Carl Higbie cuts through the nonsense in a way the limp-wristed mainstream media never will: the immigration debate is glaringly simple and it comes down to defending our nation and our culture from those who refuse to play by our rules. He tells Americans plainly that when people break our laws to get here and then reject the values that built this country, they are doing real damage to what makes America uniquely free and prosperous.
This isn’t a cruelty argument; it’s about the rule of law and the right of citizens to preserve a shared national identity. Polling and reporting show most Americans want the government to remove those here illegally and restore order at the border, not endless euphemisms and open-door policies from elites.
Look at the real-world fallout that Higbie highlights on his program: towns overwhelmed by sudden influxes of migrants see strained schools, healthcare, and housing markets while local taxpayers pick up the tab. Conservatives have been warning for years that unchecked flows produce not only security risks but cultural displacement, and the scenes in communities like Springfield prove those warnings were not alarmist.
The left’s answer is predictable: moral grandstanding, sanctuary fairy tales, and blame-shifting that protects cartel bosses and cheap labor schemes instead of American families. Higbie is right to call them out; Democrats and their media allies have turned compassion into a racket that rewards lawbreaking and punishes the people already here.
Higbie speaks from experience and a conservative warrior’s posture — a former Navy SEAL turned Newsmax host who doesn’t sugarcoat the truth for ratings. His show is built on unapologetic patriotism and a refusal to bow to the woke consensus, which is why he’s become a reliable voice for Americans who actually want borders enforced and culture preserved.
Critics will scream “xenophobia” and drag up old controversies to silence the debate, but the question isn’t about hating immigrants — it’s about insisting newcomers respect our laws and our way of life. Higbie has been controversial before, and conservatives should meet those critiques head-on while refusing to let elites redefine patriotism as complacency in the face of cultural erosion.
If we mean what we say about being a sovereign nation, then we enforce our laws, secure the border, and remove those who refuse assimilation or who threaten public safety. Higbie’s message is the rallying cry for hardworking Americans who want a future where their children inherit the same language, values, and liberty that made this country great — not a diluted substitute engineered by policymakers more interested in votes than the nation’s survival.

