“You’re INSANE Schiff, Dems” – Hawley GOES OFF on Schiff, Dems for Going Against Mass Deportation

“That’s Insanity”: Josh Hawley’s Hearing That Exposed the Moral Collapse of the Open-Border Argument

Every once in a while, a congressional hearing stops being political theater and becomes something else entirely. It stops being about soundbites and starts revealing worldviews — incompatible, irreconcilable, and morally opposed.

That’s exactly what happened in this exchange.

What unfolded was not just a disagreement over immigration policy. It was a collision between two visions of the country: one rooted in law, wages, and human cost — and another trapped in abstractions, spreadsheets, and ideological denial.

Josh Hawley didn’t begin by yelling. He began by stating what used to be obvious.

A nation that refuses to enforce its laws invites chaos.

Yet somehow, in today’s Washington, the simple idea of securing the border and deporting criminals has been reframed as “extreme.” That alone, Hawley argued, exposes how detached the debate has become from reality. When enforcing the law is controversial, the system itself is broken.

Democrats didn’t deny the chaos. They didn’t deny the crimes. Instead, they pivoted — straight to economics.

Their core argument was chilling in its simplicity: enforcing immigration law would hurt the economy. Construction would suffer. Agriculture would collapse. Hospitality would lose millions of workers. The implication was unmistakable.

America needs illegal labor.

And that’s where Hawley went for the jugular.

Because buried inside that argument is an admission no one wants to say out loud. The system works — just not for workers. It works for corporations that benefit from suppressed wages, unprotected labor, and a workforce that can’t complain without risking deportation.

Hawley didn’t let that slide.

He dragged the conversation out of theory and into reality by naming names. A 12-year-old boy in Missouri, killed while walking down a sidewalk. A police officer rammed and killed with a vehicle. Civilians stabbed at laundromats. Officers assaulted, one requiring over a hundred stitches to the head.

These weren’t statistics. These were preventable tragedies.

And Hawley asked the most basic question imaginable:
Should the people who committed these crimes be deported?

The witness agreed — reluctantly — every single time.

But then came the pivot. Yes, criminals should face consequences, they said, but they are a “small minority.” The real concern, they insisted, was mass deportation harming the economy.

That’s when the mask came off.

Because when Hawley pressed further, the real agenda emerged: amnesty. A “path to citizenship.” Legalization for millions who entered the country illegally — not to reduce labor pressure, but to normalize it.

Hawley didn’t mince words.

Why should American citizens have to compete with illegal workers who are paid under the table, denied benefits, and used specifically to drive down wages? Why should construction workers, farmhands, and service workers see their pay suppressed so corporations can protect profit margins?

The answer was never really disputed.

Instead, it was avoided.

When Hawley asked what had happened to working-class wages over the past 15 years — the same 15 years Democrats admitted amounted to de facto amnesty — the witness couldn’t answer. Not confidently. Not honestly. Not at all.

Because everyone knows the answer.

Wages stagnated.
Costs exploded.
Workers lost leverage.

And the labor force was flooded — legally or illegally — to ensure they stayed that way.

That’s when Hawley delivered the line that ended the debate.

“The American people just voted.”

They saw this program.
They lived under it.
And they rejected it.

Four years of open borders.
Fifteen years of quiet amnesty.
Lower wages.
More chaos.
More deaths.

And the response from Democrats? More of the same. Double down. Call enforcement “extreme.” Call amnesty “compassion.”

Hawley called it what it was.

Insanity.

What made the moment powerful wasn’t volume or theatrics. It was moral clarity. Hawley rejected the false choice between compassion and law. He made it clear that a country without borders cannot protect anyone — not immigrants, not workers, not children, not police officers.

The most damning moment wasn’t when crimes were listed. It was when Democrats admitted that enforcing the law would disrupt industries — as if that were an argument against enforcement rather than an indictment of how broken the system has become.

If an economy only functions by exploiting illegal labor, then the economy is the problem.

This hearing exposed a truth many Americans already feel but rarely hear articulated so plainly: the open-border system is not humanitarian. It is extractive. It transfers wealth upward, suppresses wages downward, and leaves ordinary families paying the price in safety, stability, and dignity.

While Democrats spoke in euphemisms about “paths” and “frameworks,” Hawley spoke in consequences. While they hid behind ideology, he forced the conversation back to law, accountability, and the real-world costs imposed on citizens who never consented to any of it.

This wasn’t just a clash of policies.

It was a reckoning.

And for anyone watching honestly, it made one thing unmistakably clear:
A government that refuses to put its own citizens first is not compassionate.

It’s negligent.