The attack occurred at 3:15 a.m. Central Time on Bourbon Street, New Orleans, where a 42-year-old U.S. citizen, Shamsud Din Jabbar, drove a rented Ford pickup truck into a crowd, killing 10-15 people and injuring 35. After hitting the crowd, the suspect exited the vehicle and fired at law enforcement, who returned fire and killed him. An ISIS flag and IEDs were found in the vehicle, suggesting a possible terror cell involvement.
Questions were raised about the lack of steel bollards or barriers that could have prevented the vehicle attack. According to New Orleans City Council member Jean-Pierre Morel, the barriers were being repaired, and the suspect drove over the sidewalk to bypass them, rendering the barriers ineffective even if they had been in place.
Jabbar was a 42-year-old U.S. citizen born and raised in Texas, and an Army veteran with an unclear discharge status. He was driving a rented Ford pickup truck and had an ISIS flag in the vehicle. The FBI is investigating his potential associations with terrorist organizations and whether he acted alone or as part of a terror cell.
President Trump issued a statement lamenting the crime situation under Joe Biden, while J.D. Vance expressed solidarity with the people of New Orleans. The mayor of New Orleans immediately labeled the incident a terror attack, though the FBI initially hesitated before confirming it as such.
ISIS continues to recruit individuals, often domestically born in the West, through the internet. The group has been active in Syria, attempting jailbreaks in Kurdish areas. ISIS affiliates are often radical Muslims who are recruited into the organization, posing a persistent threat to Western countries.
A Cybertruck exploded in front of the Trump Hotel in Las Vegas, causing a significant blast but no reported casualties. The cause of the explosion remains unclear, with speculation ranging from fireworks to a potential message involving Elon Musk and Donald Trump.
The speaker argues that radical Islamism remains a serious threat to the U.S., criticizing attempts to downplay it by focusing on other forms of extremism. They emphasize the need for stricter immigration policies to prevent individuals sympathetic to radical Islamist ideologies from entering the country.
Under President Trump, the U.S. is expected to adopt stricter policies on immigration and anti-terrorism, particularly targeting radical Islamic terrorism. Trump’s administration is likely to focus on preventing immigration from regions sympathetic to Islamic terrorism and strengthening border security.
Hey folks, well it's very difficult to begin the new year with such terrible news out of New Orleans. I wanted to bring you the latest breaking news from the authorities at this point. So what we do know is that by various reports, somewhere between 10 and 15 people have died in New Orleans at this point. Another 35 have been wounded by a terror attack. The terrorist's name
is apparently Shamsud Din Jabbar. Now, normally I don't mention the names of mass killers. The difference is that the authorities are actually seeking more information about this person. And so if you have information about this person, it's actually relevant to know his name. He's a 42-year-old U.S. citizen from Texas. Apparently, according to the FBI, he was driving a Ford pickup truck, which appears to have been rented. There was some early reporting that it had crossed over the
U.S. southern border via the Eagle Pass crossing. That does not mean the person inside was an illegal immigrant or anything like that. Apparently, this car was rented. It last crossed through that Eagle Pass crossing back in November, so it's quite possible the person who owned the vehicle went to Mexico and back into the country. In any case, what we do know is that at 3.15 a.m. Central Time, an individual drove a pickup truck into a crowd of people on Bourbon Street in New Orleans
After hitting the crowd, the suspect then exited the vehicle and fired on local law enforcement. Law enforcement returned fire and killed the suspect on scene. There was in fact an ISIS flag in the vehicle.
the FBI did ask for citizen help in determining if there were any other associates. They are investigating other known associates. They're operating under the assumption this person did not act alone and that this may, in fact, have been part of a terror cell. Presumably, one of the reasons for that is that there were IEDs that were found in the vehicle. There were also IEDs that were found, apparently, on the street. And those were apparently detonated a little bit earlier today.
There are questions that have been raised about why exactly Bourbon Street wasn't better protected, why there weren't steel bollards that were up, why there weren't barriers that would have prevented some sort of terrible automobile attack like this one.
Obviously, this is not the first time that you've seen an Islamic terror attack of this nature. Almost every year, there's a Christmas market in Europe that is attacked by some member associated with ISIS. So what the hell happened here? Well, apparently, according to New Orleans City Council member Jean-Pierre Morel, he said on Wednesday, the barriers on Bourbon Street were in the process of being repaired. The suspect actually drove over the sidewalk to avoid that particular area. He said even had the bollard barriers been up, the circumvention by riding on the sidewalk would have defeated them.
