THE GOOD NEWS: A lot of Muslim babies born of first cousin marriages die soon after birth. THE BAD NEWS: Of the inbred Muslim babies who do not die right away, a large number of them have so many physical and mental disabilities, UK taxpayers are forced to bear the costs of caring for these genetic freaks for the rest of their lives.

A rarely spoken-about problem with Muslims is their deeply ingrained practice of marrying first cousins — a practice prohibited in the Judeo-Christian tradition since the days of Moses. With mass immigration into Europe and the West from Muslim countries, especially Pakistan, chronic inbreeding not only is a societal problem, it’s serious a drain on a country’s medical and financial resources.
These problems within Islam bring many detriments to Western countries. Expenses related to mentally and physically handicapped Muslim immigrants, for instance, severely drain the budgets and resources of our societies. More than half of all childrenin schools for children with mental and physical handicaps are foreigners — of whom Muslims are by far the largest group.
Economic Times A 2025 viral social media post by anti-Islam activist Tommy Robinson has reignited a contentious debate over cousin marriage practices within the British Pakistani community. He urges the British government to ban the practice outright. His comments have been widely condemned as inflammatory and racist by critics across social media.

Tommy Robinson tells it like it is:
“Pakistanis make up 3% of the UK population. They are responsible for 33% of birth defects. They are being born retarded.
It’s costing the economy billions and billions because Mohammed married his cousin.”
Ban cousin marriage! pic.twitter.com/tP6FBsUzwP
— Dr. Maalouf (@realMaalouf) July 6, 2025
A BBC investigation in Britain several years ago revealed that at least 55% of the Pakistani community in Britain was married to a first cousin.
In a report by Nicolai Sennels, published on PJ Media, massive inbreeding among Muslims has been going on since their prophet allowed first-cousin marriages more than 50 generations (1,400 years) ago. For many Muslims, therefore, intermarriage is regarded as being part of their religion. In many Muslim communities, it is a source of social status to marry one’s daughter or son to his or her cousin.
70 percent of all Pakistanis are inbred. A rough estimate reveals that close to half of everybody living in the Arab world is inbred. A large percentage of the parents that are blood related come from families where intermarriage has been a tradition for generations.
Medical evidence shows that the probability of depression is higher in communities where consanguine marriages are also high. The closer the blood relative, the higher the risk of mental and physical retardation and schizophrenic illness, as well as recessive genetic disorders.
And then there are the findings on intelligence. Research shows that if one’s parents are cousins, intelligence goes down 10-16 IQ points. The risk of having an IQ lower than 70 (criterion for being “retarded”) increases 400 percent among children from cousin marriages.
Cousin marriage is a long-standing tradition in many parts of South Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa. Within the UK, it’s more common among immigrant communities, particularly British Pakistanis, as part of efforts to preserve wealth, property, and family ties.
A 2022 DW article cited a 2017 report linking Pakistan’s high rate of genetic mutations to its “heterogenous composition” and deeply entrenched tribal and caste systems, which encourage inter-family marriages. Over 1,000 mutations across 130 genetic disorders have been documented in Pakistan to date.

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