Most Muslims in the West don’t wake up strategizing how to take over the world.
But they’ve been conditioned to view Islamic norms as inherently superior.
That superiority doesn’t disappear at the border. It travels in the luggage of language, customs, assumptions, and sacred texts. And eventually, it seeps into local politics, social demands, and institutional pressure, slowly, passively, invisibly.
This is how the system reproduces itself without meetings, leaders, or manifestos.
It doesn’t need central command when the psychology is collective and the doctrine is divine.
Muslims in the West don’t have to organize a coup to alter the cultural landscape. All they have to do is continue being who the system trained them to be:
People who defer to divine authority over secular law, who view freedom of speech as dangerous, who see dissent as blasphemy, and who feel morally justified in pressuring the host society to bend to their religious sensitivities.
In Islam, there is no separation. Religion is government. Religion is law. Religion is identity.
The West doesn’t need to fear a conspiracy, it needs to fear complacency.
Because what we’re facing isn’t a war of weapons. It’s a war of worldviews.
One side believes the individual is sovereign. The other believes Allah is. One side encourages doubt, dissent, and open debate. The other treats them as disease.
One side builds freedom from the inside out. The other demands submission from the top down.
So no, there’s no secret plan. But that’s what makes it more dangerous. Because you can fight a conspiracy. You can expose a plot. But how do you fight a collective subconscious, when most of the people carrying it don’t even know they are?
