a visitor, that’s exactly what you are – a visitor.

No Right to Stay

Let’s be real – if someone applied for a visa saying they support Hamas (a group known for kidnapping children, raping teenage girls, and taking hostages) and planned to disrupt universities with anti-Semitic activities, they’d be denied entry immediately. So why should it be different if they do these things after arriving?

Students at prestigious universities are paying huge amounts of money for their education, yet many can’t even attend classes because they’re afraid of extremists running around campus with covered faces, screaming terrifying things. This isn’t about free speech – it’s about people who don’t have an inherent right to be in the United States in the first place.

Taking a Stand

It’s time for Mahmood Khalil and others like him to go back where they came from. The US should deny green cards and student visas to jihadists, and we need to stop letting these extremists hide behind a liberal and progressive veil.

Here’s a news flash: there’s nothing liberal or progressive about protecting people who are neither liberal nor progressive. When you protect these individuals, they come onto campuses and teach everything but liberalism and progressivism. They teach hate, bigotry, and violence.

Learning from Each Other

The Jewish state was created as a safe space for the Jewish people – a protectorate against Nazism, neo-Nazism, and jihadism. They don’t need jihad in their land or on their borders. We’re seeing a battle against jihad brewing on the ideological level, especially on campuses, and that’s incredibly important. But I don’t want you to think all Arabs are jihadists – far from it.

Arab Voices Against Extremism

There are amazing Arabs fighting against jihad because they want to save their civilization. Muslims from Yemen, Lebanon, Syria, and all over the world are pushing back against extremism.

Take Raan Osman, a half-Syrian, half-Lebanese woman who visited Israel nine times after October 7th. She boldly states that “Israel is not the problem” and challenges other Arab countries for their hypocrisy. She asks pointed questions:

  • Why didn’t Qatar arrest Hamas leaders and demand the release of hostages?
  • Why does Iran send billions to Hamas and Hezbollah instead of helping their own suffering people?
  • Why did Egypt charge thousands of dollars for people to escape the war?
  • Why has Jordan refused to accept any Gazans?

Then there’s Lui Ahmed from Yemen, who asks why nobody cares about the half million Yemenis who have died in the last ten years – the biggest famine and humanitarian crisis in modern history. He questions why the UN report mentions Israel 188 times but fails to mention Iran even once, despite Iran arming and funding terror proxies like Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis.

A Vision for a Better Middle East

These brave Arabs are challenging what I call the “Euro-Jihad axis” – they’re speaking truth to power and highlighting the hypocrisy of the international community.

Israel shouldn’t just be an innovation nation; it should be a liberation nation. We should help liberate Arabs, Persians, and others from the oppression of jihadism. It’s time for a better Middle East, and that will come through Israeli strength and a recognition of our shared heritage.

Through amplifying these courageous voices and standing firm against extremism on all fronts – physical and ideological – we can work toward a safer, more peaceful region for everyone.

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Citations:

  1. https://ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws.com/web/direct-files/18167015/da098e30-b15e-4a0a-ab6a-d5eefdaa4a1d/paste.txt
  2. https://ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws.com/web/direct-files/18167015/902226be-5b2e-40ad-bcc7-89c77eb8e9f7/paste.txt
  3. https://ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws.com/web/direct-files/18167015/da098e30-b15e-4a0a-ab6a-d5eefdaa4a1d/paste.txt

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