Trump’s coalition of the Gulf states
Operation Epic Fury did not begin February 28. It began in Donald Trump’s first presidency when he made his first trip abroad landing in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on May 20, 2017
Obama giving Iran $1.7 billion to finance terrorism did not help ease tensions because Obama loved to flip the bird at those who won’t accept the new Marxist world order.
Trump’s task and purpose in Saudi Arabia was to the inauguration of the Global Center for Combating Extremist Ideology—an alliance of Muslims who oppose terrorism.
“We are not here to lecture—we are not here to tell other people how to live, what to do, who to be, or how to worship. Instead, we are here to offer partnership – based on shared interests and values – to pursue a better future for us all.”
“This is not a battle between different faiths, different sects, or different civilizations. This is a battle between barbaric criminals who seek to obliterate human life, and decent people of all religions who seek to protect it. This is a battle between Good and Evil.”
“A better future is only possible if your nations drive out the terrorists and extremists. Drive. Them. Out. DRIVE THEM OUT of your places of worship. DRIVE THEM OUT of your communities. DRIVE THEM OUT of your holy land, and DRIVE THEM OUT OF THIS EARTH.”
“America is prepared to stand with you, but the nations of the Middle East cannot wait for American power to crush this enemy for them. Muslim nations must be willing to take on the burden.”
https://donsurber.substack.com/p/trumps-coalition-of-the-gulf-states?
Old Don Suber forgot to include DRIVE THEM OUT OF THE USA.
Trumps new DHS guy is a weakling who isn’t capable of doing what needs to be done.
Bring back Bovino and let the drive begin again.
Otherwise we are DEAD. 50 mosques open in Dallas in the last year. Gotta stop – END IT NOW.
COPILOT what is the percent population of muslims in Dallas and in Texas as a whole
Copilot said:
Copilot
Here are the best-supported estimates based on recent demographic studies:
Dallas (Dallas–Fort Worth metro area)
About ~1% of the population is Muslim according to Pew Research (2023–2024 data).
pewresearch
Some broader estimates (using community counts) suggest roughly 1–2% in the wider metro area.
grokipedia
? Simple takeaway:
Dallas area: ~1% (up to ~2% depending on estimate)
Texas (statewide)
Pew Research estimates about ~2% of adults in Texas are Muslim.
pewresearch
Other datasets estimate around ~1.0%–1.1% of the total population.
usadatahub
+1
? Simple takeaway:
Texas overall: ~1% to 2%
? Bottom line
Dallas: ~1% (possibly up to ~2%)
Texas overall: ~1–2%
SO WHY ALL THE DOOM AND GLOOM THAT THERE ARE HUNDREDS OF MOSQUES IN DALLAS AND MUSLIMS ARE TAKING OVER THE CULTURE ?
Copilot said:
Copilot
I get why you’re seeing that kind of messaging—there’s a lot of it online—but the actual data doesn’t support the “takeover” narrative. Here’s a clear, fact?based explanation.
1. The numbers don’t match the claim
In Dallas–Fort Worth, Muslims are about ~1% of the population (maybe up to ~2%).
pewresearch
+1
In Texas overall, it’s roughly ~1–2%.
pewresearch
+1
That means 98–99% of people are not Muslim in both cases.
So by sheer population share, Muslims are a small minority, not anywhere close to dominating culture.
2. “Hundreds of mosques” sounds dramatic—but needs context
You’ll often hear big numbers like “dozens” or “hundreds” of mosques in a metro area. But:
Dallas–Fort Worth has millions of people (7–8+ million)
grokipedia
It also has thousands of churches and other religious buildings (not controversial or headlineworthy)
? Any large, diverse city will have many religious centers for different groups:
Churches
Synagogues
Temples
Mosques
So the absolute number alone can sound big, even when the percentage is small.
3. Why the “doom and gloom” narrative spreads
This is more about how people interpret information than the data itself.
Common reasons:
1. Visibility vs. size
A group can become more visible (more restaurants, places of worship, cultural events)
That can feel like “rapid change,” even if the group is still small percentage-wise
2. Social media amplification
Dramatic or alarming claims get shared more
Algorithms tend to push emotional content (fear, anger)
3. Misleading framing
Saying “there are 100+ mosques” without saying “in a metro of 8 million people”
Mixing growth with dominance (growth takeover)
4. Cultural anxiety
When cities become more diverse, some people interpret that as “losing culture,” even if the majority culture is still dominant
4. What the data actually shows
Muslim population is growing gradually, like many other groups
It remains a clear minority
Dallas and Texas are still overwhelmingly majority non-Muslim (mostly Christian or unaffiliated)
pewresearch
+1
There’s no credible demographic data showing anything close to a cultural or population “takeover.”
Bottom line
The numbers are small (around 1–2%)
The community is visible and growing, but still a minority
“Taking over” claims are not supported by demographic evidence
Well, Fully, you can either nip the Muslim invasion in the bud or wait until we have France/GB/Ireland/Germany on our hands.
Close the mosques and deport them now.
I lived in Dallas 1997 – 2001. The large Plano suburb (northeast Dallas) was a pristine conservative dominant-white community.
Here we are today: “What is true is that Plano has one of the larger and more visible Muslim communities in the Dallas–Fort Worth area. The city has multiple mosques, Islamic schools, halal businesses, and Muslim community organizations, particularly in parts of East Plano.”
Friends in Dallas tell me the impression is Muslims are everywhere and they bend the community to their “way of life.”
I’m sure Dearborn, Michigan started out the same way.
A few key facts:
The 2020 Census found that about 54.5% of Dearborn residents identified as Middle Eastern or North African (MENA) ancestry, making Dearborn the first major U.S. city with a MENA majority.
The Census does not collect religious affiliation, so there is no official count of Muslims.
Most estimates place the Muslim share somewhere around 40–50% of the population, though no exact figure can be verified.
Dearborn has numerous mosques, Islamic schools, halal businesses, and elected Muslim officials, including Mayor Abdullah Hammoud.
So if by “dominated” you mean:
Culturally very influenced by Muslims and Arab Americans? Yes. That’s fair to say.
Muslims clearly make up a majority of the population? Possibly, but it cannot be proven with official data because religion isn’t tracked by the Census.
Non-Muslims are excluded or unable to participate in civic life? There is no evidence of that. Dearborn remains a diverse American city with Christian Arabs, non-Arab residents, and people of many backgrounds.
Compared with Plano, Texas, the difference is substantial. Plano has a visible and growing Muslim community but Muslims are still a relatively small minority of the city’s population. Dearborn, by contrast, is one of the most heavily Muslim-influenced cities in America and may have a Muslim plurality or majority depending on which estimate is used.
It’s the same strategy – start small, grow and get big, then force Islam onto the locals who never wanted it in the first place. It’s called “infiltration” and it has worked wonders in Dearborn, Minneappolis, Paris, London, etc etc. If we don’t take notice of the warnings elsewhere we get what we deserve.
Unless, of course, you’ve bought into the whole “diversity is our strength” bullshit. There’s that…
I agree nip it in the Bud….but it’s still in the bud and that’s good