https://www.bitchute.com/video/c263P7TwEFzg/
😇 ገብርኤል 🧕 ማርያም ❖ ኡራኤል ❖ ጊዮርጊስ ❖ ተክለ ሐይማኖት ❖ መርቆርዮስ ❖ ዮሴፍ ❖ መድኃኔ ዓለም
👏'እስልምናን አጨርሰዋለሁ' ፤ ጎበዟ የቴክሳስ ፖለቲከኛ ቫሌንቲና ጎሜዝ እርኩሱን ቁርኣን ካቃጠለች በኋላ ሙስሊሞች የቴክሳስ ግዛትን ለቅቀው እንዲወጡ ትናገራለች።
👏 Texas Republican congressional candidate Valentina Gomez has drawn widespread criticism after posting a video on X in which she set fire to a copy of the Quran. The footage, captioned “I will end Islam in Texas so help me God,” quickly went viral, prompting condemnation from Muslim advocacy groups, political leaders, and users across social media. Watch the viral video below:
This incident is the latest in a series of provocative stunts by the 26-year-old candidate. In May 2025, Gomez interrupted Texas Muslim Capitol Day at the state legislature, grabbing the microphone during a civic engagement event and declaring, “Islam has no place in Texas. Help me to Congress so we can end the Islamisation of America. I only fear God.” The event, which included prayers, training workshops, and meetings with lawmakers, was disrupted before security escorted her out. Civil rights groups, including the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), denounced her actions as dangerous rhetoric that undermines religious freedom.
Gomez has previously courted controversy with inflammatory campaign material. In December 2024, she released a video depicting a mock execution of a hooded immigrant while calling for “public executions” of undocumented migrants accused of violent crimes. The footage was restricted on several platforms for violating rules on violent content. Earlier this year, she also filmed herself burning LGBTQ+ literature and vowed to ban such material if elected, while making derogatory remarks about transgender communities.
Who is Valentina Gomez?
Born in Medellín, Colombia, on May 8, 1999, Gomez moved to the United States in 2009 with her family and grew up in Jersey City, New Jersey. Before entering politics, she worked as a real estate investor. She first ran for office in 2024, unsuccessfully seeking the Republican nomination for Missouri Secretary of State, where she placed sixth with 7.4% of the vote.
Despite repeated electoral failures and multiple social media bans, Gomez has built a following online by positioning herself as a far-right figure who embraces controversy. Her Quran-burning stunt has once again spotlighted her campaign’s reliance on incendiary acts to gain attention, raising renewed calls for accountability and reaffirming concerns about rising hate speech in US politics.