Let’s just start with the obvious: if you so much as sneeze in the general direction of a mosque these days, you’re automatically branded a bigot, a racist, or—everyone’s favorite buzzword—Islamophobic. That’s exactly the kind of nonsense Andrea Unger and her neighbors in Dearborn, Michigan, are up against as they dare to ask for one thing: that the city’s existing noise ordinance be enforced equally. Not thrown out. Not rewritten. Just followed.
Now, remember, we’re not talking about people protesting religion or freedom of worship. That’s the first thing the outrage mob will jump to—because it’s much easier to accuse someone of hate than to actually listen to what they’re saying. No, what Andrea’s talking about is waking up at 5:30 in the morning to five minutes of loudspeakered religious chanting—inside her home—because a mosque a quarter-mile away is blasting the call to prayer loud enough to rattle windows and nerves. For two years.
And get this: she documented it. Thirty days. Consistently over 70 decibels. That’s higher than the legal limit of 55 decibels at night and 60 during the day in Dearborn. Seems pretty open and shut, right? If it were a party, a barking dog, or some kid’s car stereo, you know the cops would be all over it. But when it’s a mosque? Suddenly, everyone’s wearing kid gloves and walking on eggshells.
In Dearborn, Michigan, they’ve started playing the Islamic call to prayer 5 times a day on speakers at 6 in the morning, and 4 other times throughout the day.
I will vote for whoever will get this out of my country the fastest. pic.twitter.com/ZQLWk20Yq2
— Braeden (@BraedenSorbo) September 27, 2025
Andrea even brought a petition with 40 signatures to the city council. Forty neighbors saying, “Hey, this isn’t fair. We’ve got laws. Let’s follow them.” And what do they get? Crickets. Or worse, they get accused of being Islamophobic. That’s what happens when identity politics runs the show—legitimate concerns get swept under the prayer rug in favor of who checks what demographic box.
And don’t miss this little gem from Mayor Abdullah Hammoud—he’s the one who called a local Christian minister a “racist,” “bigot,” and “Islamophobe” for having the nerve to object to renaming streets after controversial Islamic figures. Because that’s the playbook now: if you disagree, you’re a hater. You can’t possibly just want the rules applied fairly—you must have some deep-seated bias. Never mind that this is the same city where public schools can’t say a prayer to any god, per the Supreme Court, but a prayer to Allah blasted over loudspeakers is fine? Where’s the consistency?
How can it be legal to blare crazy religious shit so loud it wakes everyone up early in the morning?
Dearborn residents push city to curb noise levels from mosque’s call to prayer https://t.co/1yWM976FlG #FoxNews
— Moral High Ground (@LeafReader) October 3, 2025
Even more telling is how some residents are afraid to speak up. Afraid of being labeled, canceled, or publicly shamed for simply wanting peace and quiet in their own homes. That says a lot about the climate we’re living in. And let’s be real—if the roles were reversed, if a Christian church were cranking out five-minute sermons on loudspeakers seven times a day, this wouldn’t even be a debate. It would be a court case. Maybe a protest. Definitely a media frenzy.
Here’s the part no one wants to say out loud: this isn’t about religion, it’s about special treatment. And in America, the law is supposed to apply to everyone the same way—regardless of your religion, your background, or how loudly your microphone is turned up. But in cities like Dearborn, the enforcement of those laws seems to depend more on who you might offend than on what the ordinance actually says.
It’s time to send in the military to Dearborn, Michigan to deport every single one of them.
Do you agree?
— MJTruthUltra (@MJTruthUltra) September 29, 2025
One mosque in the area did the decent thing and voluntarily turned down their speakers. That’s what neighbors do. That’s what respect looks like. But for the mosque at the center of this complaint? Nothing. No comment, no compromise, no accountability.
This is a problem.
The first Muslim Mayor of Dearborn Michigan, Abdullah Hammoud, telling an American citizen he isn’t welcome at a city hall meeting because he disagreed.
We need Trump get serious about deporting Arabs from Michigan and Somalis from Minnesota.pic.twitter.com/sX2BKGs6VB https://t.co/4nfyBn7Pqv
— Wall Street Mav (@WallStreetMav) September 25, 2025
City Council President Mike Sareini said the police are investigating, and admitted there are violations. That’s a start. But talk is cheap. Will they actually enforce the law? Or are they too scared of the backlash that might come with doing their job?
This isn’t rocket science. It’s common sense. Enforce the law—the same way for everyone. If Dearborn can’t manage that, then maybe it’s time voters put people in office who still remember what equal protection under the law actually means.


