Sunday, 15 February 2026

Congress notices that *Islam wants to conquer the West* | Chip Roy and Robert Spencer

 

For a very long time, all I've been about on this blog is the threat of Islam to our societies. About how it's the Muslim Brotherhood that's the tip of the spear. 

[The Muslim Brotherhood Memorandum about it's "Civilisational Jihad" and program to "destroy the West from within".]

We're starting to see real focus on this threat, both in the United States and in Europe. I'm not sure it's "better late than never", as it may be too late. But I do hope not. 

Robert Spencer is one of the first guys I started following here 17 years ago. 

He's very well read on all matters Islam, has written many books on Islamic doctrine. By the way, he's neither Jew, nor Muslim, but a Catholic. He can quote at length not just the Bible, but also reams of Islamic theology, verses from the Koran, sayings from the Hadith,  chapters from the Sirah, the Life of Muhammad, crimes & punishments from the Umdat al-Salik, Islamic Sharia law. 

Spencer is better read on the canons of Islam than most Muslim scholars. I've seen him debate -- and defeat -- many.

Good on Congressman Chip Roy for bringing this threat to the Congress, via the person of Spencer. 

Islam and Islamisation is a threat. It's what Muslims repeatedly says it is: 

"We are not here to take part. We are here to take over". 

They say that again and again. In London and New York. In Salzburg and in Sydney. 

But somehow the bien pensants, the well wishers, the "good thinkers" (the Left!), don't believe that. Oh, they say, Muslim immigrants will be just like us; they will become liberal democrats. If we're just nice to them. 

No, that's not how it works. Muslims prey on that naive attitude, of course. They use the useful idiots, of course. But in the end they will dominate. Dominate us. And we will then know what it's like to have "Democracy Die in Darkness". 

Unless they're fought. They have to be fought. I fear we have neither the recognition of the threat, nor the will to do anything about it, even if we did recognize it. 

Though perhaps the above, is a glimmer of hope.