Apparently, according to that city council member, the suspect was staying in Airbnb before the attack. Again, a horrible, horrible attack. Details are still emerging. The officers who were involved in killing the suspect, two of them received gunfire. According to the chief of police, they will be okay. What we do know about the suspect at this point,
Jabbar was an Army veteran, possibly had been discharged. Unclear exactly at this point whether that would be an honorable or dishonorable discharge. There is some tape apparently floating around of the suspect doing things like diversity training on behalf of the military. He apparently, again, was born in Texas and that he was raised in Texas as well. We don't know if he went abroad and was recruited abroad or if he was trained abroad or anything like that at this time. Again, what we do know, according directly to the FBI,
is that he was driving a Ford pickup truck, which was rented. They're working to confirm how the suspect came into possession of the vehicle. And again, there was an ISIS flag that was located in the vehicle.
The FBI says they're working to determine the subject's potential associations and affiliations with terrorist organizations. Now, very early on, the mayor of New Orleans immediately called this a terror attack, and the FBI immediately tried to walk that back and said, well, we don't know if it's a terror attack or not. We're not going to care. And then they came back and said, we're investigating it as a terror attack. They're going to sort of pretend away the fact that they denied it was a terror attack at the outset. But this is pretty clearly an Islamist terror attack.
So presumably the FBI is going to spend the next hours and days trying to retrace exactly what happened to this person, who this person was, who this person was associated with, and if there are other suspects who are out there right now. Meanwhile, there are other explosions that are happening. Unclear whether these are related, whether it's an accident or anything else like that. It would be very weird if it were an accident, what just happened outside of the Trump Vegas hotel, apparently.
A Cybertruck blew up in front of the Trump Hotel in Las Vegas. It's a fairly large explosion. No reports of any casualties. It did rock the area. We have no other information on this at the time. Maybe somebody put fireworks in the Cybertruck. Maybe this was a message about Elon Musk and Donald Trump. We don't know anything like that at this moment. President Trump has issued a statement. He issued a statement very quickly on this, did President Trump. President Trump's statement lamented the situation.
amount of crime under Joe Biden to quote,
J.D. Vance also put out a statement in solidarity with the people of New Orleans at this time. He said, Okay, so what exactly is going on here? Well...
This person was an ISIS affiliate. We know that ISIS tends to recruit over the internet. We know that ISIS has agents all over the world. Very often, these are people who are born domestically inside the West and then are recruited, because they are radical Muslims, into ISIS. We also know that ISIS has been flexing its muscle somewhat in Syria.
The decline of the Assad regime in Syria, the collapse of the Assad regime in Syria, and its replacement with HTS, which is an Islamic Jihad break-off group. It's a break-off group from originally al-Qaeda and then also from ISIS.
That break-off group says they now oppose al-Qaeda and they oppose ISIS, but we know that ISIS also has been attempting jailbreaks in the Kurdish areas of Syria. Could this have something to do with the situation in Syria, the caste in Syria? Totally unclear at this point. Again, it could be another one of these ISIS quote-unquote lone wolves. Again, it appears this person was a domestic American citizen, a person born in the United States and who's recruited into ISIS. Islamic terrorism remains a serious threat to the American public.
Pretending that away by suggesting that the real threat in America is right-wing, quote-unquote, white supremacism, that the real threat of terrorism in the United States has nothing to do with radical Islam, is, of course, wish-casting. And this is one of the big problems that Europe has had as well, is the attempt to pretend away the problem of radical Islamism and its impact on
on the politics and the lives of people who are living in Europe. A huge amount of the immigration backlash that is happening in the West is a direct result of the flooding of the West with people from countries that unfortunately harbor beliefs that are very much in line with those of ISIS, that are Muslim Brotherhood offshoots, that are radical Islamist cells or associated therewith. So again, information is still coming out at this point. We'll bring you more information as it does.
There are going to be serious conversations, and there should be, about the nature of our immigration system, about who should get in, about who should not be allowed in. That is not just going to be a question with regard to illegal immigration. It's going to be a question with regard to legal immigration. Where are people coming from? What are their belief systems? How well do they want to assimilate into the United States? How much do they actually care about American values? How much do they hate those values?
How vulnerable are they to recruitment by radical Islamist terror groups like ISIS? These are all open questions at this point. One thing is for sure, things are about to change in the United States in a very significant way with regard to how Americans view all of these issues because President Trump is coming into power. That is going to change how these issues are addressed. Border issues, immigration issues, anti-terrorism issues.
No more excuses for radical Islamic terror under President Trump. That was one of his strongest points during Trump term number one. I would assume the same is true during Trump term number two. He's put together an excellent foreign policy team that is directed against Islamic terrorism, that is directed against defeating Islamic terrorism, and that is directed against allowing immigrants from places that are warm toward Islamic terrorism into the United States. And we'll continue to bring you all of the news on this.
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