During what is said to be one of the holiest and most reflective periods in Islam—Ramadan—Yasir Qadhi used his platform not for prayer or peace, but for political provocation. His timing was no coincidence. Just weeks after RAIR Foundation released its bombshell exposé detailing Qadhi’s central role in engineering the Islamization of America—and after our viral report exposing EPIC City, the controversial Sharia-style compound being advanced by the East Plano Islamic Center—Qadhi took the stage with a clear and chilling message: Islamization of America is not only underway—it’s unstoppable.
Qadhi’s brazen defiance didn’t happen in a vacuum—it came in direct response to mounting exposure. For months, Texas leadership stood idle while EPIC City quietly advanced through local approvals, shadowy LLCs, and what appears to be religious zoning schemes. But after RAIR Foundation released its major exposé on EPIC City—and our investigation into Qadhi’s ideological empire went viral—Texans began demanding answers. Faced with overwhelming public pressure, Governor Abbott and Attorney General Ken Paxton were moved to action. A dozen state agencies are now investigating EPIC, including a criminal case over its illegal funeral home operation. But Qadhi’s Ramadan declaration made one thing clear: this is not just damage control. It’s a war of wills—and Islamic supremacists are daring Texas to stop them.
In his speech, Qadhi openly declared that Muslims will not accept what he calls “second-class citizenship.” He framed any criticism of mosque developments or Islamic expansion as “lies” and “slander,” accusing critics of racism and “Islamophobia”—a term invented by the Muslim Brotherhood to silence dissent. But in Islam, “slander” doesn’t mean what Americans think it means. Under Sharia, slander includes saying anything true about Islam if it portrays the religion negatively. This concept is codified in Article 22 of the Cairo Declaration of Human Rights in Islam, which states that all speech must conform to Islamic law and may not “violate sanctities,” “undermine moral and ethical values,” or “weaken faith.” In other words, freedom of speech is only allowed if it aligns with Sharia. This is the lens through which Qadhi views the First Amendment—one that is in direct conflict with the U.S. Constitution. He attacked non-Muslims for supposedly applying the Constitution “selectively,” while boasting that Muslims will use America’s constitutional freedoms to the fullest extent. In his words: “We are doing what we’re allowed to do, and we will… continue to do so.” […]
— Read More: rairfoundation.com