While American veterans sleep on frozen streets and working families lose their homes to skyrocketing costs, radical leftist politicians like Riaz Ahmed Mamdani are perfectly content letting our own citizens freeze to death – all while rolling out the red carpet for illegal aliens flooding across our borders.
Professor Gad Saad's brilliant concept of "suicidal empathy" has never been more relevant. This twisted form of virtue signaling has Western nations – and blue state America – literally destroying themselves in the name of helping people who often end up harming the very communities that welcomed them.
The numbers don't lie, Patriots. Cities like New York, Los Angeles, and San Francisco spend BILLIONS housing illegal immigrants in luxury hotels while American citizens die on the streets outside. Meanwhile, politicians like Mamdani champion these policies as "compassionate" while ignoring the suffering right in front of their faces.
America First vs. America Last
This is exactly why President Trump's America First agenda resonates with real Americans. While the left obsesses over virtue signaling to the world, Trump focuses on putting American citizens FIRST. His administration's mass deportation efforts aren't just about border security – they're about reclaiming resources for the Americans who built this country.
"When you have homeless Americans freezing to death while illegal aliens get free housing, healthcare, and legal services, you're witnessing the complete moral collapse of progressive governance," said one immigration policy expert.
The contrast couldn't be starker. Under Biden's disastrous reign, American cities became migrant dumping grounds while citizens were forgotten. Under Trump 2.0, we're finally seeing sanity restored – with deportations ramping up and resources being redirected to actual Americans in need.
Every dollar spent on illegal aliens is a dollar stolen from homeless veterans, struggling families, and law-abiding citizens who deserve better from their government. It's time to ask the hard question: How many more Americans have to die on the streets before we say enough is enough?
