A friend of my wrote the following yesterday and though I may not be on the same page as he on all, I think he gets a critical point in all this:
"Migration (Hijrah)-we see new calls for America (like France) to increase its intake of Muslims dramatically such as immigration from Syria. For Muslims, immigration is seen as incredibly strategic. As well it should be. The Quran says: “I charge you with five of what Allah has charged me with: to assemble, to listen, to obey, to immigrate and to wage Jihad for the sake of Allah.”
The target according to the Quran? The West--the U.S--esp. Christians and Jews (what the Quran refers to as "people of the book").
Muhammad said this: “Migration will continue until the sun rises from the West. Hijrah would not be stopped until repentance is cut off, and repentance will not be cut off until the sun rises from the West”
As one author noted "Muslim immigration is a transitional period of preparation for transforming the host society from an open society into an Islamic society of the “slaves of Allah” and of establishing a political system, a State, based on Islamic principles."
According to U.S. Census Data, the United States admits roughly 100,000 Muslim immigrants legally each year, representing the fastest growing block of immigration into the United States. Tennessee (Nashville), in fact, is home to one of the fastest growing immigrant populations in the country....our President (the one who said hours before the French slaughter, that ISIL is contained) promote(s) an expansive immigration policy, esp from Syria. The Mayor in that city has launched a New Advisory Council to help facilitate the legally-sanctioned transition from the previous inhabitants of Nashville to the new ones (Islamic).
I recognized that any group comprised of millions can not hold every aspect of what it means to live out the Quran in this life in perfect harmony. My comments are more directed at what I believe to be a growing and highly coordinated effort to usher in what the Quran calls the apocalypse such that the numbers and strategic initiatives are increasingly nearer a tipping point. I can't help but think that newer or more nominal Muslims are truly not aware of the implications of a theology that, by design, makes Christianity (at least one of) it's primary enemies. The danger is that only a few have to shift toward a more serious form of Islamic discipleship in order to radically change the equation. It is what I would call the power of the minority. Once engaged, that fringe group engenders the support of a global network, supported by activism and wealth. That in turn, catalyzes those now considered fringe to a more central and core ideology. I am not aware of any place in the Islamic world (much unlike the Christian world) whose trajectory is toward nominalism."