America’s mayors are supposed to protect their cities, not peddle reckless, inflammatory comparisons that would make even the most cynical patriot blanch. In recent weeks an official White House release documented a string of left-wing officials who have equated ICE with the SS and other totalitarian secret police, a grotesque and dangerous bit of political theater.
Boston’s mayor even went so far as to liken masked ICE officers to an actual neo‑Nazi group, a comparison that drew swift condemnation from federal leaders and Homeland Security officials who called the remarks sickening. That kind of moral equivalence—putting federal agents who enforce the law on par with violent extremists—doesn’t critique policy, it incites contempt and violence.
Chicago’s mayor has repeatedly labeled ICE “secret police” and accused federal agents of terrorizing communities, language that plays straight into a mob mentality and gives green lights to extremists looking for an excuse. These are not isolated gaffes; they are part of a pattern of performative outrage from the same officials who refuse to secure their own streets while eagerly stoking national division.
The White House and other federal sources have tied this toxic rhetoric to a spike in assaults on ICE personnel and even a deadly attack on an ICE facility, arguing that demonizing law‑enforcement personnel carries real-world consequences. Whether you care about immigration policy or not, encouraging people to see enforcement agents as the moral equivalent of genocidal regimes is beyond reckless—it’s dangerous.
Americans who believe in the rule of law know the difference between lawful enforcement and historical totalitarianism, and we won’t let virtue‑signaling mayors rewrite the language of evil for cheap political gain. If critics want to change policy, do it in the halls of Congress and state legislatures, not by whipping up hatred on city hall steps that puts officers and civilians at risk. (Opinion)
These leftist leaders talk tough about “compassion” while glamorizing lawbreaking and tearing down institutions that keep neighborhoods safe; it’s a poisonous double standard. Voters need to remember who defends ordinary citizens and who courts chaos for headlines, and demand their mayors stop dressing up partisan theater as moral leadership.
Hardworking Americans want secure borders, accountable officials, and honest debate—not hyperbolic comparisons that inflame and endanger. It’s time for responsible leaders to reclaim patriotism from the mobs, speak honestly about policy, and stop equating federal agents with the darkest regimes in human history.

