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21 January 2026

In Just 5 Years, 200,000 Violent Crimes Committed by Criminal Aliens

 By Juan Fermin | Nosocialism.com

Why the Distinction Isn't Just Academic—It's Essential for Safety and Sovereignty

A lot of people out there are talking about immigration and the "Gestapo" tactics of ICE, but let's face it: regardless of the percentage of people with criminal records, the truth is that they don't belong here if they've broken the law to enter or stay. When someone breaks into your house, you don't debate whether they're "good people." You show them the door, and if they refuse, you call the police. ICE is the police in this scenario—enforcing federal law, not whims.


People invoke "What would Jesus say?" as a shield, but we don't know everyone's story, and the system exists for a reason: to verify backgrounds and prevent harm. We do know the tragic toll—thousands of Americans raped, killed, or victimized by individuals who entered illegally. Are their names not important? Don't their families deserve protection? From 2011 to 2016 alone, criminal aliens (non-citizens convicted of crimes) accounted for over 200,000 homicides, assaults, and sex offenses in the U.S. The system isn't a suggestion; it's the thin line between order and anarchy.

To me, the craziest part is how activists throw themselves in front of ICE officers, as if deportation orders are optional. It's not compassion—it's obstruction of justice. And if we adopt their stance, refusing to deport, we're flashing a green light to every thief, murderer, rapist, drug dealer, and thug: "Come on in; we won't enforce the law." As for Jesus, I wonder what He thought when the crowd cheered for Barabbas over justice?

A Call to Restore the Line

America's generosity through legal immigration has made us a beacon—welcoming over 1 million newcomers yearly on merit. But blurring the line with illegal entries invites the very chaos socialism thrives on: open borders, eroded sovereignty, and divided communities. It's time to honor the difference—streamline legal paths for the worthy, and enforce the law without apology for the rest. Because a nation without borders isn't a nation at all.

The Fundamental Difference Between Legal and Illegal Immigration: Why the Line Matters

In the heated debates swirling around immigration, one core truth often gets lost amid the rhetoric: there's a world of difference between legal and illegal immigration. It's not just semantics—it's the foundation of a sovereign nation's right to control its borders, enforce its laws, and protect its citizens. Legal immigration builds up a country through orderly processes that respect the rule of law. Illegal immigration, by contrast, undermines it, creating chaos, straining resources, and inviting exploitation. As we dive into these distinctions, let's cut through the noise with facts and clarity, because ignoring this divide doesn't make borders disappear—it erodes them.

The Legal Path: A Structured Gateway to Opportunity

Legal immigration to the United States isn't a free-for-all; it's a deliberate system designed to welcome those who contribute while safeguarding national interests. Under the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, overseen by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), aspiring immigrants must navigate a rigorous process to gain entry and status.

Here's how it works in practice:

  • Visas as the Starting Point: All legal entrants begin with a visa issued by the Department of State. Non-immigrant visas cover temporary stays—like tourism (B-1/B-2), study (F-1), or work (H-1B for skilled professionals). Immigrant visas pave the way for permanent residency, often through family sponsorship (e.g., marrying a U.S. citizen) or employment (e.g., job offers from U.S. companies).
  • Green Cards and Permanent Residency: Once approved, immigrants receive a green card, granting lawful permanent resident (LPR) status. In fiscal year 2024, USCIS issued about 1 million green cards, with roughly 65% tied to family reunification and 20% to employment-based preferences. This status allows holders to live and work indefinitely, access certain social services, and even sponsor family members.
  • Path to Citizenship: After five years as an LPR (or three if married to a U.S. citizen), eligible individuals can naturalize. This requires passing a civics test, demonstrating English proficiency (with exceptions), and proving "good moral character." Naturalized citizens gain full rights: voting, passports, and federal benefits like Social Security.

As of mid-2025, the U.S. foreign-born population stood at about 52 million—15.5% of the total—with over 77% holding legal status as naturalized citizens, green-card holders, refugees, or long-term visa holders. Legal immigrants fuel innovation and growth: think of the H-1B workers powering Silicon Valley or family-sponsored arrivals strengthening communities. This system isn't perfect—backlogs can stretch years—but it rewards patience, skills, and adherence to the rules.

The Illegal Reality: Breaking In Without Invitation

Illegal, or unauthorized, immigration flips this on its head. It's not a "path" at all; it's a violation. The vast majority enter without inspection (crossing borders undetected) or overstay valid visas, rendering their presence unlawful from day one.

Key hallmarks:

  • No Formal Process or Status: Unlike legal entrants, there's no visa, no vetting, no green card. Unauthorized immigrants—estimated at 13.5 million in 2025, comprising about 26% of the foreign-born population—live in the shadows, ineligible for most federal benefits, voting, or citizenship pathways. They can't legally work in many sectors without risking exploitation, and employers hiring them face penalties.
  • Limited Rights and Constant Risk: No access to federally funded programs like Social Security or Medicare. Deportation looms large—U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) removed over 271,000 individuals in FY 2024 alone, prioritizing those with criminal convictions. Even without crimes, discovery means detention and removal.
  • Scale and Impact: While legal channels admitted around 2.5 million authorized immigrants in 2024, unauthorized entries at the southern border have plummeted in recent months, with U.S. Customs and Border Protection recording historic lows in encounters for FY 2025—down over 80% from peaks in prior years. This isn't abstract: even with the decline, past surges burdened cities with uncompensated costs for education, healthcare, and housing, while diluting wages for low-skilled American workers.

The data paints a stark picture—legal immigration is controlled and contributory; illegal is disruptive and unsustainable.

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