A Venezuelan family's Christmas: From the American dream to poverty

This story raises questions about governance, accountability, and American values.

Source: Enid News & Eagle
1 min read
A Venezuelan family's Christmas: From the American dream to poverty
Image via Enid News & Eagle

Mariela Gómez and thousands of Venezuelan immigrants have faced a challenging Christmas after Donald Trump returned to the White House in January. Gómez, her partner, and two sons returned to Venezuela in October after being deported from the U.S.

They

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Enid News & Eagle

How We See It

New Republican Times Editorial Board

The sympathetic framing here treats deportation as a moral failure by America, as if the only relevant fact is that a family is struggling at Christmas. That story tugs at the heart, but it also sidesteps the basic question: on what legal basis did they enter and remain?

What gets lost is the strain that unchecked migration places on working-class communities already facing high housing costs, crowded schools, and overstretched clinics. A country cannot run an immigration system on anecdotes and seasonal sentiment. Rule of law is not cruelty. It is the minimum standard for any stable society.

A serious approach pairs border security with humane, orderly pathways, and it distinguishes asylum from economic migration. Most of all, it protects public trust by applying rules consistently. The principle at stake is fairness to citizens and legal immigrants, without pretending enforcement is optional.

Commentary written with AI assistance by the New Republican Times Editorial Board.