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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums'Weaponizing ignorance': Muslims bear brunt as Texas Republicans make hate mainstream
Following a brutal Republican primary runoff in which Islamophobia took center stage, anti-Muslim hatred continues spilling into public life in Texas.
Texans say that the hate speech shared by elected officials is increasingly echoed by people in their everyday interactions, including discussions about education or interactions at a store, in a park, at university and at elementary school. In one case, students at the University of Houston were praying when a man approached them and burned a Quran. In other cases, people have been verbally attacked for wearing traditional garments.
It definitely trickles down, said Naila Syed, a Dallas resident and member of the Islamic Center of North America Council for Social Justice. Syed says her two young daughters have been confronted with anti-Islam talking points while at school. A fellow student asked them if they knew that followers of Islam treated women poorly. To have a kid who has these points ready and memorized like this is just very concerning as a parent, Syed said.
Multiple people said the hatred had made them uncomfortable venturing outside their own home by themselves. Others requested the use of a pseudonym because they had already been the subject of threats and online harassment. Recently, Muslim attenders at the official Texas GOP convention including some delegates were told to convert to Christianity or leave the country. About the same time, a woman was filmed verbally accosting two Muslim women in a grocery store.
Islam is a terrorist organization, not a religion, the woman said. This is not a Muslim country; this is a Christian country.
A fundraiser for the woman who made the comments has raised nearly $145,000 as of this writing and drawn support from the Republican congresswoman Nancy Mace. Mace and other lawmakers, including Brandon Gill, also a Republican, have repeatedly cast Europe as a cautionary tale for what happens when people from Muslim-majority countries are allowed to immigrate elsewhere.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jun/29/texas-muslims-hate-speech
If all the Muslims moved out of Texasss, it would definitely hurt their economy. There are a lot of them.
dalton99a
(96,421 posts)AZProgressive
(30,119 posts)You can take a random Republican statements about Muslims and replace Muslim with another group and also replace that it was a Republican that said it and there would be massive outrage and deservedly so.
There are high ranking Republicans that engage in this sort of thing but most of media ignores it.
msongs
(74,556 posts)Norrrm
(6,193 posts)The Qur'an has the words of God in it, just as the Bible does.
The Ten Commandments are in the Qur'an.
and much more.
and the Torah.
Would he burn the Protestant/Catholic Bible?
Many Protestants/Catholics consider the other to be false Christians.
If someone says, 'the Muslim God', they are claiming/admitting multiple Gods, not one God.
Oftentimes, the method of religion is more important than the God of religion.
sarisataka
(23,030 posts)Two cornerstones of the Right
