We must not sink to this level.

Hard-working, law-abiding Americans are witness to bad behavior and victims of cultural bullying every day.

Last weekend about 20 people protesting the nation’s immigration policies were arrested in Boston.

Civil unrest — however inconvenient and damaging to the general public — has been fully sanctioned by progressives and any opposition is pilloried. Each disruption benefits from politicians and media who draw fraudulent comparisons to the civil rights movement.

Online Twitter mobs are “dox-ing” (releasing personal information) and intimidating private citizens who voice their opposition to open borders.

On a daily basis, concerned Americans who simply want the immigration laws that their representatives have already passed are labeled racists and xenophobes.

Cabinet officials are shouted down in the streets and rowdy bullies prevent them from entering restaurants in peace. Stephen Colbert applauds Seth Rogan for being rude to Paul Ryan in front of the House speaker’s children.

Incredibly, elected and aspiring politicians see the mobs go low, and they go lower.

U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren whipped up the crowd on City Hall Plaza on Saturday with dark invective:

“This is about children held in cages. This is about babies scattered all across this country. This is about mamas who want their children back,” Warren declared to the excited crowd.

“President Trump seems to think that the only way to have immigration rules is to rip parents from their families, is to treat rape victims and refugees like terrorists, and to put children in cages.”

She continued. “This moment is a moral crisis for our country.”

Warren then called for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to be replaced with “something that reflects our morality.”

Warren’s words were inaccurate, irresponsible, insulting and disgusting. Weren’t we just talking about the tone of the country leading to violence?

Warren never bothered to implore immigrants to stop crossing the border illegally in order to avoid the consequences of apprehension, nor did she responsibly inform the crowd that many facets of law enforcement must separate adults from children as a matter of process.

Instead, she vilified the law enforcement protecting our borders as being immoral and painted the president — and thus his supporters — as being a monstrous force for evil.

This kind of talk is not helpful. And it is echoed by increasingly mainstream Democratic calls to “abolish ICE,” from Warren herself, gubernatorial candidate Bob Massie and Boston city councilor and congressional hopeful Ayanna Pressley, to name just a few.

It certainly will not be helpful at the ballot box as the Democratic Party establishes itself as the “open borders” party at best and the party of anarchy at worst.

Decent Americans need to stay the course. Refrain from bullying and intimidation and continue to at least attempt to have conversations with people. For all the off-the-wall things President Trump has said or tweeted, he has never said anything as damaging to the country as Elizabeth Warren did Saturday on City Hall Plaza.

Unfortunately, radical Democrats across the country sound exactly like her. It will never get the coverage and scrutiny it should from the media, and late night hosts will continue to mock all Republicans — elected and otherwise — as dolts or evil or both.

We are seeing large-scale outrageousness in the name of decency but a bully is a bully and is not justified in his actions just because he is ignorant enough to think he is being noble.

Let’s be civil to each other. Social media trolls are empowered by two things: anonymity and the instant gratification of evoking a response. We should endeavor to resist the temptation to engage. No one goes to social media to have their mind changed.

Being kind and responsible Americans is its own counter-protest and it will yield results. We need to have resolve and it should be buoyed by the knowledge that we are quiet but we are also numerous.

There is still a moral majority in the country and when mobilized it produces great things. One of them we’ll celebrate tomorrow.