Peter Schweizer’s appearance on Life, Liberty & Levin pulled back the curtain on something every American should be furious about: the deliberate “weaponization” of immigration to change our politics and culture. Schweizer explained in plain terms how migration isn’t just a humanitarian or economic issue anymore — it’s being used as a political tool by enemies and elites to reshape the country.
His new book, The Invisible Coup: How American Elites and Foreign Powers Use Immigration as a Weapon, lands as a road map of the threat, backed by years of investigation and a trove of documents compiled by the Government Accountability Institute. Schweizer and his team say this is not theoretical; they lay out names, networks, and timelines showing coordinated efforts to overwhelm our institutions.
This isn’t idle conspiracy talk — Schweizer names foreign governments and transnational actors who have incentives to flood the United States with politically pliant populations, arguing that Mexico, China, and Islamist networks have all played roles in what he calls migration warfare. What used to be dismissed as open-hearted immigration policy is now exposed as a battlefield in which American sovereignty is at stake.
One of the most chilling themes Schweizer highlights is the rise of birth-tourism and what he dubs the “Manchurian Generation,” a coordinated effort to exploit birthright citizenship and create future vectors of foreign influence inside America. If true, these revelations demand urgent policy fixes; we cannot allow foreign regimes to manufacture voting blocs and influence operations from abroad.
The attention is real enough that President Trump himself slammed the book as “a great new book” and urged the public to read it, which tells you this subject has escaped the bubble and hit the national radar. Conservatives who have been warning about porous borders and political migration feel vindicated by this explosion of documentation and mainstream attention.
Publishers and political insiders are already acknowledging the scale of Schweizer’s reporting, with major outlets describing the book as overflowing with national-security and election revelations that trace connections between elites, NGOs, and even criminal networks. This should make every voter ask one blunt question: who benefits when our borders and citizenship rules are weaponized?
Americans who love their country must demand immediate, uncompromising action: secure our border, end policies that incentivize mass political migration, and investigate the networks Schweizer exposes. This is not a partisan plea but a patriotic one — defending the Republic means restoring sovereignty, enforcing the law, and stopping the quiet coup being waged against the American people.

