Sunday, July 19, 2026

Global demographics is transformed by mass immigration! Non-assimilation destroys national sovereignty! Plain and simple - the planet is in an uproar!

 


Immigration Is A Proxy Issue For A Western Government Trend

Mass immigration doesn’t stand alone. Instead, Western governments, including ours, have much grander plans for the end of nations.

Allan J. Feifer | July 19, 2026 www.americanthinker.com

One of the greater mysteries of our century may be why governments across much of Europe, North America, and even Australia adopted remarkably similar immigration policies seemingly at the same time. It is difficult to believe this happened by chance. And unlike Adam Smith’s Invisible Hand, which explains how complex order can arise without central direction, mass migration appears less like an organic historical development than a remarkably coordinated political calculus.

There are many explanations; some point to economics, others to humanitarianism. Others argue that businesses sought inexpensive labor or that politicians sought new voters. Whatever the explanation, governments across Western civilization not only permitted but actively facilitated mass immigration, even in the face of demonstrably low rates of assimilation by some groups. Government leaders have bent over backward, not only facilitating their entry but also subsidizing their living costs, looked the other way as large numbers of young male migrants, including many with criminal histories, entered and remained, and then protected them from expulsion.

This essay examines the forces that continue to promote this mass immigration despite electoral and mounting fiscal costs, and shows how these new immigrants have consistently failed to assimilate. Why do progressive governments cling to these policies like glue? Why do major media organizations so often minimize migrant crimes while emphasizing stories that reinforce preferred narratives that are harmful to a country’s citizens? Why has a common vocabulary—words such as “welcoming,” “neighbors,” and “safety”—appeared almost simultaneously across governments, advocacy groups, and media outlets?

The central question is not whether large-scale migration has been encouraged; evidence supports that conclusion. The real mystery is how so many institutions, in so many countries, arrived at the same destination nearly simultaneously.

So, how did it occur? To answer this question necessarily requires some inference and speculation.

What we can say is that over several decades, international and domestic organizations and leaders of many Western democracies have shifted away from the central importance of the individual toward a collectivist mentality. Recurring themes promoting transnationalism, nationhood, borders, and identity politics conflict with traditional bedrock constructs such as citizenship and defensible borders.

The people undertaking these discussions and actions are well-funded, disciplined, coordinated, and, if you look at how consistent the messaging and actions are across the Western world, it becomes more difficult to discount coordination by parties, known and unknown, driving us toward a unipolar, undemocratic future. Mass migration is one of the tools of this drive.

So where does this lead? I see three takeaways:

1.    There is a concerted effort to make large-scale immigration seem not only acceptable but desirable.

2.    As during COVID, we can again witness intense pressure to conform to a curated socially correct way of thinking, particularly in blue states and cities.

3.    We are witnessing an intensive effort by progressives to internationalize social, legal, and even historical events, delegitimizing European and American national identities and, especially, America’s constitutional ethos.

Mass immigration is one manifestation of a broader worldview that regards national identity, citizenship, borders, and other inherited institutions as obstacles to be reimagined rather than foundations to be preserved.

If that interpretation is correct, immigration is not the end of the story but the beginning. Once that framework takes hold, it naturally extends into other debates—affordability, antisemitism, international policy, wealth inequality, and countless other issues where traditional American assumptions are increasingly challenged.

Mass immigration is not the only social construct at play; it is simply among the most visible. If this broader project succeeds, what remains is a society progressively reorganized around a different set of political assumptions—what many would instantly recognize as collectivist.

Americans may never have been as disconnected and, arguably, as confused and at odds as they are today. The divisions are palpable, not unlike the question of slavery was before the Civil War. And it is easy to understand why. The various institutions that people follow, from the political party they support to their religious institutions, schools, and the government that leads us, are catering to polarizing constituencies, sending out mixed and utterly confusing messages that frequently make no sense!

I want to say that our institutions reflect logical, evolving priorities, but I can’t. Our institutions are not just confused concerning their underlying assumptions; no, they’re actively rejecting essential tenets, such as the centrality of our country’s founding and our Constitution. Until recently, that wasn’t up for discussion. However, today, progressives are aligning against our historic principles and, frequently, the will of the people.

Illegal mass immigration is ultimately a symptom of a larger debate over the direction of our nation, accountability, and what has allowed policies that would have been previously rejected out of hand. The confusion, uncertainty, and even anger many feel are palpable. Our country is blessed with a system that has a built-in capacity for self-correction. We don’t know today who, what, or even why America’s future is in play. God willing, we’ll figure it out and self-correct before it is too late.

Regardless, immigration cannot be understood as an isolated policy disagreement. It has become a proxy for a much larger debate over sovereignty, citizenship, democratic accountability, and what our country is to become. Until Americans address that larger argument, we’ll continue debating immigration while missing the philosophy that increasingly drives it.

God Bless America.

Friday, July 17, 2026

States with Voting rolls problems must correct this problem immediately. The mid-terms are approaching rapidly.

