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2 Million Americans Just Took a Stand

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The real twist in this case is the petition. Nearly 2.5 million signatures have been gathered on Change.org demanding Florida Governor Ron DeSantis show “leniency” to Singh.

The petition, organized by a group calling itself “Collective Punjabi youth,” paints the deadly crash as little more than an accident.

It claims: “While accountability matters, the severity of the charges against him does not align with the circumstances of the incident.”

This reasoning has left many Americans sick to their stomachs.

Thankfully, not everyone is falling for the narrative. St. Lucie County Judge Lauren Sweet ruled over the weekend that Singh would not be granted bond.

Her reasoning was simple: Singh poses a major flight risk and has no legal status in the U.S. And she’s right—he already proved he’s a flight risk when he ran to California after the crash.

Judge Sweet also confirmed probable cause for six felony charges, including three counts of vehicular homicide and three counts of manslaughter. If convicted, Singh could spend decades behind bars.

But here’s the part that should infuriate every American: Singh had a valid California commercial driver’s license.

How is that even possible?

Singh crossed the border illegally in 2018 and later applied for work authorization. That application was rejected by the Trump administration in 2020. Yet California still handed him a license to operate an 80,000-pound truck.

This massive failure directly paved the way for three innocent Americans to lose their lives.

Let’s be honest: do we really believe 2.5 million Americans rushed online to defend this man? Not likely.

Several commenters on Fox News pointed out that many signatures appear to be coming from IP addresses in China and India. One reader wrote: “More than 2 million signatures are actually coming from both China and India IP addresses. China wants to keep making it look like we are divided much more than we are.”

Whether it’s 2.5 million or 250 signatures, the fact that anyone is calling Singh a victim shows just how twisted things have become in this country.

Singh wasn’t in the wrong place at the wrong time. He was in the U.S. illegally, driving a truck he never should have been licensed to operate, and made a reckless choice that killed three people.

Yet the so-called petition doesn’t even mention the real victims—the three Americans who had their lives cut short. Instead, it paints Singh as someone who deserves sympathy.

California’s decision to give a commercial license to an illegal immigrant with no work authorization is more than a bureaucratic mistake—it’s a deadly failure.

Even now, U.S. officials are scrambling to clean up the mess. Senator Marco Rubio recently announced that the U.S. will stop issuing work visas for foreign commercial truck drivers, a step that should have been taken years ago.

But it’s too late for the families in Florida. Their loved ones are gone, and no petition will bring them back.

This case is a grim reminder of how badly America’s priorities have been twisted. The system bent over backward to hand an illegal immigrant the keys to a deadly vehicle, and now activists want to excuse him after three Americans are dead.

Justice demands accountability—not petitions, not excuses, and not sympathy for the man who caused this tragedy.

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2 Million Americans Just Took a Stand

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