The War You Can’t Hear: How the Muslim Brotherhood Is Beating the West Without Firing a Shot
While we chased bomb‑makers, they planted stories. Now those stories rule our campuses, our media, and soon, our politics.
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The West has always feared explosions when it should have feared whispers. Bombs at least announce themselves; narratives — planted quietly and patiently — corrode institutions from within. The Muslim Brotherhood, founded in Egypt in 1928, understand this better than anyone.
The true war is not waged with suicide belts but with ideas, bureaucracies, and the exploitation of liberal naïveté. Western democracies, desperate to advertise tolerance, end up reciting the Brotherhood’s script almost verbatim.
Canada prides itself on civility and moderation. We a…
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