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I'm a drone CEO. America must protect its airspace now, before it's too late
I'm a drone CEO. America must protect its airspace now, before it's too late

Fox News

time2 days ago

  • Fox News

I'm a drone CEO. America must protect its airspace now, before it's too late

Drones have rapidly evolved from backyard novelties into critical components of today's infrastructure and now, into one of the fastest-growing threats to our national security. As the CEO of one of the nation's largest drone technology companies and a former naval officer, I've seen firsthand how powerful these tools can be. I've also seen how dangerous they are when left unregulated; they become liabilities, capable of disruption, destruction and danger. Just days ago, amid deadly flash floods in Texas, a private drone collided with a rescue helicopter during an active life-saving mission. The crash forced the crew to land, grounding a critical asset in the middle of an unfolding emergency. In the chaos of unspeakable tragedy, a single uncoordinated drone put lives at risk and halted the very efforts meant to save them. Incidents like this are entirely preventable with proper airspace coordination. In the first quarter of this year, the FAA reported over 400 illegal drone incursions near U.S. airports, which is a 25% increase from the same period in 2024. Drone incursions into U.S. military airspace have reached unprecedented levels, and the trend is only accelerating. At military bases across the country, 350 unauthorized drone flights were recorded last year alone. These aren't harmless mistakes. They are persistent, coordinated, and, in some cases, hostile. These incidents are not isolated; they're escalating. Drones have been used to smuggle contraband into prisons, surveil energy facilities and ports, and even collide with manned aircraft, narrowly avoiding catastrophe. As drones become faster, cheaper and easier to operate, our systems for detecting, coordinating, and responding remain fractured, outdated, and dangerously inadequate. From commercial airliners and emergency helicopters to power grids and correctional facilities, these vulnerabilities cut across every critical sector. Without stronger detection, clear enforcement authority, and a unified approach to managing airspace, the risk will only grow. This is no longer a question of if these gaps will be exploited, but when, how often, and at what cost. The root of the problem is not technological. The solutions exist today. What we lack is a national framework, a unified, real-time system to track, manage and respond to low-altitude air traffic. We need a flight information exchange that allows law enforcement, regulators, and operators to see what's flying, where it is, and who is responsible. We need cryptographically secure digital credentials that link drones, their pilots and their missions to prevent spoofing. And we need Remote ID signals that can't be manipulated. Right now, too many decisions depend on disconnected sensors, slow approvals and guesswork. We must fuse radar, RF and acoustic data into a single surveillance picture. The FAA needs to publish a national mission-priority table to ensure emergency flights aren't delayed or grounded. Most urgently, Congress must expand counter-Unmanned Aircraft Systems authority to include local law enforcement before the current federal authority sunsets this September. The technology is ready. The risks are growing. We no longer have the luxury of delay. It's time for Congress, regulators and industry to act together before these threats escalate into disasters. We can protect our skies before the next drone incident becomes a national tragedy.

This July 4th, here's how my family earned the right to be called ‘Americans'
This July 4th, here's how my family earned the right to be called ‘Americans'

Fox News

time04-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Fox News

This July 4th, here's how my family earned the right to be called ‘Americans'

I was born in India but made in America. My father, a proud Indian naval officer, gave up everything — his career, comfort and country — for a chance at the American Dream. He brought my mother, my brother and me to the United States with just $80 and a belief in the American Dream. My father gave up everything — not to receive assistance or special treatment, but to pursue a future based on freedom and merit. He scrubbed toilets, worked night shifts and shared a home with my grandparents and relatives. My father never complained or requested handouts. He simply sought the opportunity to build a future through hard work and dignity. My family followed the legal process. We filed paperwork, paid the required fees, attended government interviews, passed the citizenship exam and, ultimately, swore an oath of loyalty to the United States of America. That's the American way: not cutting the line or breaking the law but earning your place through sacrifice and assimilation. Today, however, the American Dream is being redefined and undermined by those who treat it as an entitlement rather than an achievement. The modern Democratic Party has turned legal immigration into a punchline, offering citizenship to those who circumvent the law. By blurring the line between legal and illegal, they betray the ideals they claim to uphold. Not all immigrants are the same. Consider Albert Einstein, who fled Nazi persecution and changed the course of science. Elon Musk, who left South Africa, worked his way through school and helped revolutionize technology and space. Madeleine Albright, who escaped communist tyranny and became the first female United States Secretary of State. Each of these individuals earned their place in America through allegiance, contribution and sacrifice. Contrast their legacy with that of Victor Martínez Hernández, who murdered Rachel Morin after multiple illegal entries into the country. Or Sebastian Zapeta Calil, who was accused of setting a woman on fire in a New York subway. Or Lina Maria Orovio Hernandez, who was accused of stealing more than $400,000 in taxpayer-funded benefits and illegally voting in the 2024 election. These are not the same stories, and the law must reflect that reality. Millions of legal immigrants, like my family, followed the rules. We waited, worked and learned English. We assimilated. In contrast, under Democrats' broken border policies, millions entered the United States unlawfully — without documentation, vetting or any intention of becoming Americans in the fullest sense. The threat is greater than most admit. We're facing an invasion of unvetted individuals — many of them fighting-aged men from China, Iran and violent regions of the Middle East. Human traffickers and cartels are ransoming, enslaving and assaulting women and children who trusted them to reach the U.S. Democrats' open-border policies have fueled this black market of terror. This isn't just a failure — it's a national security crisis and a humanitarian disaster. And to those who say, "They're just here to work" — motives don't excuse breaking the law. Desiring a better life is no excuse to break the law. Every illegal entry disregards those who pursued citizenship the right way. Rewarding such behavior — through sanctuary status, government benefits or expedited citizenship — sends a dangerous and deeply unjust message: that laws are optional, and that effort is irrelevant. The consequences are real. Working-class Americans bear the cost — overcrowded hospitals and schools, higher housing prices and declining safety. This isn't compassion; it's injustice. The rhetoric of "equity" has been weaponized to build a new caste system — where legal immigrants and law-abiding citizens are pushed aside, while lawbreakers are elevated and subsidized. This isn't fairness. It's a grab for power. I take pride in my Indian heritage — but I'm even prouder to be an American. Citizenship isn't just a status; it's a sacred commitment to defend the Constitution, uphold the law, and give more than you take. It means standing in line, abiding by the rules, and embracing both the duties and blessings of this country. Because I embraced America, it embraced me. I became a lawyer, media commentator, served in national security and the Ohio Governor's Office, and became Ohio's first female sports agent — all thanks to a legal, merit-based system now under siege. Democrats' open-border policies have fueled this black market of terror. This isn't just a failure — it's a national security crisis and a humanitarian disaster. And to those who say, "They're just here to work" — motives don't excuse breaking the law. Legal immigrants across America are rejecting the left's false promises. In 2016, President Donald Trump won 36% of the legal immigrant vote. By 2024, it rose to 47%. Even CNN can't spin it. Why? Because we're tired of being ignored, disrespected, and erased. We won't stay silent as our story is co-opted. This Independence Day, remember freedom isn't free and neither is citizenship. Both must be earned. To every legal immigrant who followed the law: this country sees you, values you, and needs you. You're not a footnote in America's story. You're its backbone. We won't let that legacy be stolen.

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