Monica Showalter "Three days ago, Nation of Islam pooh-bah Louis Farrakhan praised Rep. Ilhan Omar's revoltingly open Jew-hating tweets and offered her some unsolicited advice: not to apologize."
"We also know that several of the vaunted Women's March organizers have ties to the famous anti-Semite. Word getting out about Farrakhan's presence is why the march has since fallen apart. Yet the Muslim women who were organizers of it refused to dissociate themselves from Farrakhan as well.
"This was strange. Denouncing Farrakhan should be a no-brainer for anyone, but at a women's event, blasting him should be even easier because he has nothing to contribute to a feminist happening. Yet for some reason, they didn't, even if their big event and all the work they put into it were lost for it.
"Does Farrakhan have some kind of spellbinding, mesmerizing impact on these Muslim women, making them slavishly loyal to him forever? Or does Farrakhan (and his army of thugs) scare them?
"Does Farrakhan have some kind of political power over them? Or could it be that Farrakhan has something blackmailable on Omar?" . . .