At the University of Illinois Chicago, the Muslim Students Association (MSA) has come under fire for hosting speakers who unleashed a deluge of venomous anti-American rhetoric during recent sermons.

One such speaker, Mohammad Nusairat, left no stone unturned as he labeled America and its democratic values as a "cancer" that has inflicted its illness globally. In his impassioned diatribe, Nusairat railed against America's freedoms, decrying how the nation permits actions such as fornication while suppressing dissenting voices. However, he didn't stop at just criticizing; he also pushed for the worldwide embrace of Islam as the antidote to these societal ills.

Meanwhile, Musab Kazi, another UIC student, aimed harsh words at the "enemies of Islam," spewing invective at the "illegal Zionist entity" and America. He emphatically asserted that the liberation of Palestine would come from Muslim strength, dismissing the involvement of Western powers.

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Not to be outdone, Sadik Froukh, in a separate sermon, heaped praise on the Hamas terror group for their ruthless attack on Jewish people in October. In an appalling display of callousness, Froukh deemed the lethal assault as bringing "pride to the Islamic nation," completely disregarding the innocent lives lost in the massacre.

With these jaw-dropping sermons, the MSA's platform has transformed into a hotbed of anti-American sentiment and outright hostility towards Western values. The MSA's role in amplifying such divisive and extremist rhetoric is deeply concerning, and it raises serious questions about the ideological direction being fostered within the university's student associations. This cascade of incendiary rhetoric is a stark reminder of the need for vigilance against radicalism and hatred being propagated in academic environments.

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