Friday, February 13, 2026

This 'Outstanding' post is a perfect description of the destructive fallacies of 'open borders'; author is sincerely commended!

 


Open borders — A gift to elites, a weapon for politicians, a burden on citizens

There was a time when I believed in open borders, but then reality hit me in the face.

Delise Tattum | February 13, 2026

There was a time when I believed in open borders. I believed in the ideal. The slogan. The dream. A world where people could move freely, build better lives, and contribute to their host countries. A win-win arrangement where immigrants worked hard, integrated, and made their new nation their priority. Families wouldn’t be separated by bureaucracy. Human potential wouldn’t be trapped by geography.

It sounded compassionate. It sounded enlightened. And before I saw the negative consequences, I supported it.

I can see now how naïve I was. I wanted to believe that most people are decent, trustworthy, and come with honorable intentions. I assumed that those who crossed a border would respect the country that took them in, follow its laws, and contribute in good faith.  But the world is not built on ideals. Not everyone plays by the rules. Not everyone comes to integrate or give back.

I also learned that open borders are not promoted for humanitarian reasons but for political and financial gain. To justify their agendas, politicians and elites peddle the narrative, that every arrival will be hardworking, law-abiding, grateful, and eager to contribute. That claim does not hold up to scrutiny. Many immigrants do fit that description, but national policy cannot rest on sentimentality or exceptions.

This approach does not merely welcome the diligent family fleeing danger. It also admits criminals, human traffickers, gang members, and those with no intention of integrating or respecting their host countries’ laws. And a government that refuses to acknowledge this reality and secure its borders is not compassionate, it is negligent.

Most Western nations are welfare states, and no welfare state can indefinitely absorb the world’s poor without buckling under the strain. How can such systems function when millions enter illegally, having contributed nothing to the tax base, and often little afterward? From day one, these migrants draw on citizen-funded infrastructure, such as:

  • Housing assistance
  • Healthcare
  • Schools
  • Roads and public transportation
  • Emergency services
  • Social welfare programs

The taxpayer foots the bill. The citizen bears the burden. Politicians call it “kindness.”

Low-skilled labor may benefit certain industries, but it does not sustain generous welfare systems. The math simply does not work, and the resulting pressure is obvious to anyone outside insulated enclaves.

None of this is an argument against helping genuine refugees. True asylum seekers fleeing war or persecution deserve protection. But the system has been deliberately blurred.

During the 2015 migrant crisis in Europe, Migration Watch UK calculated that over 60% of those arriving in Europe were economic migrants, not refugees. Yet governments and media presented the influx as purely humanitarian.

Why? Because “refugees” make a useful shield. If you question the policy, you are told you are questioning compassion itself. It is emotional blackmail, and politicians know it works.

One of the most alarming features of recent migration waves, both in Europe and the United States, is the large number of arrivals without identification. Some deliberately discard passports before reaching their destination. Without verifiable identity, how can governments:

  • Confirm asylum claims?
  • Screen for criminal records, extremist affiliations, or prior deportations?
  • Ensure public safety?

They cannot. This results in chaos, surrender and political posturing disguised as virtue.

We are told by the politicians and elites that immigration is good. That the population is declining, and citizens are getting old. We need a larger tax base to fund our cost of living and way of life.

Yes, managed immigration can be very good.

But if politicians genuinely wanted more immigration that benefited their countries, they would expand lawful pathways by streamlining processes, but still include background checks, skill assessments, and security vetting—while also repealing the Hart-Cellar Act. Third world cultures do not allow for assimilation, and all that “diversity” just destroys societal cohesion.

Legal, and managed immigration offers dignity to newcomers, security to host nations, economic benefits from high-skilled workers, and realistic prospects for integration. Instead, many governments tolerate and encourage illegal entry, because disorder serves political ends.

Mass migration delivers short-term gains for certain politicians and their allies, demographic shifts that create future voting blocs, cheap labor for corporate interests, and moral posturing that wins media praise. The long-term consequences are economic fragility, social division and declining safety which becomes someone else’s problem.

Elites reap the rewards of:

  • Cheap labor
  • Virtue-signaling capital
  • Political leverage

Ordinary citizens absorb the costs of:

  • Overcrowded schools
  • Strained hospitals
  • Housing shortages and price inflation
  • Wage suppression at the lower end
  • Higher taxes
  • Reduced public safety
  • Greater social fragmentation

The burden falls disproportionately on working- and middle-class communities, not the gated neighborhoods of the powerful.

Western governments have compounded the problem by doing little to encourage native population growth. Family-friendly policies, incentives for childbearing, and cultural support for stable households remain scarce. Instead, leaders treat mass importation as a quick-fix for demographic decline, an easy path that avoids harder domestic choices.

