Mexico Is Poisoning California Citizens In A Disgusting Way

alexgo.photography
alexgo.photography

The Trump administration is stepping up to confront a dire environmental and public health crisis unfolding in Southern California, where Mexico’s unchecked sewage has wreaked havoc for far too long.

“Over the past five years, more than 100 billion gallons of raw sewage, industrial waste and toxic runoff from Tijuana have flooded across the border into our communities,” writes Jim Desmond for Fox News, exposing a shocking scale that demands attention.

“Let that sink in: 100 billion gallons. In 2023 alone, 44 billion gallons crossed into the U.S. the most ever recorded,” he adds, hammering home the sheer volume that’s turned a regional issue into a national disgrace.

“This sewage isn’t just disgusting it’s dangerous. It contains E. coli, antibiotic-resistant bacteria, arsenic and other toxic chemicals,” Desmond warns, highlighting a threat that’s poisoned water and air, leaving residents and even pets battling illnesses.

“Our Navy SEALs are training just north of this toxic flow. Local families can’t enjoy the ocean. Tourism is taking a hit,” he emphasizes, underscoring the real-world toll on security, community life, and the economy—beaches closed for over 1,000 days straight tell a grim story.

Years of inaction have only deepened the mess, and the finger-pointing has worn thin.

“Millions of taxpayer dollars have been spent. Just like the homelessness crisis, we’ve seen government throw money at the problem with nothing to show for it. The pollution keeps coming. The promises keep breaking. The leadership keeps failing,” Desmond charges, a scathing critique of wasted funds and broken trust that Republicans have railed against for years.

“Let’s be honest: Mexico has failed to fix this, and the United States has failed to hold them accountable. Across multiple administrations, we’ve seen weak oversight, delayed action and zero results. That must end,” he asserts, pinning blame on both sides of the border—a call for accountability that resonates with a GOP fed up with excuses.

Hope flickers with a familiar name at the helm.

“I’m hopeful that with EPA Commissioner Lee Zeldin and a Trump administration willing to stand up to Mexico, we will finally get the leadership this crisis demands,” Desmond writes, signaling confidence in a no-nonsense approach—82 percent speech approval from Trump’s March 4 address shows voters crave this resolve.

“Hold Mexico accountable. Protect Southern California. Protect our country,” he urges, a rallying cry that sums up the stakes—Republicans see this as a chance to restore order where chaos has reigned.

For Americans who value security and sovereignty, this is a turning point—our communities shouldn’t suffer from foreign neglect—97 percent GOP approval backs a leadership poised to act, not just talk.

America’s watching a president ready to deliver—Trump’s not letting this fester, and Republicans stand united—cleaning up this sewage nightmare is a fight worth winning!