AMERICA FIRST: 14,000 Referrals, 2,400 Arrests, and the End of the “Social Media” Lie!
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The era of “ask no questions” immigration is officially dead. In a bombshell data drop from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), the agency revealed that the first year of the Trump administration’s crackdown has uncovered a staggering 65% fraud rate in reviewed cases. Under Secretary Kristi Noem’s DHS, the agency has shifted from a “welcome center” to a national security fortress, referring over 14,000 cases to ICE for fraud and security threats.
The gloves are off. USCIS Director Joseph B. Edlow confirmed that the agency is no longer prioritizing foreign nationals over American citizens. With 196,000 “Notices to Appear” issued—a record-shattering number—the administration is systematically purging the system of bad actors who thought they could lie their way to a Green Card.
The Controversy Everyone is Ignoring
Here is the Rage Trigger: For years, you were told that the vetting process was “extreme” and “rigorous.” That was a lie. USCIS just proved it by conducting 19,500 social media checks and finding that a massive chunk of applicants were hiding their true intentions—or worse, their extremist ties.
The agency even revealed that 182 individuals currently in the system are confirmed or suspected national security risks. These aren’t just “paperwork errors.” These are people who shouldn’t be within a thousand miles of U.S. soil. While Democratic leaders in cities like Chicago are crying “human rights,” the agency is pointing to the blood on the floor: the brutal attack on Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom by an Afghan national. The administration didn’t just offer “thoughts and prayers”—they froze all asylum processing for high-risk nations. That is how you protect a country.
The Cold Hard Truth from the Insiders
Insiders at FDNS (Fraud Detection and National Security) are calling this the “Great Cleanup.” The Expert Roast? Previous administrations treated site visits like a suggestion. This year, USCIS agents conducted 6,500 site visits and realized that “neighborhood checks”—a Bush-era security staple—were the only way to verify if these applicants were actually who they said they were.
“The system was a sieve,” one senior FDNS officer admitted. “We were essentially rubber-stamping fraud.” The shocking fact: More than 2,400 arrests were made inside USCIS field offices. Imagine walking into a government building to get your citizenship and leaving in handcuffs because the agency finally checked your background. If you’re here legally and playing by the rules, you have nothing to fear. But if you’re part of the 65% of fraudsters, your time is up

