Jack Hibbs Issues a Warning on the Rising Threat Facing America

 

November 25, 2025

By James Lasher

VIDEO

 

Link to the video…

The warnings coming from Pastor Jack Hibbs and former Muslim insider Hedieh Mirahmadi Falco are not casual observations about politics or culture. They describe a movement with centuries of ideological continuity, a strategy aimed at reshaping nations and laws, and a spiritual vacuum in America that has allowed it to advance largely unchallenged. Their message is clear: what is happening is not random, and ignoring it will not make it go away.

“You need to sit down. You need to hang on because what you’re about to hear is not only going to be true, it just might be too much for you,” Hibbs opened his podcast. “You are about to hear some things that you need to learn, know, and get ready for.”

His guest, Hedieh Mirahmadi Falco, was born and raised Muslim to Iranian parents, worked under multiple U.S. administrations, held a top secret clearance and helped design FBI counter-radicalization programs. Today, she follows Christ and warns believers about what she once helped analyze from the inside.

“We as Christians, we love all people. So we’re not talking about Muslims, we’re talking about the ideology,” she said.

Islam as Global Ideology, Not Just Private Faith

Mirahmadi argues Americans have been shielded from Islam’s historical and doctrinal aims.

“Once the Islamic army advances outside of Mecca, 632 B.C. about, it starts invading all of these Christian lands,” she said. “By 732 B.C., almost that entire region that was Christendom is conquered.”

Hibbs pressed her on whether Islam is merely a religion.

“Are you suggesting… that Islam is a theocratic geopolitical ideology that has conquer and conquest in its mindset?” he asked.

“It’s at the root of Islam,” she replied. “It’s a global expansionist doctrine, folks. And they’ve never denied that.”

She outlined Islam’s two-phase strategy:

  • Phase one: military conquest across Christian territories until World War I.
  • Phase two: political, demographic and cultural “jihad” once military defeat was no longer possible, advanced through groups like the Muslim Brotherhood.

Central to this is Sharia.

“So Sharia is all of it. If you are devout, you abide and believe in all of it,” she said. “It’s a parallel legal system.”

Once embraced, she argued, it cannot coexist with constitutional loyalty.

“How do you technically sincerely take an oath of office to defend the Constitution when you believe in a parallel legal system?” she said.

She also highlighted the doctrine of deception used outside Islamic rule: “It is legal in Islam to lie to advance the cause.”

Political Footprint Growing Inside the United States

Mirahmadi said the ideological advance is already measurable in American elections.

“For us here in the United States, 42 Muslim Americans were elected to office in this cycle,” she said. “So there’s 280 Muslim American officials in total.”

They pointed to Hamtramck, Michigan — called “America’s first Sharia city” — and to a CAIR-produced map of Muslim elected officials by state, which Mirahmadi interprets as evidence of strategic expansion.

More concerning, she said, are international inroads. She highlighted the Qatar-backed peace negotiations and the unexpected concession buried inside them:

“Part of their aid package… was a military installation inside our military base in Idaho.” She described it as an “Islamic footprint of dominance” in a state previously untouched by such influence.

“Not the Same God”: A Warning to Churches

Mirahmadi insisted that interfaith claims equating Allah with the God of Scripture blind Christians to the truth.

“A lot of churches… say that Allah is the same God,” she said. “But it’s so important for Christians to know that is not correct.”

“The understanding in the Quran… of who Jesus is, is He’s a prophet. He is not the Son of God,” she said. “By saying it’s the same God, you’re woefully deceiving yourself and the Muslim.”

And for Muslims who leave Islam, she underscored the stakes: “The punishment for apostasy is death.”

What Christians Must Do Now

They urged believers to act immediately:

  • Teach a clear, courageous worldview rather than shallow positivity.
  • Engage in local and national politics — school boards, councils, legislatures.
  • Educate families about Islamic doctrine, history and the meaning of current events.
  • Refuse intimidation from labels designed to silence concerns.

Her closing appeal pointed back to the message that transformed her life.

“The greatest secret… is that Jesus saves,” she said. “I lived as a devout Muslim and nothing in me ever changed… The transformation I’ve experienced now is only by virtue of the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.”

The conversation ends where it began — with urgency. What Hibbs and Mirahmadi describe is not theoretical, not distant, and not slowing down. Their warning is that the stakes are higher than politics, and the consequences of inaction are already unfolding. The response, they argue, must be informed, courageous and rooted in truth before the window to act is gone.