Posobiec pointed to the New York City bombing plot involving Islamic suspects who traveled from Pennsylvania, saying the case shattered assumptions about where threats originate. “When there was that attack in New York City, the bombing, and it was the two, I guess, buddies, they weren't brothers, but it was very similar to the Boston bombers who were brothers. And they came out of Newtown, Pennsylvania, and then they drove up to New York City, throw some bombs near Gracie Mansion. And for anyone who doesn't understand Bucks County, Philadelphia area, Newtown, I said this is like the town from Gilmore Girls, right? This is a place that you would never ever associate with something like that.”
“But the idea that there could be ISIS extremist sympathizers here, is because of mass immigration, it's because of mass open borders. It's because mass—but it's actually not just mass open borders, because it's mass third world open borders, because it's only from certain places, right? There's actually immigration restrictions on certain parts of the world, too. And so this is just exactly what you and I have been talking about, again, since 2017, Sweden, everything else, that now it's here in the United States, and we're seeing it again and again.”
Posobiec also pushed back on claims that such events are distractions tied to international conflicts: “But because it's happening at the same time as the Iran operation, people are saying, oh, no, this must be, this must be something else. This, this can't possibly be its own, you know, its own thing. It's got to be fake. It's got to be false, which is just obviously not true.”
He referenced DNI Tulsi Gabbard, noting her past warnings. “And you got DNI Gabbard, who, by the way, she herself has always talked about this from the days that she was a Democrat, like freshman congresswoman from Hawaii, she would always—she was the only one that would in the Obama years that would speak out about radical Islam. And she would say this is what we're fighting. We're not fighting just some group or fighting an ideology. That's one of the reasons that I remember, like, she just came across my radar back then.”
Cernovich said public skepticism is the result of failures in how the issue has been communicated. “Yeah, you know this, I know this. Gabbard knows this, but it doesn't strike, it just doesn't come off as credible to most people because nobody was talking about it when we were supposed to be talking about it. And that's the way it is with a lot of issues. Nobody believes in the Qatar stuff, except for us, because we knew it. But that's a messaging failure.”
“And then in terms of why do we have this? Why do we have Islamic terror? Because you brought it, because the neocons brought them in, dude, because we all remember the tweets about, well, I don't care about the browning of America. We all know white people suck. White people are—we all know this stuff. It's so tiresome for people to try to go, oh, God, oh, gosh, oh, gosh, what happened? You know, anti-white bigots, white people haters within the neocon movement wanted this. And now they're saying, well, look, look, we have Islamic terrorism. I'm saying, well, I know, because you supported open borders. You, there's a reason that they're here.”
Cernovich concluded by saying the issue is being downplayed in the current media environment. “And people don't even believe this is a problem now, because you guys were the ones supporting it. And now it looks like a huge distraction from Israel.”




