What happened in Texas is the kind of investigative reporting that the mainstream media refuses to do: BlazeTV host Sara Gonzales drove into communities, pulled public H-1B records, and confronted addresses that allegedly serve as ghost companies sponsoring dozens of foreign workers. Her on-camera encounters—knocking on a residential door listed as a corporate address and finding empty office shells—have forced a conversation about how federal visa programs are being used in the real world.
Gonzales named specific firms in her investigation, pointing to Qubitz Tech Systems LLC, which shows 13 approved H-1B petitions, and 3BEES Technologies, which had 27 approvals between 2022 and 2025, yet lists addresses with no visible operating business. Those are not theoretical examples; they are entries in federal records that any citizen can check, and they are exactly the sort of red flags Americans ought to be alarmed about.
The video even captured the moment a homeowner called 911 when confronted, underscoring how uncomfortable these confrontations are for people who may be running paper operations from homes or shell offices. Gonzales is right to call this a possible tip of the iceberg, and the unfolding public attention shows why citizens must be allowed to highlight abuses when government agencies sit idle.
Governor Greg Abbott did what too many elected officials will not: he ordered Texas state agencies and public universities to freeze new H-1B petitions and launch a full review, demanding detailed disclosures about how these visas are being used in state-funded positions. That directive, issued January 27, 2026, is the kind of common-sense, pro-worker action conservatives should applaud, because taxpayer-funded jobs should be filled by Texans first unless there is a clear and documented need otherwise.
Naturally, the left and frivolous critics rushed to defend the status quo, accusing Gonzales of sensationalism and even tossing out claims of defamation while pointing to legitimate reasons why a company might not have a flashy office footprint. Critics argue remote work and startups operating from homes are not evidence of fraud, but those defenses do not erase the obligation of government to verify the paperwork and stop bad actors exploiting loopholes.
This moment is a wake-up call: if federal reforms and administrative changes are being debated in Washington, state leaders must not wait for permission to protect their citizens. Conservatives should use this scandal to press for tougher enforcement at USCIS, clearer audits of visa sponsors, and penalties that make fraud unprofitable, not merely a media nuisance. The national conversation about H-1B misuse, and recent federal policy proposals and scrutiny, make it clear reform is both timely and necessary.
Hardworking Americans deserve transparency, accountability, and a government that defends their wages and opportunities. Let Sara Gonzales’ reporting be the spark that forces action—more investigations, stronger laws, and real consequences for those gaming our immigration system while citizens are left picking up the tab. The fight to prioritize American workers is just getting started, and conservatives should lead it with resolve.