Most unforgivably of all, lax border control puts citizens at direct risk.  A nation that cannot secure its borders ceases to function as a sovereign state and invites disorder and lawlessness.

I once viewed open borders as compassionate. I now see them as reckless and politically motivated, a tool, a gift to elites, a weapon for politicians, and a burden placed squarely on the backs of ordinary citizens.

Open borders are not simply about compassion. They serve agendas.

 

Some American cities are in chaotic turmoil - illegal immigration at the root cause of it all.

 


Whistles not enough? LA activists find a new way to warn about ICE — and your ears probably won't like it

Carlos Garcia February 12, 2026 theblaze.com

A leader of the group says she sees fewer ethnic minorities out because of ICE operations.

Liberal activists in Los Angeles are organizing a new way to warn illegal aliens about Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents.

Amanda Alcalde founded the Highland Park Community Support Group for ICE operations and began posting flyers about their new plan: Install sirens.

'It feels dystopian in a way.'

"We'd like to ultimately have this along all the different streets so they can take shelter," Alcalde said to KTLA-TV.

The effort is not sanctioned by the city, so the group will have to find private property supporters and businesses where it can install the sirens.

She added that she was "really taking a lot of that influence from Minneapolis and trying to turn it into our own here."

Activists already use whistles to alert each other about ICE agents.

"We don't directly get ourselves involved with ICE, but we will get involved protecting the community to stay in their office or home," activist David Trujillo said to KTLA.

Alcalde claimed that the ICE operations have led to a reduced presence of ethnic minorities in Los Angeles.

"I've seen a lot of fear in people's eyes. I don't see a lot of our ethnic minorities out in the day-to-day. It's big change. It feels dystopian in a way," she said.

Blaze News reached out to DHS for comment but did not receive a response by time of publishing.

RELATED: ICE accuses LA of giving 'a middle finger to the law' after county paves way for illegal aliens to receive funding

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, a Democrat, has openly opposed the Trump administration's order to surge ICE operations in the city.

"There is no plan other than fear, chaos, and politics," Bass said in July. "Home Depot one day, a car wash the next, armed vehicles and what looked like mounted military units in a park the next day."

The KTLA report promoted the group's efforts to raise donations from people who oppose ICE.

 

Another example of a failed Judicial system. These criminals are back on the streets.

 


Activist Judge Releases Four Criminal Illegal Aliens Convicted of Murder, Child Sex Crime

Sean Moran 12 Feb 2026 breitbart.com

Middle District Court of Louisiana Judge John deGravelles, an Obama appointee, last Friday released four criminal illegal aliens convicted of murder and child sex crimes from ICE custody.

“Judge John deGravelles, appointed by Barack Obama, released FOUR violent criminals back onto American communities, and unfortunately, the ramifications will only be the continued rape, murder, assault, and robbery of more American victims,” Assistant Department of Homeland Secretary (DHS) Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in written statement.

“Releasing these monsters is inexcusably reckless. President Trump and Secretary Noem are now enforcing the law and arresting illegal aliens who have no right to be in our country. We are applying the law as written. If an immigration judge finds an illegal alien has no right to be in this country, we are going to remove them. Period.”

According to a DHS press release, the judge released:

  • Ibrahim Ali Mohammed, a criminal illegal alien from Ethiopia, who has been convicted of sexual exploitation of a minor. An immigration judge ordered his removal in 2024. He was released by the Biden administration.
  • Luis Gaston-Sanchez, a criminal illegal alien from Cuba, who was convicted of homicide, assault, resisting an officer, concealing stolen property, and two counts of robbery. An immigration judge ordered his removal in 2001.
  • Ricardo Blanco Chomat, a criminal illegal alien from Cuba, who was convicted of homicide, kidnapping, aggravating assault with a firearm, burglary, larceny, and selling cocaine. An immigration judge ordered his removal in 2002.
  •  Francisco Rodriguez-Romero, a criminal illegal alien from Cuba, convicted for homicide and a weapons offense. An immigration judge ordered his removal in 1995.

Last September, DHS partnered with the state of Louisiana to expand ICE detention at the Louisiana State Penitentiary, otherwise known as Angola Prison.

 

Thursday, February 12, 2026

An 'Outstanding' post that calls a spade a spade and must be read and re-read!

 

The Morality and Pragmatism of Immigration Laws

The mass overrunning of our borders warrants a Watergate-style investigation. Meanwhile, the Left’s performative indignition can be countered by both moral principle and by pragmatic reason.

