Wednesday, March 18, 2026

We the People Never Voted for Mass Islamic Immigration: Societal Transformation Without Representation; Islamic Immigration and the Death of Assimilation

We the People Never Voted for Mass Islamic Immigration:
Societal transformation without representation.
“Islam is largely alien to American history—it certainly didn’t come into the United States on the Mayflower,” freshman Rep. Brandon Gill (R-Tex.) observed last month. Gill continued: “It’s something that we deliberately imported as a matter of immigration policy into our country.”

Quite right. But who, exactly, is the “we” who implemented such a reckless—indeed, suicidal—act of mass cultural importation? It’s a frustratingly difficult question—and one we ought to be asking, especially in light of recent events.

For two years after the Hamas pogrom of Oct. 7, 2023, keffiyeh-clad Muslim students did their best Hitler Youth impressions on American university campuses, clamoring to eliminate the State of Israel and “globalize the intifada” more broadly. A lone wolf ISIS jihadist mowed down 15 and injured 30 others in the Bourbon Street New Year’s Day massacre of 2025. Somalis in Minnesota bilked federal taxpayers to the tune of billions of dollars’ worth of welfare fraud, culminating in a lethal recent bout of neo-Confederate immigration anarchism and the premature political demise of Gov. Tim Walz (D-Minn.). In Dearborn, Mich., the Muslim mayor told a Christian minister he “was not welcome here” because he objected to renaming a local street after a Hezbollah supporter. Outside the nation’s capital, a local mosque held a vigil for “our leader,” the deceased “shaheed” (martyr), Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. And most recently, the Muslim mayor of the nation’s largest city—a man who for years struggled mightily to condemn Hamas and intifada itself—not only refused to condemn an ISIS-inspired IED attack by two radicalized young Mohammedans, but proceeded to then host Hamas apologist Mahmoud Khalil at Gracie Mansion for an iftar diner. Most recently, on Thursday a radicalized Muslim opened fire at Virginia’s Old Dominion University.

There is endless more where that came from. Suffice it to say that America’s grand, decades-long experiment in welcoming in all peoples and all cultures is not going well. And it is going particularly poorly when it comes to those followers of the Religion of Peaceä. It turns out that Islam and Americanism go together about as well as the Hatfields and the McCoys—or Bill Clinton and chastity.

Which brings us back to our earlier questions: Who voted for this? Who did this? And how did this happen? And make no mistake: Islamic immigration and the insidious Islamization of American society, more generally, is happening. We do not merely know that from the myriad anecdotal stories about the adhan (call to prayer) being blasted from minarets at obnoxiously early times in cities like Minneapolis and Brooklyn. We have some numbers to back it up too.

At the time of the landmark Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, there were an estimated 100,000 to 150,000 Muslims living in the United States. At the time of the 2020 United States Religion Census, there were an estimated 4.5 million Muslims in the country. By the year 2050, that number is estimated to nearly double to 8.1 million. Huge swaths of the American Muslim community, unsurprisingly, are immigrants—those, in theory (!), who We the People through our duly elected representatives chose to bring here because we believed they would have a positive impact on the common good. Instead, we got D.C.-area mosque vigils for a despotic monster who sought “Death to America,” a staggering 54% food stamp rate and 73% Medicaid rate for Minnesota Somalis, campus activism on behalf of numerous U.S. State Department-recognized Foreign Terrorist Organizations, Ivy League calls for the “total eradication” of Western civilization, and more.

Not exactly a smashing success, it it?

In the early decades of the republic, Presidents Thomas Jefferson and James Madison waged the First and Second Barbary Wars against radical Muslim pirates—the Houthis of their day—off the northern African coast. To this day, The Marines’ Hymn famously makes reference to “fight[ing] our country’s battles” off “the shores of Tripoli.” In fact, those wars were highly instrumental in the initial building up of the U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps into the world-renowned fighting forces they are today. Now, Americans seem to be letting Muslims—millions of them—into the country through a very wide front door. Far from fighting them or recognizing their comprehensive religio-political worldview as antithetical to the American way life, we are rolling out the red carpet (and doling out fraudulent welfare benefits).

But still: Who is doing this? And why are they doing so? --->READ MORE HERE

Islamic Immigration and the Death of Assimilation:
National borders matter for every nation, and America is no exception. They matter because every nation carries its own customs, traditions, and values that make it distinct. America’s borders date back to the colonial era, and within them, a culture was cultivated, one where God stood at the center of public life and community. Those same values are now under threat, challenged by both legal and illegal immigration that’s reshaping the country from within.

As Scripture reminds us, “When the Most High gave the nations their inheritance, when He separated the sons of mankind, He set the boundaries of the peoples according to the number of the sons of Israel.” Deuteronomy 32:8. God Himself established the principle of borders and nations, not to divide humanity out of hatred, but to maintain order, identity, and accountability.

Just last night, New York City elected Zohran Mamdani, a self-proclaimed socialist who openly sympathizes with 9/11 terrorists. His victory underscores a deeper national problem: America’s way of life is at serious risk of being uprooted.

Millions have entered the United States, both legally and illegally. While lawful immigration has long been part of our story, it isn’t always beneficial. Americans have their own customs, their own traditions, the very essence of what defines our culture. Historically, we have been a free people, a God-fearing people, oriented toward charity, liberty, justice, and virtue. Not every nation shares those values, and those who come from different systems bring with them different purposes and priorities.

That’s why assimilation is essential. Assimilation means more than residency, it’s the process of embracing a nation’s culture, civics, and values as one’s own. For those who come to America, it means understanding how our government functions, why church on Sunday matters to tens of millions, and what it means to live under the supreme law of our land, the Constitution. It means grasping the cultural rhythms that bind us: the meals we share, the families we cherish, the holidays we celebrate. Immigrants should not merely live in America; they should become American. After all, they chose to leave their homeland to come here.

Sadly, that vision is fading. Over the past 10 years, an estimated 20 million foreign nationals, representing more than 100 countries have crossed America’s borders unlawfully. In addition, over one million foreign students entered the country on visas during the 2023–2024 academic year, not counting millions of legal immigrants who came before. As a result, entire communities are being reshaped by those who often hold no real stake in preserving our way of life. Immigration itself is not the enemy, but immigration without assimilation can destroy a home from within.

No rational homeowner would invite someone inside and allow them to redecorate, rewrite the rules, and change the very spirit of the house. The homeowner would rightly push back. So why do we allow that within our borders? --->READ MORE HERE
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