STEVE DOOCY (CO-HOST): Meanwhile, Hamtramck, Michigan is the first Muslim-majority city in America. So what is it really like to live there?
BRIAN KILMEADE (CO-HOST): Pete Hegseth went to find out himself. First time ever in America, right?
PETE HEGSETH: We did, absolutely. In 2013, this town became the first Muslim-majority city. We went to check it out. What was Hamtramck, Michigan like? It is unlike any other town in America. Surrounded by the city of Detroit, Hamtramck just elected a Muslim-majority city council, and more changes are coming.
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HEGSETH: We talked to a lot of folks that day. And what was interesting was what was said on-camera and off-camera. A lot of folks weren't willing to go camera and say their true feelings. When the camera's off --
DOOCY: Why?
KILMEADE: They've got to live there, right?
HEGSETH: Yeah, they've got to live there. There's a lot of social pressure. But when the camera turns off or when we're pre-interviewing, they're saying, well, we're pretty worried about this. There's a lot of anxiety. We're not sure if, they're not actually integrating as much as we'd want them to.
ANNA KOOIMAN (CO-HOST): Yeah, we talk a lot about assimilation and how important that is. A rep from the Census Information Center said that the predominantly Muslim groups don't intermingle much because of language barriers. Did you notice them assimilating?
HEGSETH: And we saw that. Twenty-seven languages in the schools, segmentation in the town. There's a Yemeni portion, there's a Bangladeshi part. There isn't as much assimilation. Folks in the Polish population talked about that, too. So, concerns about integration.