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Remember The Alamo!—The Indian Invasion Of Texas

Remember The Alamo!—The Indian Invasion Of Texas
  • Tyler Oliveira, who risked life and limb to film a poop-throwing festival in India, has now come home to America, and is filming Indians—with questionable work visas—in Texas. The above image is AI, the video is real.


    Obviously, from one point of view—American—the point is that part of America, the city of Frisco in this case, is becoming unrecognizable.

    From the point of view of the Times Of India, the problem is “anti-India hate in US”

    North Texas is witnessing a striking cultural shift, particularly in the Frisco area, as Indian American communities grow rapidly. A recent video by TPUSA reporter Savannah Hernandez captures the transformation, showing a 72-foot Karya Siddhi Hanuman temple, Holi celebrations with colours, adults playing cricket in parks, streets with names like “Ali Akbar,” and residents in traditional Indian attire.

    Here’s the Holi celebrations with colors:

    https://static.toiimg.com/thumb/msid-130023024,imgsize-161344,width-400,height-225,resizemode-4/130023024.jpg

    Moreover, a sharp rise in online hostility towards Indian Americans has sparked concern across communities in the United States, according to social media and advocacy group data.

    In 2025, more than 24,000 anti-Indian posts on X were tracked, generating over 300 million total views and showing a huge increase in hateful content compared with previous years. By late 2025, weekly anti-Indian content on the platform had nearly tripled, and showed a surge in online rhetoric that often included ethnic slurs and conspiracy theories.

    Texas is now ‘mini‑India’: How a deep-red state became a hotspot for anti-India hate in US, April 4, 2026

    Here’s the video from the Savanah Hernandez post mentioned, and it’s trenchant, but not nearly as fun as a Tyler Oliveira post:

    The Muslim and Indian Takeover of Texas The Muslim and Indian Takeover of Texas

    Ms. Hernandez visits the Karya Siddhi Hanuman Temple, which is huge.

    This Frisco, TX temple was finished in 2021. I don’t know anything bad about this temple, but I happen to know that a similar temple in New Jersey was built with what amounted to slave labor: Untouchables imported from India and paid $1 an hour:

    • The New America: Immigrant Slavery At Hindu Temple In NJ
    • Immigrants Committing Slavery: Hindu Temple Using Untouchable Workers As Slaves In New Jersey

    Federal agents descended on a temple in New Jersey, built by a prominent Hindu sect with close ties to India’s ruling party, after Dalit workers said they had been lured there from India, confined to the temple grounds and forced to work for $1 an hour. https://t.co/MmX0NvRtfU

    — The New York Times (@nytimes) May 11, 2021

    Slavery was abolished in the United States in 1865, but still exists in the Third World, and when you find someone committing slavery in America, it’s usually an immigrant, and frequently an Indian immigrant.

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  • Aside from the cultural issue—and it’s a big, huge cultural issue—what is the problem with all these Indians living in Texas and working for (for example) Infosys?

    Well, one thing is that they displace American workers. Here’s a 2019 story of a lawsuit against Infosys:

    The story says

    Infosys, the India-based information technology consulting firm with an office in Plano, is facing yet another reverse discrimination lawsuit asserting that it creates a hostile work environment for workers who are not from India or South Asia.

    Erin Green, a [male] former supervisor at Infosys, filed suit this week in the Eastern District of Texas in Sherman, alleging that he and black and white staffers on his team were denied raises and promotions, and that other “non-South Asian” workers were berated by South Asian company officials.

    Green, of Frisco, is white and rose to the rank of “head of global immigration” while working in the company’s Plano office. He was terminated in June of 2016, ostensibly for violating Infosys’ “code of conduct by using his work computer for personal use a number of years earlier.”

    Oh, and included in that article is a link to this related article: Tech giant Infosys settles allegations of visa fraud in Plano office for $34 million.

    A major spurt in Indian immigration is the result of hiring boom, and a lot of visas being issued, some fraudulently, all too many legally. What I tend to say about skilled, allegedly high-IQ immigrants is that they may not go on welfare, but they displace a better class of people than illegal immigrants from Mexico do.

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  • Why should a hiring boom in a Dallas exurb like Frisco benefit people from Gujarat, Calcutta, Bombay or Kerala?

    People would be happy to move to Frisco from elsewhere in the US. When there was an oil boom in Dallas in the 80s. the people who benefited were Americans.

    According to the Texas Almanac, there are at least 385,000 Asian Indians living in Texas (figures from 2017) and according to Wikipedia, 235,000 of them live in the Dallas–Fort Worth area or roughly 3% of the metro area’s total population

    First settling in the area as doctors, engineers, and skilled professionals in the medical field, the community has expanded to include information-technology specialists and those in the higher educational realm, including both students and professors. Through multiple waves of immigration periods and beginning families in the region, the Indian population in the DFW area has more than doubled from 2000 to 2010. Recently, there has been an influx of Indians in Frisco and Allen. Asian Indians make up the majority of the population in many subdivisions in Frisco.

    That’s why Oliveira titled his video below I Exposed Texas’ Indian Invasion…

    I Exposed Texas' Indian Invasion...I Exposed Texas' Indian Invasion…

    And here’s the article we did on his dangerous trip to the poop-throwing festival:

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  • There are too many Indians in Texas for the good of Texas or America. They’re there because of thoughtless legal immigration. Fortunately, most are not yet American citizens, but are living in America on temporary visas which can be revoked or just not renewed by the Trump Administration. As as I said earlier, legal immigration is just as bad for America as illegal—and it can be stopped.

    James Fulford has been writing about the national question for over 20 years, mostly for VDARE.com, more recently for White Papers. Subscribe to his personal Substack here.

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Written by

James Fulford

Managing Editor

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14 April 2026

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