The voices no one asks: Communities most affected by crime
The people actually living where ICE is working are invisible in the national conversation. Why? Because their perspective doesn’t fit the preferred narrative.
Christian Vezilj | February 19, 2026
Let me ask you a question. When was the last time you witnessed a news team stroll into a neighborhood that has been experiencing criminal activity by illegal aliens and interview the residents about their thoughts on ICE? I mean, not the activists, celebrities, or the politicians reading from a cue card, but the people who live there, raise their kids, and suffer the consequences firsthand.
If you are having trouble thinking of such an example, you are not the only one. Such interviews are virtually nonexistent.
Instead, we get a steady stream of slogans: “Defund ICE.” “Abolish ICE.” “ICE out.” You’ve heard them. They’re repeated so often they start to sound like background noise. And if you only listened to the loudest voices, you’d think the entire country is united in outrage against immigration enforcement.
But here’s the thing — and you already know this instinctively — that’s not the whole story. In fact, it’s not even half of it.
The people shouting the slogans all share one thing in common: they’re not the ones living with the crime ICE is addressing. They’re not the ones who’ve had their homes broken into. They’re not the ones who’ve watched gang activity creep closer to their block. They’re not the ones who’ve called 911 so many times they’ve memorized the dispatcher’s voice. They are distanced from the issue, and so they are safe and can be outraged.
Now contrast that with the families who actually live in the neighborhoods where ICE conducts operations. These are the people who feel the difference when a dangerous offender is removed. They’re the ones who breathe a little easier when the gangs who have been terrorizing the neighborhood are finally gone. They’re the ones who know what it’s like to live with the consequences of inaction.
And yet, they’re invisible in the national conversation. Why? Because their perspective doesn’t fit the preferred narrative.
Think about what has occurred over the last year. Crime has dropped in many parts of the country. Not everywhere, but enough that people have noticed. And part of that decline — whether the media wants to admit it or not — is tied to the removal of individuals who were repeatedly victimizing the same vulnerable communities. When ICE steps in, it’s often because local authorities have run out of options or because the offenders have no legal right to remain after committing serious crimes. Then there are sanctuary cities that protect illegal aliens, rather than protecting the communities most affected. But you rarely hear that part.
Instead, the cameras stay focused on the protests, the signs, the chants, and the emotional appeals. They interview activists who speak in sweeping moral terms about compassion and justice. And look, compassion matters and justice matters. But compassion without proximity is easy, and justice without consequence is abstract. The people who live closest to the problem understand the stakes in a way that no slogan can capture.
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Imagine if a reporter actually walked into those neighborhoods. Imagine the conversations they’d hear. A mother saying she finally feels safe letting her kids play outside. A shop owner explained how many times he had been robbed before someone stepped in. A grandmother who spent years praying for help because the local system failed her.
Those voices would change the entire debate. They would reveal a truth that activists and celebrities never have to confront: enforcement protects the vulnerable.But those interviews never make it to air, and this is media malpractice. The media has an agenda, and it is the reader’s or viewer’s responsibility to step back and look at the whole picture, as the loudest voices are the least affected. The quietest voices are the most affected. And the media amplifies the former while erasing the latter. It creates the illusion of consensus where none exists. The people who live with the consequences are never the ones shaping the narrative.
They don’t have platforms or publicists. They don’t have the privilege of pondering enforcement as a philosophical question. They endure the consequences. They experience the difference between when laws are enforced and when they are not, and they will bear the cost of a community without enforcement. A healthy society listens to the people closest to the problem. It honors their experience. It protects the vulnerable and refuses to silence them simply because their reality is inconvenient to someone else’s storyline.
Until we do that, we’re not having an honest conversation. We’re just amplifying the voices that shout the loudest while ignoring the voices that matter most. Thankfully, alternative media outlets are emerging, and people are gradually turning away from traditional elite media corporations. Although the shift is slow, it indicates healthy progress and positive change.