Protecting Borders, Reclaiming Sovereignty, and the End of “Homicidal Empathy”
This week, the Trump administration has made one thing clear: the era of open-border “acts of love” is officially over. From the long-overdue rollback of DACA protections to the high-stakes game of federal impersonation in San Diego, the focus has returned to the rule of law and the safety of American citizens.
THE BIG STORY: Ending the “Dreamer” Free Pass
For over a decade, DACA recipients have lived in a state of quasi-legal limbo created by executive overreach. This week, the Trump administration took decisive action to dismantle the “Dreamer” protections that critics have long argued were unconstitutional.

The Fallout:
- 86 Deported: Since January 2025, ICE has already deported 86 DACA recipients who violated their terms.
- 515,000 Impacted: Roughly half a million migrants are now facing the reality that their presence in the U.S. is no longer guaranteed by a “quiet rollback” of protections.
- Ending the Subsidy: The administration is also moving to strip DACA recipients of access to affordable health coverage, arguing that American taxpayers should not be footing the bill for those here illegally.
Democratic senators are calling the move “heartless,” but for constitutionalists, it’s a matter of restoring the power to set immigration policy to Congress—where it belongs.
The “Ferderal” Imposter: A Lesson in Border Boldness
In one of the more bizarre cases of the year, 52-year-old Jaime Ernesto Alvarez-Gonzalez, a Mexican national who overstayed his visa decades ago, was arrested for impersonating a Border Patrol agent.

Alvarez-Gonzalez didn’t just dress the part; he outfitted his F-150 with fake antennas and an FBI badge. He even had the audacity to demand real agents leave the Linda Vista community, claiming he had “reinforcements.” The giveaway? A license plate frame that read “Ferderal Truck.” Beyond the comedy of his spelling, the case is a terrifying reminder of how easily the border mission can be disrupted. He now faces 18 years in prison and was found in possession of two pistols and an AR-style rifle.
Homicidal Empathy: The Cost of Liberal Policy
A new term is circulating in D.C. this week: “Homicidal Empathy.” It describes the liberal obsession with “social progress” that consistently results in the sacrifice of innocent American lives.


Fairfax County Case Study: In Fairfax, Virginia, three out of four homicides in 2026 have been committed by illegal immigrants. The case of Abdul Jalloh is the smoking gun. A serial offender from Sierra Leone, Jalloh was protected from deportation by “woke” judges and DA Steve Descano’s refusal to work with ICE.
- The Result: Six years after a judge refused his deportation, Jalloh murdered Stephanie Minter, a mother waiting at a bus stop.
While the Left claims that mass migration is necessary for “cheap labor” and “cultural melting pots,” the statistics tell a darker story. In 2024, non-German suspects committed nearly 40% of all rapes in Germany—roughly 12 women a day. Here at home, the refusal to deport criminals like Jalloh isn’t “suicidal” for the politicians—it’s homicidal for the citizens they are supposed to protect.
The Activist Bench: Releasing a Murderer
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is in an uproar after Judge Melissa DuBose—a Biden appointee who once described herself as being in a “Marxist Phase”—ordered the release of a wanted murderer.


Bryan Rafael Gomez, an illegal alien from the Dominican Republic, is wanted internationally for a 2023 homicide. Despite a deportation order and an international warrant, DuBose characterized his detention as “unlawful” and released him onto the streets of Rhode Island.
“An activist judge appointed by Joe Biden released this wanted murderer back into American communities. This is yet another example of an activist judge trying to thwart President Trump’s mandate.” — Lauren Bis, Acting Assistant Secretary of DHS
Crime & Immigration: The Hard Data
As the debate over DACA and deportations heats up, the American public deserves the facts about the intersection of immigration and public safety.
According to data from the U.S. Sentencing Commission and recent ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) reports:
- Criminal Aliens: In FY 2023, ICE ERO arrested 73,822 noncitizens with criminal histories; this group had a total of 290,178 associated charges and convictions (an average of 4 per person).
- Specific Crimes: These included 33,209 assaults, 7,520 weapon offenses, 1,713 homicide-related offenses, and 1,655 kidnappings.
- DACA Statistics: While many DACA recipients have no criminal record, the program has historically allowed individuals with certain “non-significant” misdemeanors to remain, a policy the current administration is moving to tighten.
- Federal Charges: Noncitizens accounted for a disproportionate percentage of federal arrests in recent years, particularly in districts along the Southern Border.
Final Thoughts
The Trump administration is proving that “American Fairness” starts with the American citizen. We cannot have a country if we do not have a border, and we cannot have safety if activist judges view murderers as “court users” rather than criminals.
The Left can call it “cruel,” but we call it Accountability.
