While hardworking American families struggle to put food on the table and pay skyrocketing bills, nearly half of all immigrant households in the United States are living off the taxpayer-funded welfare system. The stunning revelation comes as President Trump's mass deportation operation gains momentum, exposing the true financial burden of decades of failed immigration policies.
This isn't the America our founders envisioned when they welcomed those seeking opportunity and freedom. The famous words inscribed on the Statue of Liberty spoke of the "tired" and "poor" yearning to breathe free—not freeload off hardworking Americans.
The data destroys the left's favorite talking point that America is simply "a nation of immigrants." Yes, we are—but our ancestors came here to BUILD something, not drain it dry. They worked in factories, farmed the land, and sacrificed everything for the CHANCE at success, not a guaranteed government handout.
Biden's Welfare Magnet Legacy
This welfare crisis didn't happen overnight. The Biden regime spent four years rolling out the red carpet for anyone willing to cross our border illegally, advertising America as a welfare paradise to the world. Now American taxpayers are footing the bill for this disastrous social experiment.
"Today's immigrants appear to have a very different idea" of what America represents, and who can blame them when Democrats literally campaigned on expanding benefits to non-citizens? The left turned immigration from an opportunity system into an entitlement program.
Trump's Solution: America First
Thankfully, President Trump and his team understand that real compassion means protecting American workers and families first. The administration's deportation efforts aren't just about border security—they're about fiscal responsibility and fairness to legal immigrants who followed the rules.
Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem and the Trump team are methodically dismantling the welfare magnet that drew millions to our borders illegally. It's time to return to the principle that immigration should benefit America, not burden it.
How much longer should American taxpayers subsidize a system that puts foreign nationals ahead of our own citizens? The answer is clear: not one more day.
