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Muslims THOUGHT Spain Will Fall To Islam… And The Spanish Threw Them OUT!

Elahalah.

You are super Muslims thought Spain was falling.

They miscalculated badly.

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez granted amnesty to 500,000 illegals and ordinary Spaniards erupted.

A church was allegedly torched by a North African national just for fun.

Reportedly, streets filled with crowds chanting, “Spain is Christian, not Muslim.

” Remigration marches reached the capital.

Here’s what nobody is saying yet.

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The political pressure building could trigger mass deportations, mosque closures, and citizenship crackdowns at a scale Europe hasn’t witnessed in generations.

Muslim communities across the continent are watching Spain because whatever happens next sets the template.

This isn’t just a protest.

It’s a turning point.

The fallout has barely started.

Spain needs the immediate repatriation of every illegal immigrant on our soil.

Spain needs the deportation of all foreigners who even while residing legally in Spain are committing crimes or are trying to impose fanatical religions.

And Spain needs the remigration of all those who have come to our country and refused to work and are living off of social benefits that aren’t reaching Spaniards.

Benefits that Spaniards themselves need.

Architected tight political commentary script balancing seven news inserts strategically.

Spain has one of the most remarkable histories on earth when it comes to this exact fight.

For 700 years, from the 700s all the way to 1492, Islamic forces controlled large parts of what is now Spain.

The Spanish fought back generation after generation in a struggle historians call the reconista, the reconquest.

They took their country back inch by inch.

Now in the 2020s, a new version of that fight is playing out, not with swords.

With migration policy, demographics, and political power, Spain has gone from 400,000 Muslim residents to 2.

6 million in roughly two decades.

The left-wing government in Madrid is handing out legal status and voting rights to hundreds of thousands of illegal migrants.

Spanish taxpayers are being told there’s not enough to go around.

And Spanish communities, from national parliament to small town councils, are starting to say no more.

Here’s why this matters far beyond Spain’s borders, and why it should matter to every freedom loving person watching this.

Right now, Spain’s leading conservative voice recently walked to the floor of Parliament and said what most Western politicians still won’t, not vague talking points.

Three specific concrete demands laid out one by one in front of the country.

Repatriation of illegal immigrants, deportation of legal residents who commit crimes or push religious extremism, and remigration of those living offstate benefits while refusing to work.

That’s three distinct policies stated plainly on the record.

The establishment called it dangerous.

A large portion of the Spanish electorate called it long overdue, and the mainstream media is scrambling because they can’t easily dismiss an elected official saying it from a parliamentary podium.

The push back isn’t limited to the national stage.

At the local level, Spanish towns are starting to act independently, and one municipality just made the kind of move no other town in Spain had ever attempted before.

ow Jamila banned Islamic practice in public spaces.

first ban of its kind in the entire country.

Muslim rights organizations are furious, calling it discriminatory and unconstitutional.

But locals frame it differently.

They say they’re protecting the identity and traditions of their own town.

When the federal government refuses to hold the line, communities draw their own.

Whether courts uphold it or strike it down, the message it sends is undeniable.

Ordinary Spanish people are no longer waiting for permission.

Now, here’s where the situation turns truly alarming.

Because it’s not just about who is arriving.

It’s about what the government in Madrid is handing them upon arrival.

Half a million illegal migrants being given.

and the right to stay and the right to vote.

Say that slowly.

A government is importing a new electorate.

That isn’t speculation.

That is policy announced openly, funded by Spanish taxpayers.

You are not just changing the culture.

You are permanently reshaping who gets to vote and therefore who holds power.

Once that electorate exists, any future government that wants to reverse course will be voting against people who were granted citizenship specifically to vote the other way.

The tension isn’t only in parliament or in town halls.

It’s found its way into everyday life and into the most unexpected places.

Spanish football fans chanting whoever doesn’t jump is a Muslim during a match against Egypt and jumping.

The media labeled it Islamophobia.

But ask yourself, what are they actually expressing? A population that believes its culture is being slowly pushed aside.

finding one of the last spaces where they can still say something without losing their job or their social standing.

The fact that a stadium chant is now a national controversy, investigated, condemned, debated tells you how far the censorship has crept into ordinary life.

Now, let’s look at the numbers because the raw demographic picture is something the corporate press refuses to put in a single paragraph.

1% of the population to 5% in about 20 years.

That’s not natural drift.

That is the result of deliberate policy.

and the downstream consequences listed.

No go zones in major cities, public Catholic traditions displaced by Islamic celebrations, rape gang cases where victims reportedly received no justice, a bestiality decriminalization law.

Those aren’t a random cluster of unrelated stories.

They’re the predictable result of a government that chose globalist ideology over the safety and continuity of its own people.

When a state stops protecting its citizens, citizens stop trusting the state.

And then things get worse.

Take a single moment captured on video widely shared that strips away every abstract political argument and shows you what the ground level reality looks like for some Spanish people right now.

A man with Down syndrome robbed on a train platform in broad daylight and not one bystander moved to stop it.

That is what the collapse of social trust looks like in practice.

Not a think piece, not a statistic.

One human being made vulnerable by his disability, prayed upon in public, while a crowd stands frozen.

When people no longer feel safe enough to defend one another, something fundamental has already broken.

And then there’s Barcelona.

Because while victims are waiting for justice, someone else is marching through the streets with a very different agenda.

Come on.

Come on.

Come on.

Come on.

Come on.

Say what I say when I need my father.

thousands of migrants in the streets of Barcelona, not demanding safety for Spanish citizens, not calling for accountability, demanding faster citizenship processing and expanded welfare benefits, louder, more organized, more politically coordinated than ever before.

The Spanish left calls that democracy in action.

The Spanish right calls it a pressure campaign, using the streets to extract political concessions from a government that has already shown it will yield.

Either way, the image of thousands of migrants marching through a European city to demand state benefits is not something most Spaniards were told to expect when this all began.

Spain did this once before.

Seven centuries of resistance and they won.

Whether the Spain of 2025 has the same resolve, that is the defining question of this generation, and the world is watching the answer unfold in real time.

Stay sharp, stay informed.

This is freedom insight.