Muslims Are PISSED After U.S. Representative Announces Anti-Sharia Law Act!
The Siege of Sovereignty: Inside the Rising Movement to Ban Sharia Law in America
In a wood-panneled hall within the U.S. Capitol, the air is thick with the rhetoric of existential combat. Texas Representative Keith Self, a man whose military bearing has transitioned seamlessly into legislative warfare, stands before his colleagues to announce a milestone that would have seemed unthinkable a decade ago. The “Sharia-Free America Caucus” has just welcomed its 60th member, representing 25 states—exactly half of the Union.

“All cultures are not morally equivalent,” Self declares, his voice echoing a sentiment that has become the rallying cry for a burgeoning movement across the American Right. “Whereas Christianity is the religion of peace, of reconciliation, of love, Islam is a religion of the sword.”
The scene is a flashpoint in a deepening cultural and legal schism. For Self and his allies, including fellow Texan Congressman Chip Roy and Senator Tommy Tuberville, the United States is no longer merely debating policy; it is defending its very foundation against an “internal enemy.” This movement characterizes Sharia not as a personal religious practice, but as a “supremacist code” that seeks to supplant the U.S. Constitution.
The Lone Star Ground Zero
While the debate rages in Washington, the tactical front of this movement is firmly rooted in Texas. In March, Texas Republicans sent a shockwave through the political establishment by passing Proposition 10 with a staggering 95% support. The mandate was clear: a statewide ban on Sharia law.
The catalysts for this legislative fervor are often local. In Plano, Texas, the East Plano Islamic Center (EPIC) has become a lightning rod for controversy. Representative Self points to the “Epic Enclave”—a Sharia-adherent residential development—as evidence of “separatist intent.” Originally marketed as “Epic City” and later rebranded as “The Meadow,” the proposed 400-acre project in Collin and Hunt counties was designed to house over 10,000 homes, a K-12 school, and a mosque.
To critics, it is an “abomination” that threatens American principles of equality. To the developers, it is a community tailored to the needs of practicing Muslims. But in the eyes of the Sharia-Free America Caucus, it is the blueprint for a “parallel society” that rejects assimilation in favor of domination.
“We must never accommodate a system that demands the submission of every surrounding society,” Self warns. He points to anecdotal reports of imams in Dallas and Houston allegedly intimidating fellow Muslims or threatening to “occupy” non-compliant businesses as proof that the “creeping threat” has already arrived.
A History of Conflict: From Tripoli to Texas
The ideological architecture of this movement rests on a specific interpretation of history. Proponents often cite a 1786 meeting between Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and the Ambassador of Tripoli. When asked why his nation attacked peaceful American merchant ships without provocation, the Ambassador reportedly replied that it was their “right and duty” under the laws of the Quran to make war on all who did not acknowledge Islamic authority.
Islam
For the modern anti-Sharia movement, this 18th-century exchange is the Rosetta Stone for understanding contemporary geopolitics. They argue that the conflict between the West and Islam is not a result of Middle Eastern intervention or the existence of Israel, but an inherent “clash of civilizations.”
“This was then and remains today a stark contrast,” says the host of Sahar TV, a digital platform that has become a megaphone for these views. “One rooted in submission and domination, the other in individual liberty under constitutional law.”
The Shadow of March: A New Wave of Extremism?
The urgency of the caucus is fueled by a string of violent incidents that occurred in early 2026. On March 1st, a naturalized citizen from Senegal opened fire outside a bar in downtown Austin, killing three and wounding over a dozen. The suspect wore a sweatshirt proclaiming “Property of Allah” and left a Quran in his vehicle.
This was followed by a failed ISIS-inspired bombing attempt at Gracie Mansion in New York City, a vehicle ramming at a Michigan synagogue, and a shooting at Old Dominion University in Virginia targeting ROTC members.
“The enemy is inside the gates,” the rhetoric goes. These attacks are framed not as the work of “lone wolves,” but as the logical conclusion of a “supremacist ideology” found in Surah 9:33 of the Quran, which states that Islam should “prevail over all other religions.”
