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


Texas is now 'mini‑India': How a deep-red state became a hotspot for 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.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.

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The escalation began earlier in 2025, when explicit racial insults targeting Indians started to spread on social media. Mid‑year, posts emerged framing Indian immigrants as demographic “replacers” or cultural “invaders,” themes that gained traction and went viral. In the summer of 2025 alone, several hundred posts using anti‑Indian language amassed nearly 281 million views on X, according to digital research studies cited by the National Daily.Advocacy groups have documented this rise in online hate. Stop AAPI Hate, a nonprofit that tracks discrimination against Asian American and Pacific Islander communities, reported a 115 percent increase in anti‑Indian slurs tied to violent rhetoric between 2023 and late 2025.The online hate has also affected real life, especially in places with growing Indian American communities. In Frisco, Texas, a suburb of Dallas‑Fort Worth, tensions came to a head at a city council meeting on February 3. Videos and reports showed a crowd, many from outside the city, confronting Indian American residents with complaints about immigration and the local economy.The backlash in Frisco has also been tied to broader narratives around immigration, economic anxiety and cultural change. Some online activists spread unfounded claims about supposed “Indian takeover” of the local community, while others connected Indian immigration with visa programmes such as H‑1B or O‑1A, often without evidence.Indian American advocacy organisations have responded by releasing legal and civil rights guidance to help community members understand their protections under US law.

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