Larry Gordon | February 12, 2026 www.americanthinker.com

It is undeniable that millions of individuals entered the United States between 2021 and 2025 without following U.S. laws on how to do so. This was not only allowed by the previous administration, it actively facilitated the influx with intricate planning and funding and with no democratic consensus.

Polls show most Americans strongly agree that our immigration laws are good and should be enforced. And yet when they are, it evokes ritualistic indignation all the way up to big city mayors, governors, and U.S. senators, all of the same political party that created this mess.

The Pavlovian Left has predictably responded as riotous street mobs that actively interfere with law enforcement. Their focus is upon ICE agents doing the heavy lifting of deportation, while the legacy media stokes their anger.

There is no prologue here, no acknowledgement, much less debate, about what led up to this. And still no official explanation from that same party as to why this influx was orchestrated.

You might think there would be indignation that airplanes were clandestinely flown in in the middle of the night to pick up persons to enter the U.S. illegally, who were then given free housing all on the taxpayer’s dime.

And where is the indignation that hostile countries emptied their prisons and mental institutions into the U.S.? Who could possibly think that would be benign?

The mass overrunning of our borders warrants a Watergate-style investigation. Meanwhile, the Left’s performative indignition can be countered by both moral principle and by pragmatic reason.

Put simply, if someone sneaks into a ballgame, theme park, or concert and gets caught, he gets put out. There is no “Due Process,” and the “sneaker” does not expect any. He expects to get shown out.

Likewise, U.S. immigration law enforcement does not result in imprisonment but rather deportation. That simply means getting sent back preferably to the country from which they came and where they can apply for citizenship per the proper procedure.

Deportation is tough on all involved and can get rough physically (thus optically) when resisted, but it is not cruel or unusual. All countries do this; previous Democrat administrations have routinely done this, and they did not need to hide behind the apologetic spin “we’re only focusing on child rapists and terrorists.”

Clinton and Obama deported millions by enforcing the law and its simple principle, “You sneak in, you get caught, you get put out.” No one prattled about “neighbors being kidnapped ,” and ICE agents did not feel the need to be masked.

Deportation isn’t cruel and unusual and it’s not even “punishment” per se. It is not intended as such, it is following the law. Isn’t "The Law" the central element of Justice?

In fact, we might label ICE’s task “Restorative Justice” as it seeks to cure a malady deliberately brought upon us. Justice typically results in law, but when law does not (and cannot) cover everything, then we must sense there is unfairness, something unjust afoot that should be rectified in our pursuit of justice.

So, it is undeniable that waves of folks sneaking across our borders is not fair to those who have already gone through the procedures properly, nor is it fair to those waiting to be naturalized by the book.

And most importantly, it is not fair to our own citizenry, who must bear the consequences of overrun borders. Think costs and crime and competition and culture. Each one of those things is immensely important in its own right, but all this has been blissfully ignored by a myopic mainstream media.

ICE’s Restorative Justice can rightly pound both the law and the facts while their critics can only pound their chests and still not win the moral side of the argument.

The pragmatism of immigration law is just as clear. We all understand that there are persons who sincerely want to be U.S. citizens and who could be good citizens, but we cannot take all who wish to come.

This is not complicated: For every one American citizen, there are also twenty-four other human beings on the planet. An open borders policy could allow any and every one of them to enter the U.S.

That ratio should give pause and sobering perspective. We cannot have even one-tenth of those people sneaking into our country, nor can we afford to give the world medical care when our government with its deep deficit struggles to provide care for our own citizenry.

Certainly, no one should be coming in unvetted. Vetting should be the real “due process.” And for “asylum” to be granted there should be confirmation and consensus, not just “claims.”

And finally, some analogy to bear this out: If the mantra of “open borders” is taken to its logical conclusion then it should also follow that anyone who wishes to attend an Ivy League school can just go plop themselves down in a seat in any classroom. You can skip the admissions department. And forget tuition, Education is a good thing and should be a right.

Other students should cheer you on as a fellow classmate, one who should not be kidnapped out of the classroom by the Gestapo campus security.

And ditto for hospitals. If you are not feeling well then just go crawl up in a hospital bed. You don’t need no stinkin’ admissions department. After all, healthcare is a right, right?

Or should there be laws and procedural admission rules? What happens if those laws are not enforced?

If a private theatre or theme park allowed folks to sneak in, it would soon go out of business. A hospital might hang on via government subsidies as could a university via even more begging for private donations, but their institutional quality i.e. functionality would dramatically decline.

Likewise, countries that fail to enforce immigration laws might survive at best but with a marked deterioration in quality of life, and no outside entities will be there to bail them out. Take them over, yes, bail them out, no.