What Peter Schweizer dropped on Glenn Beck this week should wake every American who still believes our borders are a joke. Schweizer lays out documentation and quotes suggesting parts of Mexico’s political elite openly view mass migration not as an accidental spillover but as a deliberate strategy to reshape the United States. If you care about the integrity of this nation, you should be alarmed.
The most chilling line Schweizer reads comes from a December 2024 Mexican government report alleging, “We already know that the Mexican population in the United States reaches 39.9 million. We Mexicans are reclaiming our territory.” That sentence is not harmless rhetoric; it’s a declaration that demands serious, sober attention from our leaders and security services. Americans deserve straight answers about whether this is bluster or part of a real, long-term plan.
Schweizer also details the institutional muscle behind the rhetoric: a sprawling network of Mexican consulates and cultural apparatus inside the United States that, according to investigators, are being used to organize protests, influence local politics, and push migration flows. Mexico runs dozens of consulates across our country, and conservative analysts say that infrastructure can be weaponized if left unchecked. This isn’t paranoia; it’s commonsense scrutiny of foreign influence operating on American soil.
Mexico’s president and other officials will rush to deny any intention of an armed invasion, and they have already pushed back when the subject comes up in diplomatic rows. President Claudia Sheinbaum and her team insist there won’t be a military incursion, and that’s a different claim than admitting a political strategy that leverages migration and soft power. Denials do not erase the documents and statements being cited publicly by respected investigators.
Let’s be blunt: whether you call it reconquest, reconquista, or weaponized migration, the strategic use of human movement to change the political landscape of another country is a matter of national security. Schweizer’s reporting ties these ideas to real policies, songs, and public statements that normalize rejecting assimilation and celebrating transnational loyalty. If true, that’s an existential threat to the civic fabric that binds Americans together.
So what should responsible leaders do? First, secure the border with manpower, technology, and the political will to enforce our laws. Second, demand transparency: every foreign consulate operating in the U.S. must be investigated for political activity that crosses the line into interference. Third, stop cozying up to open-border ideologues who equate sovereignty with xenophobia; defending America is not bigotry, it is patriotism.
Americans are hardworking, decent people who built this country one generation at a time. We will not stand idly by while anyone—foreign government or bought-off elites—tries to steal our future under the cover of migration and identity politics. It’s time to wake up, hold our leaders accountable, and defend the homeland we love.

