How Proposition 10 Safeguards Texas Courts From Foreign Legal Doctrines

- June 4, 2026
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Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent acknowledged Wednesday that he threatened to “kick ass” during a heated confrontation last year, while firmly denying reports that he threatened to punch the now-acting Director of National Intelligence “in the face.”

The unusual exchange emerged during a Senate Finance Committee hearing, where Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) pressed Bessent about reports surrounding a confrontation between the two Trump administration officials during the summer of 2025.

According to Bessent, one key detail in the widely circulated account was inaccurate.

While he denied threatening.

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Seijah Drake was born in Boston, MA, where she developed a penchant for writing early on and a passion for politics in college. After college she worked briefly for a conservative media in New York before relocating to the Greater D.C. Area to pursue a career in political marketing. She now resides in the free state of Florida.

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On March 3, 2026, Republican primary voters in Texas will be asked if they support a simple proposition: “Texas should prohibit Sharia Law.” The simplicity is bracing. The reasoning is not. To think clearly about the question, we must first distinguish two things that are too often blurred together: Islam as a religion and Sharia as a legal order. The First Amendment protects the former. It does not license the latter when it manifests as coercive governance.

Consider an analogy. A church is a place of worship. It may also host a marriage ceremony or a voluntary arbitration. But if church elders detained congregants, imposed corporal punishment, or threatened retaliation against those who sought relief in civil courts, we would not call that religion. We would call it a crime. The law draws this line every day. Belief is protected. Coercion is not.

Sharia, understood in its classical sense, is a comprehensive moral and legal system derived from the Qur’an, Hadith, and centuries of juristic interpretation. In societies where religion and state were unified, it supplied rules of criminal punishment, evidentiary standards, family law, inheritance, and governance. In the US, however, sovereignty rests with the people under a written Constitution. The Constitution protects free exercise. It also secures equal protection, due process, and access to courts. Any system that displaces those guarantees through intimidation or parallel enforcement mechanisms collides with the rule of law.

Some will object at once. Are we not targeting a religion? No. The target is conduct. The target is the creation of a de facto criminal justice system within a community that pressures victims to report only to a tribunal, that discourages recourse to police, that imposes penalties through threats, and that treats its rulings as binding under fear of retaliation. That is not theology. That is governance.

A clear example is apostasy. In Islamic communities, leaving Islam after due process is punishable by death. Even where no explicit threat is spoken, the fact that apostasy merits death operates as a standing menace, embedding de facto coercion into the social fabric of the community itself. In America, the right to change religion or hold none is absolute. When leaders in a community make credible threats of death or serious harm to prevent a member from leaving, or knowingly cultivate an environment in which members reasonably fear such consequences, that is not protected speech. Under Texas law, such conduct constitutes a terroristic threat, aggravated assault by threat, unlawful restraint, kidnapping, retaliation, or engaging in organized criminal activity when leaders act in concert. Federally, prosecutors may pursue conspiracy against rights, deprivation of civil rights, kidnapping, witness tampering, or racketeering where there is a pattern of predicate crimes. The doctrinal origin of the threat is irrelevant. The threat, whether explicit or systemically implied, is the crime.

Blasphemy offers a second illustration. Islamic communities prescribed severe penalties for insulting the Prophet or Islam. When members of an Islamic enclave are taught from a very young age that blasphemy justifies violent punishment, the coercive effect precedes any formal tribunal ruling. The expectation of swift and likely retribution can function as an ambient threat, chilling speech long before any official process is invoked. In the U.S., speech critical of any religion is protected. When a tribunal punishes an accuser, threatens violence for alleged blasphemy, suppresses reporting to law enforcement, or knowingly cultivates a culture in which dissenters reasonably fear violent reprisal, prosecutors do not need to debate theology. They document intimidation, retaliation, or obstruction of justice. They charge the underlying offenses. The First Amendment does not shield violence, coordinated intimidation, or extortion merely because it is religiously motivated.

