This video examines the long-term strategy openly discussed for decades by the Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamist movement founded in 1928 that described itself as a global ideological project aimed at reshaping society over generations.
Campus unrest, political polarization, and activist pressure campaigns did not emerge overnight.
This video examines the long-term strategy openly discussed for decades by the Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamist movement founded in 1928 that described itself as a global ideological project aimed at reshaping society over generations.
Rather than focusing on short-term political victories or sudden revolutions, the Brotherhood articulated a gradual approach centered on influencing institutions such as universities, NGOs, student organizations, lobbying groups, and civil society.
This historical framework helps explain why education, culture, and campus activism play such a central role in modern political movements.
The video also explores how foreign-linked funding, including funding connected to Qatar, has flowed into major U.S. universities and how some of that funding was underreported under federal disclosure laws.
That context matters when examining organizations like the Council on American-Islamic Relations, which was named an unindicted co-conspirator in the 2008 Holy Land Foundation terrorism-financing case involving support for Hamas.
This is not a conspiracy theory or a speculative claim, but an examination of documented writings, federal court records, and publicly available history that continues to shape today’s campus climate and political debates.
Stay tuned for the next part, where we explain how the Holy Land Foundation case helped expose the Muslim Brotherhood’s network inside the United States.