Protesters hold a sign advocating for the abolition of ICE while law enforcement stands nearby, highlighting tensions during a public demonstration.

Protesters hold a sign advocating for the abolition of ICE while law enforcement stands nearby, highlighting tensions during a public demonstration.

WATCH: Americans Increasingly Demand a Stop to Third-World Immigration

More and more Republicans are now calling for a major shift in U.S. immigration policy: an end to immigration from high-risk third-world regions on top of the large-scale deportations already underway across the country.

The push is being driven by a growing number of violent incidents that have forced the immigration debate back into the center of national security discussions.

The most recent example occurred in West Bloomfield, Michigan, where a terrifying attack targeted a synagogue that houses a childhood learning center.

A 41-year-old man born in Lebanon, who later became a naturalized U.S. citizen, rammed a truck loaded with gasoline and explosives directly into the building while more than 140 young children were inside.

The truck smashed through the entrance and drove down the hallway before becoming lodged in the structure.

As The Gateway Pundit previously reported, armed security officers quickly confronted the attacker, triggering a gunfight inside the building. During the confrontation, the vehicle ignited and burst into flames after investigators later discovered it had been packed with gasoline and large quantities of commercial fireworks.

Remarkably, none of the children were injured.

Officials say the rapid response by the synagogue’s security guards likely prevented what could have become one of the deadliest school attacks in recent memory.

Authorities later revealed that the suspect had purchased more than $2,000 worth of fireworks at a Detroit-area store just days before the attack, further indicating that the incident was carefully planned.

Investigators also reported that members of the attacker’s family had been killed in an Israeli airstrike in Lebanon and were allegedly connected to Hezbollah, a U.S.-designated terrorist organization.

That revelation immediately raised concerns that the attack may have been driven by extremist ideology rather than random violence.

The Michigan attack is not occurring in isolation.

Within a short period of time, authorities have reported several violent incidents involving individuals tied to unstable regions overseas. 

At the same time, Jewish institutions in Europe have also been targeted, including a recent explosion that damaged a Jewish school in Amsterdam.

Taken together, these events have intensified an already heated debate in Washington.

For years, immigration discussions have largely focused on illegal crossings at the southern border. But recent incidents have highlighted a different challenge: individuals who enter the United States legally and later become radicalized.

Once someone becomes a permanent resident or a naturalized citizen, removing that person from the country becomes far more difficult under existing law.

Even when serious crimes occur, deportation can involve years of legal battles or may not be possible at all depending on immigration status.

That reality has led some lawmakers to argue that prevention must occur before individuals ever enter the country.

Supporters of stricter policies often point to President Trump’s first-term travel restrictions on several high-risk countries, which he has already begun implementing again during his second term—a policy widely criticized at the time but defended by supporters as a national security measure based on intelligence assessments.

Now, after several recent attacks, many Republicans believe the conversation should move even further.

The argument gaining traction is straightforward: if repeated acts of violence are linked to individuals arriving from unstable or heavily radicalized regions, immigration policy must reflect that security risk.

Democrats may argue that broad restrictions are unfair and punish millions of people who pose no threat. Republicans counter that immigration policy ultimately exists to protect the safety and stability of the country receiving newcomers.

The Michigan synagogue attack illustrates the stakes involved in that debate.

More than 140 children were inside that building when a truck filled with gasoline and explosives crashed through the entrance.

The only reason those children are alive today is that armed security officers reacted within seconds.

For many policymakers, that near-miss is exactly why the immigration debate is changing—and why calls to halt immigration from high-risk regions are growing louder in Washington.

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The post After Recent Terror Incidents, Americans Increasingly Demand a Stop to Third-World Immigration appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.