There is a growing tendency in our national debate to substitute emotion for precision. Immigration enforcement is no longer discussed primarily as policy. It is framed as persecution. It is described through personal anecdotes, hypothetical fears, and moral urgency. Before we surrender to rhetoric, we should take the hype out of hypotheticals and return to something more stable: the law.
Federal law is not ambiguous on unlawful entry. Under 8 U.S.C. § 1325, entering the United States at a place other than a designated port of entry is a criminal offense. Reentry after removal is a felony under 8 U.S.C. § 1326. These are not new statutes. They were passed by Congress decades ago and have been enforced under administrations of both parties.
Precision matters. Not every person unlawfully present has committed a criminal violation. Visa overstays are generally civil immigration matters. That distinction should be acknowledged honestly. But a person who crosses a border fence, bypasses a port of entry, and enters without inspection has violated federal criminal law. That is not political commentary. It is statutory fact and that is the majority of what people want removed right now.
The real debate, then, is not whether enforcement is occurring. The real debate is whether enforcement should occur at all.
We hear stories of “friends and neighbors” living in fear. We are told schools are emptying because families are afraid. We are asked to imagine hardworking caregivers, restaurant employees, and delivery drivers being torn from their communities. These narratives are emotionally compelling. But they leave out a critical question: are those defending their friends and neighbors fully aware of who those individuals are and what their legal history may include?
It is easy to protect a hypothetical. It is harder to confront reality.
Do protesters interfering with arrests know whether the individual being detained has a final removal order issued by a judge? Do they know whether that person has prior criminal convictions? Do they know whether the individual has already been through immigration court and exhausted appeal options? Or do they simply assume innocence because acknowledging risk would complicate the story?
“Friends and neighbors” is a powerful phrase. But so is “victim.”
This week, news broke of a Venezuelan national working as a delivery driver in Polk County who was accused of stealing a package while on duty. He is presumed innocent until proven guilty, as he should be. But the broader policy question remains. If someone unlawfully enters the United States in violation of federal criminal law and then proceeds to commit additional crimes, even nonviolent ones, what obligation does the government have to enforce the law before further harm occurs?
This is not an argument that every unlawful entrant is dangerous. It is an argument that ignoring unlawful entry does not eliminate risk. It merely postpones accountability. When enforcement is delayed or dismissed as unnecessary, the consequences do not disappear. They accumulate.
This is not an argument that every unlawful entrant is violent. It is an argument that ignoring unlawful entry does not eliminate risk. It merely delays consequence and if something terrible does happen, the reality is, it could have been avoided had the perpetrator not been in the country in the first place.
The same voices demanding compassion for “neighbors” rarely extend that urgency to citizens harmed by preventable crime. Where is the equal insistence on justice for victims whose names do not fit the preferred narrative? If enforcement had taken place earlier and tragedy was avoided, would anyone protest that outcome? If you’re going to protect your neighbors, protect them all.
Much of this debate rests on hypotheticals that sound powerful precisely because they will never be tested. There was recently a widely circulated hypothetical scenario about encountering a bear in the woods, where people confidently declared they would choose one danger over another. The reason such claims are easy to make is simple: they will almost certainly never have to be proven. But imagine a literal fork in the road. Down one path stands a clearly visible, immediate threat. Down the other stands a person whose character and history are unknown. In abstract conversation, some may claim they would choose the visible danger. In real life, when consequences are immediate and unavoidable, almost no one does. The gap between what we say in hypothetical debate and what we would actually choose when reality removes the safety of rhetoric reveals how often our judgments are shaped by narrative rather than reason.
Policy built on narrative rather than measurable reality inevitably produces unintended consequences.
Another rhetorical shift deserves scrutiny. We are told that immigration enforcement lacks due process. But immigration courts exist. Judges issue removal orders. Appeals are filed. Many of those targeted for arrest today are under final removal orders. Due process has already occurred. If that is the case, what exactly is being demanded? A permanent exemption from enforcement?
Selective outrage is not justice.
When deportations occurred under prior administrations, including Democratic administrations that removed millions of individuals, the same statutes were in effect. The same legal framework existed. If enforcement was considered legitimate under one president but tyrannical under another, then the issue is not the law. It is political alignment.
That inconsistency should trouble anyone who claims to defend principle over party.
We must also demand equal standards. When a United States citizen is arrested, their children may be separated temporarily. Their property may be seized. Their life is disrupted. We do not call that persecution. We call it law enforcement. Why does the standard change when the individual being arrested is not a citizen and is present in violation of federal law?
Agitator disguised as protesters physically obstructing federal agents often do so without knowing who is being arrested or why. Federal officers do not wear body armor and carry tactical equipment for symbolic effect. They prepare for the risk profile of individuals they are tasked with apprehending. Not every case involves a violent offender, but enforcement priorities focus heavily on individuals with criminal records and final removal orders. Interference without knowledge is not civic courage. It is assumption masquerading as virtue.
There is a larger philosophical issue at stake. If borders are optional, then citizenship becomes symbolic. If statutes are advisory, then sovereignty becomes sentimental. Most countries enforce immigration law far more strictly than the United States. Yet America is expected to suspend its own statutes in the name of compassion.
Compassion without order becomes chaos. Order without compassion becomes tyranny. A functioning nation requires both.
Elections matter. In a constitutional republic, enforcement priorities reflect the will of voters. Those who disagree are free to persuade and vote differently in the next election. What they are not free to do is nullify federal law because it conflicts with their preferred outcome. If your political party loses, then accept defeat with grace and style and work harder the next time to get your party elected. Don’t spend the next four years screaming that you lost, accept it. Let the winners try their hand at making the country what the majority of your fellow citizens want.
So here is the uncomfortable question that must be answered honestly. If enforcement under prior administrations was legitimate, what changed besides the name on the ballot? If due process was sufficient yesterday, why is it insufficient today? If criminal statutes exist, why is enforcing them framed as cruelty?
At some point, we must stop debating hypotheticals and confront what is actually happening. Laws are either meaningful or they are not. If they are meaningful, they must be enforced consistently. If they are not, they should be repealed openly instead of quietly ignored.
A nation cannot survive on feelings alone. Feelings are fleeting and typically conditional. You could be having the best day ever, and then something unexpected happens, and everything changes. From best to worst. That is the curse of living life with your feelings. When it comes to policy, logic needs to be the prevailing force. The emotional aspects should be considered, but they should not dictate the outcome.
Taking the hype out of hypotheticals does not eliminate compassion. It restores clarity. And clarity is the only foundation strong enough to support both justice and mercy.






