Since President Trump initiated strikes on Iran’s theocratic, totalitarian regime two weeks ago, members of the so-called “religion of peace” have been carrying out revenge killings across the United States.
On March 1, a naturalized U.S. citizen from Senegal wearing a “Property of Allah” hoodie opened fire on patrons having fun at an Austin, Texas, beer garden. He killed three Americans and injured a dozen more before being put down. When feds searched the shooter’s home, they found an Iranian flag and pictures of Iranian leaders. There was a Quran in the killer’s vehicle.
On March 7, two Muslim men (an eighteen-year-old Turk and a nineteen-year-old Afghan) traveled from Bucks County, Pennsylvania, to the Yorkville neighborhood of Manhattan and attempted to detonate two bombs in a crowd of Americans protesting the Islamification of New York City. Although no-one was hurt, the would-be murderers had pledged allegiance to ISIS and were trying to carry out an even deadlier attack than 2013’s Boston Marathon bombing (also an act of Islamic terrorism).
The terrorists had considered shopping malls and other targets that would allow them to maximize the number of Americans they could murder. Islamic terrorists have used similar bombs to kill in India, France, Belgium, and the United Kingdom. New York City’s Muslim mayor — a naturalized U.S. citizen — has spent more time criticizing the American protesters than the terrorists who attempted to murder them.
On March 12, a naturalized U.S. citizen from Sierra Leone yelled, “Allahu Akbar,” before opening fire on a Reserve Officers’ Training Corps class at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia. The Islamic terrorist killed the ROTC instructor, Lt. Col. Brandon Shah, and critically injured two cadets before other class-members stabbed him to death. The Islamic State ally was allegedly trying to recreate the 2009 slaughter at Fort Hood, Texas, in which another Islamic terrorist murdered fourteen Americans and injured several dozen more. He had already been sentenced to eleven years in prison for providing material support to ISIS, was a known admirer of slain al-Qaida leader Anwar al-Awlaki, and had expressed a desire to murder Americans during the month of Ramadan. The Biden administration released this killer from federal custody with years left on his sentence.
Also on March 12, a naturalized U.S. citizen from Lebanon attacked the Temple Israel synagogue and daycare in suburban Detroit — one of the nation’s largest Reform synagogues — with an explosives-packed car. After ramming his car into the building, the Islamic terrorist opened fire before security guards neutralized him. He lived in Dearborn, a suburb with the notorious reputation of being the “Jihadi capital” of the United States.
Do you think we might have a problem with naturalizing foreigners unworthy of American citizenship? Is it possible that after decades of fighting Islamic extremists “over there,” we might have an even bigger problem with Islamic extremists already in the United States?
Whenever politicians or pundits observe that Islamic immigrants often refuse to assimilate to American culture and are often downright hostile to the United States (while living off of state and federal welfare programs), those politicians and pundits are denounced as “Islamophobic” bigots. Apparently, if you are unwilling to look the other way while Islamic terrorists murder Americans, you are “guilty” of being insufficiently “politically correct.” Heaven forbid that we ever have another Islamic terror attack on the same scale as 9/11. Public school teachers’ unions will insist that we deserved it. Jake Tapper and CNN will find a way to blame President Trump. The Democrat Party (and Establishment Republicans) will look for new ways to bring millions of unvetted Islamic foreigners into the United States. And NYC Mayor Mamdani will hold Islamic prayer services in Times Square.