Home Opinion Former Navy SEAL Dan Crenshaw Destroys Ilhan Omar After Her 9/11 Comments,...

Former Navy SEAL Dan Crenshaw Destroys Ilhan Omar After Her 9/11 Comments, Huge Twitterstorm Followed (Video)

Ilhan Omar refused to call 9/11 a terrorist attack and the people that did it, terrorists’.

Omar spoke at a Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) fundraiser last month, where she called upon other Muslim Americans to “make people uncomfortable” with their activism and presence in the society and criticized the Jewish state.

She said:

“…some people did something, and that all of us were starting to lose access to our civil liberties.”

Watch:




She faced a huge backlash and the brave A American patriot Texas Rep. Dan Crenshaw was one of the first people to slam Omar for her description of the terror attacks.

“The first Member of Congress to ever describe terrorists who killed thousands of Americans on 9/11 as ‘some people who did something,’” Crenshaw wrote in a tweet. “Unbelievable.”

Others have also jumped on to criticize Omar’s language, urging Democrats to condemn her remarks about the largest terror attack on U.S. soil that left nearly 3,000 people dead.

“9/11 terrorists & the terror attacks they conducted are described as simply ‘some people did something’? Every Democrat should be asked by the media if they disavow @IlhanMN’s statements. Every one of them” tweeted Andrew Pollack, father of a Parkland high school shooting victim.

“Ilhan Omar isn’t just anti-Semitic – she’s anti-American. Nearly 3,000 Americans lost their lives to Islamic terrorists on 9/11, yet Omar diminishes it as: ‘Some people did something.’ Democrat leaders need to condemn her brazen display of disrespect,” said GOP chairwoman Ronna McDaniel.

As a reminder September 11 attacks, also called 9/11 attacks, series of airline hijackings and suicide attacks committed in 2001 by 19 militants associated with the Islamic extremist group al-Qaeda against targets in the United States, the deadliest terrorist attacks on American soil in U.S. history. The attacks against New York City and Washington, D.C., caused extensive death and destruction and triggered an enormous U.S. effort to combat terrorism. Some 2,750 people were killed in New York, 184 at the Pentagon, and 40 in Pennsylvania (where one of the hijacked planes crashed after the passengers attempted to retake the plane); all 19 terrorists died.