 

Homeland Security found over 250,000 illegal aliens registered to vote in just four states

After California, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Nevada opted not to use a new federal citizenship database, a Homeland Security review found more than a quarter million noncitizens registered to vote.

By Steven Richards justthenews.com 7-16-26

The Homeland Security Department found more than a quarter million illegal aliens were registered to vote in four states – California, Nevada, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, according to a review the agency conducted on publicly available data. 

The finding is detailed in a memo titled “PREVENTING ALIEN VOTING” obtained by Just the News on Thursday ahead of President Donald Trump’s speech about election integrity. 

In the speech, the president also shared Intelligence Community findings that the People’s Republic of China has “compromised” more than 200 million voter records across at least 18 U.S. states.  

The agency reviewed voter registrations as part of a Trump administration priority to address concerns about illegal voting in the U.S. using the SAVE system, a controversial citizenship database that includes Social Security numbers. The administration is offering the centralized records to states to identify non-citizens on voter rolls across the country. 

The four states opted not to utilize the SAVE system, prompting the agency to conduct a separate review using publicly available voter records. 

That review found that “over 250,000 non-citizens are illegally registered to vote” in just those four states. 

“State election officials in California, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Nevada have been notified of this serious threat to national security and DHS stands ready to support their efforts to identify and remove ineligible registrants,” the agency wrote in the memo.  

You can read the memo below: 

File

PREVENTING ALIEN VOTING.pdf

The agency also said that the probe would expand to include “multiple additional states.” 

In addition, the agency pointed out that several states have “successfully utilized” the federal records to review and clean their voter rolls. To date, those reviews have identified “400,000 deceased registrants” and “over 28,000 non-citizens illegally registered to vote.” 

The states that chose to participate, such as Georgia, Ohio and Tennessee, the agency said, “are serious about ensuring that only US citizens vote in US elections,” demonstrated by the comparatively low number of non-citizens enrolled to vote in those states. 

“There is an undeniable pattern emerging as DHS begins to unravel the horrific damage done by the open border policies of the Biden administration. States that have adopted alien-first policies instead of American-first policies have a disproportionate number of non-citizens on their voter rolls,” the department concluded. 

Fox News Digital reported on Thursday that Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin sent letters to four states, dated Friday, outlining the conclusions of his department’s investigation. He asked state offices to cooperate with the agency to verify voter identities. 

According to the outlet, DHS estimated as many as 190,832 non-citizens registered in California, 35,152 in New Jersey, 15,903 in Nevada and 14,576 in Pennsylvania.

Correction: An earlier version of this article incorrectly read 250 million in the headline. 

 

Thursday, July 16, 2026

'Selective Law Enforcement' has and will continue to make 'Law Enforcement' insignificant. Law Enforcement must be allowed to use its tools.

 

Trump vs. Collins: Vehicle stops resume as an effective measure in fighting illegal immigration

Collins, a moderate Republican Senator, asked DHS to halt traffic stops after a series of deadly shootings, but Trump ordered that the stops continue.

By Amanda Head July 15, 2026 justthenews.com

On Wednesday, President Donald Trump put an end to a brief cessation of traffic stops intended to identify and process illegal migrants in Maine, after the Pine Tree States' senior senator, Republican Susan Collins, urged the policing measure to be halted.

On Tuesday night, following a fatal shooting in Biddeford, Maine, during one such traffic stop, Collins reportedly called Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Markwayne Mullin and explicitly urged him to cease all non-urgent vehicle stops nationwide.

DHS, under Mullin's direction, then implemented the temporary pause, but in an executive flex, Trump overruled it within 24 hours. 

The move is classic Trump—exercising unusually tight personal oversight of his administration’s ambitious mass deportation initiative, signaling that even seemingly-minor immigration enforcement decisions will flow directly from the White House rather than career officials at DHS or ICE.

By repeatedly intervening to maintain aggressive tactics and rejecting pauses urged by agency leaders, Trump has made it abundantly clear that operational tempo will not bend to bureaucratic caution or short-term controversies. It's a classic, hands-on approach that shows his determination to deliver on his campaign promises at scale, treating interior enforcement as a personal priority immune to internal resistance.

Terry v. Ohio in full effect 

Despite detractors' criticism of the practice, it's constitutional, established in 1968 by the U.S. Supreme Courts' decision in Terry v. Ohio

That landmark Supreme Court case allows police (or federal agents) to briefly detain and investigate a person based on reasonable suspicion of criminal activity—less than the probable cause needed for an arrest—without violating the Fourth Amendment.

Importantly, the case underpins the legal authority for agents to pull over vehicles when they have specific, articulable facts suggesting immigration violations or related crimes, rather than random stops. The ruling also permits limited frisks for officer safety.

Broken-window policing is provably effective  

One practical application of the protections and allowances that transpired from Terry v. Ohio is "broken windows policing," a theory introduced by James Q. Wilson and George Kelling in 1982. 

