The Boulder firebombing suspect entered America legally but overstayed his welcome. Mohamed Soliman’s expired visa and asylum claim didn’t stop him from attacking Jews while screaming “Free Palestine.” Now ICE wants to deport his entire family — and common sense says they should go.
This radical migrant turned a peaceful protest into a warzone with homemade flamethrowers. Sixteen innocent people were burned because one man exploited our broken immigration system. Keeping his family here rewards lawbreaking and puts Americans at risk.
Glenn Beck’s right — deportation isn’t cruelty. It’s consequences. When you violate our laws and attack our citizens, your family doesn’t get to enjoy the freedoms they helped destroy. The Left cries “compassion” while ignoring the real victims: Jewish families fearing mob violence in their own streets.
Boulder’s leaders prove why this matters. One council member refused to call the attack antisemitic, twisting it into “anti-Zionism.” This word games put politics over people. When progressives defend hate, it’s clear why extremists feel emboldened.
The suspect’s neighbors — a Jewish family who narrowly escaped his rage — know the stakes. They moved across Colorado to feel safe, only to land next to a ticking time bomb. This isn’t coincidence — it’s what happens when borders mean nothing.
Hate crimes against Jews have skyrocketed since the Israel-Hamas war began. Open borders and woke policies fuel the fire. Every unvetted migrant could be the next Soliman. America must choose: protect citizens or coddle criminals.
Some say deporting families is too harsh. Tell that to the burn victims. The suspect chose violence — his family chose to stay illegally. Real justice means removing every reward for their betrayal of American hospitality.
Patriots know the solution: secure borders, enforce visas, and deport those who spit on our laws. Glenn Beck’s stand isn’t heartless — it’s the only way to prevent more Boulder-style attacks. Keep the killer jailed, send his family packing, and put America first.