Monday, October 6, 2025

Imagine

 https://x.com/myrongainesx/status/1974060356046582059?s=51&t=cLq01Oy84YkmYPZ-URIMYw

 "Let’s have an honest, tough conversation. I’m Muslim, I’ll never renounce it, and I need to be better. That said, we need to rethink some practices. In the west, the loud, public calls to prayer five times a day, praying in large groups that block streets, disrupting traffic, and inconveniencing others needs to stop. We’re not doing ourselves or our non-Muslim neighbors any favors by disturbing their daily lives. When Westerners visit Muslim-majority countries, they generally show respect. They follow local customs. Women cover up, men act with honor, and they don’t demand that these nations change their laws, build churches or synagogues, or take in more Western immigrants. Muslim countries enforce strict cultural and religious norms, and visitors comply. Everyone coexists peacefully. Why can’t we show the same respect in America and western countries? Let’s be real: this is a Christian-majority country. Muslims make up 1-2% of the population. We’re a minority, and in many ways, we’re guests here. I don’t see Christians or Jews going to Muslim countries demanding special accommodations or disrupting local customs. If they’re allowed to practice their faith (and pagans often aren’t), they might pay a jizya tax for the privilege, which also exempts them from military service. Non-compliance could mean jail, deportation, or worse. I know the counterarguments: “America has freedom of religion!” or “There’s separation of church and state!” But let’s clarify something. The phrase “separation of church and state” comes from Thomas Jefferson’s 1802 letter to the Danbury Baptist Association. It refers to a wall protecting religious freedom from government interference and preventing the state from controlling churches. It’s not a blank check to practice our faith in ways that disrupt others. We don’t need to “assert dominance” with mass public prayers in symbolic Western locations. That’s not faith...it’s provocation, and it disrespects our host nation. Muslim-majority countries would never tolerate similar behavior from non-Muslims. Why should we expect different standards here? Let’s show the same respect we’re shown abroad. Let’s practice our faith humbly, integrate thoughtfully, and live as good neighbors. That’s how we honor Islam and earn respect in return. If you want to openly hear the call to prayer 5x a day, there's plenty of safe, clean, and beautiful Muslim countries you can visit or even move to (these countries love western expats). Agree or disagree? Comment below. Would like to have a good discussion on this."

 

 

I'll start with the obvious, if all Muslim immigrants had this viewpoint and commitment, we wouldn't have nearly the chaos we see in Europe and parts of the US. They'd also probably get further in their goal of turning non Muslim countries into Muslim countries than they currently are. If this was serious, and not Taquiyya, it would be great. Unfortunately, we know that the ultimately the goal of Islam is conquest and that this regard for others only lasts until it isn't needed. 

Would it absolutely be better if Muslim immigrants didn't rape children, assault Kaffir, blast their calls to prayer, impose their predilections on others, and  take over public spaces, yes. 

 

 https://x.com/actbrigitte/status/1974397497478160631?s=51&t=cLq01Oy84YkmYPZ-URIMYw

 

Then there's this. 

 

The problem is that folx like Dan are so invested in attacking Christianity and Isreal for their "sins" that they ignore Islam which is literally all of the things they complain about with Christians and Jews.  

2 comments:

Glenn E. Chatfield said...

I don't believe the guy cares, rather he wants to placate everyone until Muslims are in a position of power so they can then take over. So I call B.S. on his statements.

Craig said...

Two thoughts.

1. He's absolutely correct that if Muslims had lived as he lays out, none of the current chaos we are seeing would be a factor, and Muslims would be more highly regarded.

2. He's saddled with defending a religion that encourages lying to advance itself. A Muslim would be completely fine to advocate for, or live like he describes, for the express purpose of insinuating Muslims into positions to begin to assume power. The problem with this bit of Muslim doctrine is that it automatically casts doubt on anyone who says anything like this at all.