The Gender War: Sharia and the Rights of Women
Perhaps the most potent weapon in the movement’s rhetorical arsenal is the treatment of women under Sharia. The caucus frequently cites the most brutal interpretations of the code: wife-beating as “discipline,” female genital mutilation, child marriage, and “honor killings.”
The movement points to the “grooming scandals” in the United Kingdom as a cautionary tale for the United States. They describe a dystopian reality where thousands of teenage girls were allegedly exploited by gangs while police were “too afraid of being called Islamophobic” to intervene.
“Sharia relegates women to second-class status,” Representative Self argues, citing scholars who he claims declare the rape and enslavement of non-Muslim women permissible. By framing the fight as a defense of women’s rights, the movement seeks to bridge the gap between traditional conservatives and liberal secularists who fear the erosion of gender equality.
The “Long Game”: Integration as Infiltration
One of the more controversial aspects of the movement is its critique of Muslim political participation. The election of figures like Dearborn Mayor Abdullah Hammoud or state legislators like Zoran Mandani is viewed not as a success story of American pluralism, but as a strategic “achievement for the Muslim world.”
The theory, often discussed on platforms like Sahar TV, suggests a three-step process for “Islamic dominance” in America:
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Political Ascent: Getting elected to local and national roles.
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Infrastructure Building: Creating mosques, Islamic schools, and learning centers to encourage migration.
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Demographic Shift: Utilizing higher birth rates to eventually become the majority and supplant the host culture.
This “Great Replacement” style narrative even touches the highest levels of American history. Figures within this movement still frequently refer to former President Barack Obama as a “Muslim guy,” framing his presidency as a milestone in this alleged long-term strategy.
The Legislative Fortress
To combat this perceived threat, the Sharia-Free America Caucus has prepared a legislative “fortress” consisting of seven key bills. These include:
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A federal ban on Sharia’s influence in U.S. courts.
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Mandatory deportation for any non-citizen who promotes Sharia.
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The designation of the Muslim Brotherhood and CAIR (Council on American-Islamic Relations) as terrorist organizations.
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The “Pause Act,” intended to halt all immigration to the United States to allow for “extreme vetting.”
“Legislation alone cannot halt this creeping threat,” Self admits, “but Congress has a sworn duty to act.”
The Paradox of Tolerance
At the heart of the movement is a philosophical appeal to Karl Popper’s “Paradox of Tolerance.” The argument is simple: if a society is tolerant without limit, its ability to be tolerant will eventually be seized or destroyed by the intolerant.
“We must claim the right to not tolerate the intolerant,” the movement’s leaders argue. By labeling Sharia as “the embodiment of intolerance,” they justify exclusionary policies as a necessary means of preserving Western freedom.
A Divided Nation
As the 2026 election cycle approaches, the “Anti-Sharia Act” and its associated caucus are set to become a central pillar of the national debate. To supporters, it is a long-overdue defense of the American way of life—a “One Nation, One Constitution” movement designed to ensure that no foreign ideology makes Americans feel like “foreigners in their own country.”
To critics and civil rights organizations, it is a dangerous escalation of Islamophobia that paints a diverse global religion of 1.9 billion people with a single, radicalized brush. They argue that “Sharia” for the vast majority of American Muslims refers to personal rituals of prayer, fasting, and charity—not a plot to overthrow the government.
However, in the halls of the Sharia-Free America Caucus, the nuances of religious scholarship are secondary to what they see as a clear and present danger. As Representative Self concludes his address, his message to the nation is uncompromising: “Sharia has no place in America. Defend the West. Ban Sharia.”
The battle lines are drawn. Whether this movement represents a legitimate defense of sovereignty or a retreat into nativism is a question that will likely define the American social contract for the next decade. For now, the “Sharia-Free America Caucus” continues to grow, one state and one member at a time.




