Illegal Alien Farm Workers

Illegal Aliens Are Scared to Go to Work in Commiefornia — and Legacy Media Thinks That’s a Bad Thing

(Substack)—For years, corporate media outlets have framed illegal immigration as an act of compassion — a moral duty imposed on law-abiding citizens to accept, subsidize, and even celebrate those who break our immigration laws. But when immigration enforcement finally shows up to do its job, the same media acts shocked that illegal aliens are, quite understandably, afraid to get caught.

In California’s Coachella Valley, Axios reports that many undocumented farmworkers are skipping work after a series of immigration raids sent shockwaves through the agricultural community. Some are reportedly afraid to drive, others are hiding out, and employers are complaining that fields are being left unattended. To the legacy press, this is a humanitarian crisis. To anyone who still believes in the rule of law, it’s long overdue.

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California’s political class, from Governor Gavin Newsom to local sanctuary city officials, has spent decades building a parallel system in which illegal entry into the United States is rewarded — not punished. Free healthcare for undocumented residents, driver’s licenses without proof of citizenship, taxpayer-funded legal defense for deportation cases — the incentives are endless. So when Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) conducts raids to enforce federal law, it disrupts a carefully constructed illusion that lawlessness is normal.

Let’s be clear: this is not about cruelty. America has always been compassionate — a nation built by immigrants who came legally, learned the language, contributed to the community, and swore allegiance to the flag. But compassion without law is chaos. And chaos is exactly what the political Left has created in California, where agriculture, construction, and service industries have come to rely on cheap, illegal labor to survive.

When that labor pool starts to vanish — whether because of enforcement or fear — the system cracks. Prices rise, productivity falls, and taxpayers shoulder the burden. The same journalists lamenting the “hardship” faced by undocumented workers rarely mention the American citizens who have been priced out of jobs, the small farmers crushed by regulation, or the working families whose tax dollars fund public benefits for those who entered illegally.

What we are witnessing now is the inevitable result of decades of moral inversion. The federal government has been told by activist judges, sanctuary mayors, and globalist donors that borders don’t matter. Law enforcement officers have been vilified for doing their duty. Meanwhile, millions of illegals have been invited to settle, work, and receive benefits that struggling citizens can barely access.

But even California — the model of progressive indulgence — can’t sustain this forever. The labor vacuum that comes when illegal workers hide or flee is exposing the uncomfortable truth: the state’s economy has been built on the exploitation of people who were never supposed to be here in the first place. Employers have grown dependent on this shadow workforce, and politicians have used it to reshape the electorate and secure power.

Now, with enforcement finally being taken seriously again under President Trump, the house of cards is trembling. For the first time in years, the message is being heard: breaking American law has consequences. And while the media may cry foul, ordinary citizens — especially those who have played by the rules — are quietly cheering.

If America is ever to reclaim its moral footing, we must restore the basic principle that sovereignty is not optional. Borders define a nation. Laws protect its people. Compassion must never come at the expense of justice. The real tragedy isn’t that illegal aliens are afraid to work — it’s that America was made to fear enforcing her own laws.