It argues that visible signs of disorder—such as broken windows, graffiti, loitering, or minor offenses—signal a lack of social control and invite more serious crime, and that visible signs of disorder (graffiti, litter, or broken windows) encourage further crime and antisocial behavior. Put simply, under the theory, people who commit "petty" crimes are much likelier to also commit serious — and sometimes deadly — felonies.

The strategy focuses on aggressively enforcing low-level violations to restore order and prevent escalation. It was famously implemented in New York City in the 1990s under Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Police Commissioner William Bratton, with zero-tolerance policies targeting subway fare evasion, public drinking and vandalism.

NYC saw a dramatic crime drop. Homicides fell over 70% from 1990 to 2000 and overall crime declined sharply. Proponents credit the approach with reclaiming neighborhoods, especially those that, at the time, had some of the highest crime rates in the country.

Amanda Head is White House Correspondent at Just The News. You can follow her here.

 

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

When an individual (illegal alien) runs from law enforcement - there is a cause for escalation in apprehension. It's worse when the perpetrator challenges law enfrocement.

 

Two deadly ICE shootings in one week reignite concerns about federal immigration enforcement

The most recent incident occurred in the morning hours in Biddeford, Maine. As of Monday evening, exactly what happened was still unclear.

By Ian Maile July 13, 2026 justthenews.com

A fatal shooting Monday involving Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in Maine marked the second such incident in six days, reignited concerns about the mission of federal immigration agencies after two civilian deaths in Minnesota this past winter sparked outrage and forced the Trump administration to scale back efforts.

The most recent incident occurred in the morning hours in Biddeford, Maine. As of Monday evening, exactly what happened was still unclear, including whether the victim, whose name had still not been released, was an illegal migrant and if ICE had a warrant.

"We are grieving. We are furious, and we will not allow his death to be treated as routine or inevitable," said Mufalo Chitam, executive director of the Maine Immigrants' Rights Coalition. "How much more harm must our communities endure before those with the power to act acknowledge that this has gone too far?”

The group has also identified the victim as a 26-year-old male from Colombia.

A video circulating on social media shows a car with bullet holes in the front windshield and officers tending to a person on the ground. The incident is being investigated by the FBI.   

The Maine shooting followed a similar incident July 7 in Houston in which 52-year-old Lorenzo Salgado Araujo was fatally shot by an ICE agent. 

The agency said its officers were trying to conduct a vehicle stop as part of a targeted enforcement operation to arrest an illegal migrant and that Salgado Araujo attempted to evade them. 

ICE also said Salgado Araujo rammed an ICE law enforcement vehicle, refused to follow multiple verbal commands, and weaponized his vehicle in an attempt to run over an ICE law enforcement officer – who in attempting to protect himself, colleagues and bystanders “discharged his weapon in self-defense.”

As with the incident in Maine, at least so far, there is no video of the shooting. Agents were not wearing body cameras and others in the vehicle with Salgado Araujo did not record the shooting. 

The back-to-back shootings follow months of relative calm regarding federal immigration enforcement operations after the two civilians were fatally shot weeks apart in January in Minneapolis by federal immigration officers as part of a large-scale operation known as Operation Metro Surge.

Renee Good was fatally shot January 7 by an ICE agent as she tried to drive away and appeared to clip the officer. On January 24, Alex Pretti, who was wearing a registered sidearm, was fatally shot by a Customs and Border Patrol agent when he got involved in a law-enforcement operation.

Those incidents returned to the national spotlight just hours after the incident in the city of Biddeford, roughly 15 miles southwest of Portland.

Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison and Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty said federal authorities have begun turning over evidence to state investigators after months of withholding information regarding the cases.

"I remain deeply troubled that the federal government spent more than half a year attempting to conceal this evidence from state investigators, and I hope this is the beginning of a major course correction on the part of the federal government," Ellison said.

Houston officials have raised similar complaints, saying federal investigators have shut them out of the investigation into Salgado Araujo's death. 

“They have the evidence,” Houston Mayor John Whitmire said, according to CNN. “And in this instance, the van, the passengers, the deceased, and they’re tightly controlling it. We’ve reached out to them and asked them to share that information."

The Minnesota killings resulted in significant changes to federal immigration enforcement operations, leading to relative calm until recently.

Kristi Noem and Gregory Bovino stepped down from their respective positions as Homeland Security secretary and Border Patrol chief in the aftermath of the Minnesota operation. 

President Trump later appointed former ICE Director Tom Homan, who serves as the administration's "border czar," to oversee federal immigration enforcement efforts in Minneapolis.

Trump has acknowledged concerns surrounding the Minnesota shootings while at the same time defending his broader immigration agenda.

"He was not an angel, and she was not an angel," Trump said about Pretti and Good during an interview with NBC News. "But still, I'm not happy with what happened there."

Trump also said, following the public backlash from the deaths, that his administration would continue its immigration enforcement nationwide, including mass deportation, but they may require "a little bit of a softer touch" in certain circumstances.

​There had been 10 recorded fatalities from federal immigration officer-involved shootings nationwide since Trump took office and before the Maine incident, according to reporting from the Guardian. The Maine shooting marks the 11th fatality.