That quivering you’re feeling? It’s the Annex, Westmount, the Glebe, CBC newsrooms and all of Vancouver shaking with latte-foamed fury.
They are deeply unhappy that U.S. President Donald Trump is giving the boot to hundreds of violent criminals, terror suspects and other nefarious characters.
In raids across the U.S., the feds are rounding up and deporting criminals. There is no end in sight.
Now, Canada’s limousine liberal crowd may despair over this state of affairs but the people who live on the south side of Chicago and in the Bronx? They’re delighted.
Jamaican immigrant Evelyn Brown, 80, of the Bronx summed up the feelings far away from Greenwich Village.
“Get them the hell off the street! Get them the hell out of the street so people don’t have to walk in fear,” Brown told the New York Post.
“Take the damn bad ones away!”
Among the thugs arrested was alleged Venezuelan prison gang Tren de Aragua kingpin Anderson Zambrano-Pacheco, 25. Another Bronx resident said: “Oh, thank God they got him.”
Of course, gangbanger Zambrano-Pacheco was famously caught on camera taking over an apartment building in Aurora, Colorado and he had a warrant for a laundry list of crimes, including kidnapping, burglary and menacing.
His gang took over multiple apartment buildings, a claim scoffed at by some media and then torpedoed by the truth.
Washington Heights is a Dominican neighbourhood in northern Manhattan. Relief at the raids was nearly universal.
“Too many people came over the border at once, and now it has to be a whole operation,” one man told reporters. “I don’t want dangerous people on the street, especially if we’re paying for it. People getting hurt on the street. Why should they get a pass?”
This is a mistake the left frequently makes: A belief that warm and fuzzies (safely uttered from Rosedale) make us all hold hands and sing Kumbaya.
In immigrant neighbourhoods from New York to North York, it’s not the luvvies paying the price for what author Gad Saad calls “suicidal empathy.” It is the folks in the Bronx, Regent Park, and Jane and Finch who cough up their children.
Some are illegal but work 12 hours a day to put food on the table, a roof over their family’s head and create a better life. We are desperate for these people. They do not want to be social experiments.
In the Big Apple’s Black and Hispanic communities, support for Trump surged during November’s elections largely because of a promise to deport criminally inclined illegals.
ICE also busted other notables: A Mexican national wanted for attempted murder, one of his countrymen charged with three counts of rape and sexual assault, and in Washington Heights, a Dominican man wanted for a double murder back home.
As in the U.S., this country’s elites assume that immigrants — legal and otherwise — are down with the faculty lounge worldview. They are not. They are more disgusted by criminals infesting their communities than anyone else.
“Listen, there’s too many people here that aren’t looking to make a better life for themselves. Instead, they are robbing, shooting and raping. Those are not the kind of immigrants we want here,” New York construction worker Kevin Morales said.
“I’m an immigrant and come from a family of immigrants, but we work. We came here to work and make a better life for our children.”
Perhaps Morales could make an appearance at the next Liberal caucus meeting.
@HunterTOSun