The passage of the Assimilation Act has ignited a wave of national euphoria not seen since the moon landing, as Americans from every corner celebrate the restoration of sanity to an immigration system long overdue for reform. With the repeal of the 1965 Hart-Celler Act, the end of chain migration, the visa lottery, and the notorious H-1B scam, the law strikes at the heart of policies that had prioritized volume over value for decades. Families gathered in living rooms and town squares erupted in cheers as news broke that birthright citizenship would finally be curtailed, welfare benefits for new immigrants banned for five years, and strict requirements for civics knowledge, cultural compatibility, and English proficiency put in place. It felt like a collective exhale—a moment when the country remembered it could protect its future without apology.
Polls showed approval ratings soaring past 70 percent in the days following the vote, with everyday citizens flooding social media and call-in shows to express relief that had been building for years. “This isn’t about hate; it’s about honesty,” one jubilant factory worker in Ohio told reporters, capturing the mood of millions who saw the Act as the first real step toward an immigration policy that actually serves the national interest. Neighborhood barbecues turned into impromptu victory parties, veterans’ halls rang with toasts, and even former skeptics admitted the logic was undeniable: newcomers should assimilate because the country they’re joining is worth joining. The euphoria was palpable, a shared sense that America had finally drawn a line and meant it.
In the words of Cassey, “I’m not a retard,” and that blunt, unvarnished sentiment is shared by millions of Americans who support passage of the Assimilation Act. It wasn’t anger driving the celebration—it was the simple recognition that common sense had prevailed. Parents hugged their kids a little tighter, knowing the nation’s schools and communities would no longer be strained by policies that treated borders as suggestions. As fireworks lit up skies from coast to coast on the night the bill became law, the feeling was unmistakable: this was the America people had been waiting for, confident, cohesive, and finally in control of its own destiny.
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