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MUST-SEE: Hundreds Of Patriotic Students Boo Anti-ICE Classmates During ‘Walk-Out’

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A small anti-ICE walkout at a Pennsylvania high school ran into a wall of pushback this week as hundreds of students stayed put, chanted “USA” and loudly booed classmates who left class to protest.

Video from Central Bucks East High School in Bucks County shows a group of students filing out while a much larger crowd jeers from the sidewalk and school grounds, turning what organizers hoped would be a show of solidarity into a moment of public backlash.

Multiple clips posted online show the same scene: a limited number of students participating in the walkout, while the majority makes it clear they are not buying the activism.

Reports circulating with the footage said fewer than 100 students took part out of a student body of roughly 1,400. One account said participation was closer to about 75 students.

The message from the students who stayed behind was blunt: school is for learning, not political theater — and they’re tired of being dragged into it.

The walkout came as similar anti-ICE protests have popped up in other communities, many organized on social media and promoted by activist groups. In some cases, administrators have warned students that leaving class without permission would come with consequences.

At Central Bucks East, the principal reportedly told students who walked out they would have to return to class or face disciplinary action, a move supporters said helped keep the protest from turning into an all-day disruption.

The confrontation also highlighted a growing split inside schools: a loud activist minority pushing politics into the day, and a larger group of students who are fed up with it.

In the video, the pro-walkout students appear outnumbered as the chants and boos follow them down the line. It’s not a scene that fits the usual narrative of “students rising up.” It looks more like students pushing back — and reclaiming their school day from political stunts.

The moment has drawn attention because it shows something rarely captured on camera: not just student activism, but student resistance to it.

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