Hudud punishments refer to a category of fixed criminal penalties in classical Islamic jurisprudence that are understood to be mandated by divine command rather than judicial discretion. These include punishments for offenses such as theft, adultery, fornication, false accusation of adultery, robbery, and alcohol consumption. Penalties include amputation, flogging, or, in certain cases, execution, though standards of proof were often stringent. Even when modern communities moderate these penalties to fines, detention, or social sanctions, the underlying structure remains one in which certain acts are treated as divinely fixed crimes subject to compulsory punishment. That structure raises the same issue. A voluntary mediation that both parties may freely exit is one thing. A tribunal that claims participation is voluntary while operating inside a tightly controlled community is another. When members are raised to believe that refusal invites ostracism, economic retaliation, or violence, the label “voluntary” becomes largely semantic. Families who decline to submit disputes to a Sharia tribunal, or who report crimes to civil authorities instead, may reasonably fear communal punishment or collective reprisal. Under those conditions, participation is not meaningfully optional. Detention, corporal punishment, or credible threats that compel submission are another matter still. Texas statutes on assault, unlawful restraint, coercion, organized criminal activity, and hindering prosecution apply to anyone. Federal civil rights statutes apply when access to courts is systematically denied. The legal theory is straightforward. Religious freedom protects belief and truly voluntary arbitration. It does not immunize confinement, violence, systemic intimidation, or obstruction.

Gender based legal distinctions further clarify the boundary. Classical rules on guardianship, inheritance, and testimony differ from modern U.S. law. If adults voluntarily structure their private affairs within lawful bounds, the state has no quarrel. But if women are coerced into marriages, denied access to courts, stripped of property through fraud, or threatened for seeking civil remedies, prosecutors again focus on conduct. Forced marriage, fraud, theft by coercion, and exploitation are crimes regardless of the doctrinal justification offered.

Polygamy underscores the same point. Texas recognizes one civil spouse. Religious-only marriages, beyond that, can trigger bigamy exposure if participants hold themselves out as married while a prior marriage subsists. Criminal liability expands with fraud or coercion. Sham marriages for immigration can constitute federal immigration fraud. Misrepresentations for tax or benefits can yield state and federal fraud charges. If minors are involved, the exposure is grave. The legal strategy does not criminalize belief in plural marriage. It prosecutes bigamy, fraud, coercion, and sexual offenses involving minors where the evidence supports them.

A skeptic may press further. Is this not a solution in search of a problem? The answer depends on evidence. Prosecutors must not proceed by stereotype. They must proceed by proof. At the same time, they must recognize that a system which formally prescribes death for apostasy and violent punishment for blasphemy carries coercive implications even before an explicit threat is uttered. When a community is structured around teachings that make retaliation predictable and severe, the burden is on leaders to show that participation is genuinely voluntary. One cannot cultivate a culture of coercion and retaliation under the shadow of lethal punishment and then invoke the word “voluntary” as a shield. The win condition is an evidence package showing credible retaliation for going to police or courts, enforcers who impose penalties such as money, confinement, or violence, and leadership direction or benefit. With that record, county and state authorities can seek arrests, injunctive relief, protective orders, and enterprise-style charges that reach coordinators. Federal authorities can pursue obstruction, civil rights conspiracies, and, where supported, RICO. The aim is not to whack a mole. It is to dismantle coercive systems.

There is a further cultural dimension. In Western tradition, churches are often treated as sacred spaces. Popular culture reinforces this intuition in vivid ways. In the Highlander series, immortals who otherwise wage relentless combat agree to a single rule: no fighting on holy ground. A church suspends violence by its very status. In Dracula and later vampire lore, monsters cannot enter a church uninvited. Sacred space functions as a barrier against evil. The notion of sanctuary, the idea that holy ground suspends ordinary conflict, has deep roots. That intuition does not alter legal standards, but it shapes public perception. Historically, however, the mosque in Medina served not only as a place of prayer but as a center of governance and mobilization. The point here is not polemical. It is structural. When a building functions as a community center, court, and enforcement hub, prosecutors must analyze its activities as such. No structure is beyond scrutiny when credible evidence shows organized coercion.

