The radical left's mask is slipping once again, and this time it's thanks to a Twitch streamer who thinks America deserved the worst terrorist attack in our nation's history. Democrats are squirming as their party increasingly embraces Hasan Piker, the controversial online personality who once declared that "America deserved 9/11."
Piker, who has amassed millions of followers on streaming platforms, has become an unofficial surrogate for Democrat politicians desperate to reach younger voters. But there's just one problem: this guy openly despises the country that gave him the freedom to spew his anti-American bile for profit.
The Turkish-American streamer, nephew of far-left commentator Cenk Uygur, has built his brand on attacking American foreign policy, defending communist regimes, and pushing the kind of America-last messaging that would make Karl Marx proud. Yet instead of distancing themselves from this radical, Democrats are rolling out the red carpet.
The Party of Anti-American Extremists
This isn't just about one unhinged streamer – it's about what the Democrat Party has become under the influence of the radical left. When your party embraces someone who justifies the murder of nearly 3,000 innocent Americans, you've lost the plot entirely.
"The fact that Democrats see this guy as an asset rather than a liability tells you everything you need to know about where their party is headed," said one political analyst.
While President Trump works to restore American greatness and put America First, Democrats are literally platforming voices that celebrate our nation's darkest moments. This is the same party that spent years calling Trump supporters "unpatriotic" while they cozy up to someone who thinks we deserved to be attacked by terrorists.
Moderate Democrats may be uncomfortable with Piker's extreme rhetoric, but their silence speaks volumes. When push comes to shove, they'll take the radical votes over standing up for basic American values.
The question patriots need to ask is simple: If this is who Democrats consider an influential voice for their movement, what does that say about their vision for America's future?
