The Pro-Palestinian-Hamas ‘Resist’ Movement with hundreds of thousands of students marching and condoning the Hamas' savage butchery against Israeli civilians is not something that organically came to be overnight.
During the mid-1980s, an ominous chapter in American history was quietly unfolding. It all began at the North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University in Greensboro, where a group of tightly knit, shadowy group of Islamic radicals embarked on a plot in the heart of America. Their unwavering militant hatred for Israel, fueled by their opposition to the U.S. support for the nation, set them apart. These student visa holders earned a nickname that echoed with a sinister resonance – "the Mullahs." Little did America know that, two decades later, the world would recognize the ominous truth: a covert Islamic terror network was being meticulously woven into the fabric of the United States. Among the figures who rose to infamy, Khalid "Shaikh" Mohammed would orchestrate the initial assault on the World Trade Center in 1993, setting the stage for the devastating success of the 9/11 terror attacks. The knowledge he gained during his time at North Carolina A&T, coupled with the network he and his nephew, Ramzi Yousef, cultivated, would pave the way for one of the most horrific terror attacks in history, all under the guise of American universities.
These dark chapters in our nation's past serve as a stark reminder that even within our universities, threats can silently fester with deadly consequences.