This structural difference has been exploited in conflicts where Islamic militant groups leverage Western views of sacred spaces against them. Many Islamic migrant communities frame their struggle as a holy war (jihad) against the West, viewing mosques not just as places of worship but as fortresses for waging that war. For instance, in Gaza, Hamas has repeatedly used mosques for military purposes, including storing weapons, hiding tunnel entrances, and launching rockets at Israel. When Israeli forces respond by targeting these sites, Hamas and its supporters accuse Israel of war crimes for attacking “mosques,” despite the mosques’ dual military function under international humanitarian law, which allows strikes on religious sites if they are used for combat. This tactic manipulates Western perceptions of sacred inviolability, rooted in Judeo-Christian traditions, to portray defensive actions as desecration, rallying international sympathy and pressure.

Consider also the role of economic control. In planned Islamic communities, residents purchase interests in entities that hold title to land rather than taking direct deeded ownership. As a formal matter, such ownership structures can be lawful if they are transparent, compliant with securities and real estate law, and genuinely voluntary. But legality in structure does not eliminate the reality of coercion in their operation. When housing is tied to continued good standing within a Sharia-governed religious community, the leverage is profound. It is one thing to face social scorn or ostracism for defying a tribunal. It is quite another to believe that noncompliance with Sharia rulings could place one’s own home, or the homes of one’s parents, siblings, or extended family, at risk through coordinated economic pressure or expulsion. Under those conditions, “choice” is distorted by material dependence. If residents are misled about the nature of their interest, pressured to conform under threat of eviction tied to religious compliance, or deprived of property through fraud or collective retaliation, then securities law, consumer protection statutes, and fraud provisions are implicated. Control over housing can convert social discipline into enforceable domination. The remedy remains legal. Prove deception, duress, or retaliatory coordination. Enforce the statutes.

Proposition 10, then, should be understood not as a referendum on Islam but as a statement about jurisdiction. Texas should prohibit Sharia law insofar as it operates as binding legal authority that displaces Texas law through coercion. The prohibition does not criminalize doctrine. It can clarify that no tribunal may claim criminal jurisdiction, impose detention, or interfere with access to courts. It can authorize civil actions to enjoin deceptive quasi-judicial operations. It can direct prosecutors to prioritize cases where threats and organized enforcement mechanisms exist.

Some will worry about overreach. The answer is discipline. Prosecutors must separate advocacy from action. Under Brandenburg, abstract advocacy is punishable only when aimed at producing imminent lawless action and likely to do so. Teaching doctrine is protected. Training and organizing cross the line when they become solicitation, conspiracy, true threats, or operational preparation tied to a criminal plan. This distinction is familiar in other contexts. It can be applied here with care.

Others will fear discrimination. The surest antidote is neutrality. The same statutes would apply to any group that established a coercive parallel court, whether styled religious or secular. If a self-described Christian tribunal detained members, threatened defectors, or obstructed reporting to police, it would face identical exposure. Equal enforcement is not animus. It is the rule of law.

Texas has tools already. Assault and unlawful restraint statutes address detention. Extortion and theft by coercion address forced payments. Witness tampering and retaliation address intimidation of victims. Organized criminal activity statutes elevate penalties when leaders coordinate enforcement. Civil injunctions can halt deceptive practices. At the federal level, civil rights conspiracies, obstruction of justice, and racketeering provide enterprise-level remedies when there is a pattern of predicate crimes. These are serious instruments. They should be used with seriousness.

The broader aim is assimilation under a common law, not exclusion. Many Muslims in America are model citizens who flourish under constitutional protections. They benefit when coercive enclaves are dismantled. The choice is not between tolerance and bigotry. It is between self-government and parallel sovereignty. A constitutional republic cannot tolerate competing criminal jurisdictions within its borders.

Will prohibiting Sharia law solve every problem? Not necessarily. But clarifying that no religious tribunal may exercise binding criminal authority, and empowering prosecutors to treat coercive systems as enterprises subject to dismantlement, would send a clear signal. Texas law governs in Texas. Access to courts is not negotiable. No one may be threatened into silence.

The stakes are high because the principle is foundational. Sovereignty belongs to the people under the Constitution. Religious liberty is a jewel of that order. It flourishes best when detached from coercive power. By focusing on conduct rather than creed, and by using existing statutes to confront intimidation, fraud, and organized enforcement mechanisms, conservative prosecutors can defend both liberty and law.

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