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Immigration

Texas Barred From Detaining Border-Crossers

Plus: Cuba's collapse, D.C.'s crime rate, Austin's housing market, and more...

Liz Wolfe | 3.19.2024 9:31 AM

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Migrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border | David Peinado/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom
(David Peinado/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom)

Blocked: Last year, Texas Senate Bill (S.B.) 4—which would've allowed Texas police to arrest those who illegally cross the southern border—passed. Yesterday, the U.S. Supreme Court issued an order that blocks the enforcement of the law "until justices decide whether Texas should be allowed to enforce it before federal court challenges are resolved," reports The Texas Tribune. "Justice Samuel Alito did not put a deadline on the temporary order blocking the law and did not indicate when the high court would decide whether to keep the law from being enforced during ongoing litigation."

S.B. 4 "allows police to question and arrest anyone they believe entered Texas through Mexico illegally and is currently without legal immigration status," per the Tribune. It was not intended to be a means by which law enforcement can go after longtime residents of the U.S. who once crossed illegally (and statutes of limitations further protect such people), but rather a means of detaining recent border-crossers.

The bill says "any migrant seen by the police wading across the Rio Grande could be arrested and charged in state court with a misdemeanor on the first offense," per The New York Times. "A second offense would be a felony. After being arrested, migrants could be ordered during the court process to return to Mexico or face prosecution if they did not agree to go."

No path forward: Since the federal government has immigration-enforcement authority, there is plenty of reason to believe the Texas law will ultimately get struck down. The state, meanwhile, says the law has a necessary deterrent effect.

"No matter how emphatic Texas' criticism of the federal government's handling of immigration on the border may be to some," wrote U.S. District Judge David A. Ezra when ruling on the case last month, "disagreement with the federal government's immigration policy does not justify a violation of the [U.S. Constitution's] Supremacy Clause."

But the Supreme Court intervening, and possibly striking down S.B. 4 altogether, doesn't mean tensions will be cooled—quite the opposite.

"There is either a red wave this November or America is doomed," wrote Elon Musk on X this past weekend, in response to a video about New York City's migrant crisis. "Imagine four more years of this getting worse," he added, ominously. But one thing that will surely get worse, regardless of who gets elected in November, is the degree of polarization driving Americans further away from each other on this issue in particular. There are wonky questions worth sussing out—How many low-skilled job-seekers can our labor market bear? Are there certain low-cost-of-living areas of the country that can better accommodate migrants? How quickly should work authorization be processed?—but both political parties have chosen to sidestep these questions in favor of political posturing that does very little to serve the border-crossers in question.


Scenes from New York: You've heard of carjacking, but what about trainjacking? Inside the strange breed of New York criminal that attempts to…break into subway cars and drive them.


QUICK HITS

  • Is Cuba about to collapse?
  • "For committee behind TikTok bill, influence may be short-lived," reports Politico. "Disagreements over the future of the committee underscore Congress' deep divides over how aggressive to be in handling threats from China—and who should take the lead in addressing them."
  • "Has intergenerational progress stalled?" asks a new research paper by Kevin Corinth and Jeff Larrimore. Not really: "We find that each of the past four generations of Americans was better off than the previous one, using a post-tax, post-transfer income measure constructed annually from 1963-2022 based on the Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement. At age 36–40, Millennials had a real median household income that was 18 percent higher than that of the previous generation at the same age. This rate of intergenerational progress was slower than that experienced by the Silent Generation (34 percent) and Baby Boomers (27 percent), but similar to that experienced by Generation X (16 percent). Slower progress for Generation X and Millennials is due to their stalled growth in work hours—holding work hours constant, they experienced a greater intergenerational increase in real market income than Baby Boomers."
  • "Once America's hottest housing market, Austin is running in reverse," reads a Wall Street Journal headline of a long feature that seems to be…lamenting the fact that property values have come down due to the city actually approving the building of more housing (so, exactly what YIMBYs wanted, and exactly what needed to happen).
  • "Don't be so down on D.C.," Democratic Mayor Muriel Bowser told Axios at an event yesterday, in response to questions about the city's crime problem. Last year, "homicides jumped 36% and carjackings nearly doubled," per Axios.
  • SCOTUS watch:

KBJ doubles down: "My biggest concern is that your view has the First Amendment hamstringing the government in significant ways."

That is, quite literally, the entire point of the First Amendment—of the entire Bill of Rights. pic.twitter.com/gWMCaHDG1W

— System Update (@SystemUpdate_) March 18, 2024

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NEXT: Brickbat: Persistence Is Key

Liz Wolfe is an associate editor at Reason.

ImmigrationBorder CrossingsMigrantsSupreme CourtTexasGreg AbbottPoliticsReason Roundup
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  1. Ajsloss   1 year ago

    An idiot that can't define a woman sure as shit won't be able to define the First Amendment.

    1. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   1 year ago

      Fuck, beat me by 40 seconds.

      1. Ajsloss   1 year ago

        Don't you just hate that?

        1. JesseAz   1 year ago

          Only when it is the wife saying it.

          1. Dillinger   1 year ago

            I have no idea to what you refer.

            1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

              Something about wife beating.

              1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   1 year ago

                Girl bulliers run amok.

    2. Mike Parsons   1 year ago

      Holy shit, in such a brief period of time, we have from this lady:

      – I cant define a woman, im not a biologist
      – Black babies have a 2x chance of survival when taken care of by a black doctor

      and maybe the biggest doosy…

      – the first amendment is getting in the way of the govt

      Seriously that has to be the most authoritarian take one could imagine. Such disdain for the constitution (bill of rights) should be an instant DQ of her job

      1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

        It wasn't a brief period of time. She spent her entire career thinking that shit.

        While it is becoming cliche, he is nothing but a DEI hire. And we can't fire her.

        1. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

          And we can’t fire her.

          Congress can, it's called impeachment.

          1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

            Congress can, it’s called impeachment.

            For a moment there, I thought you were serious.

            1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

              Yup. We all know now that impeachment is just a publicity stunt, and a mechanism to provide content for official state media.

      2. Square = Circle   1 year ago

        Such disdain for the constitution (bill of rights) should be an instant DQ of her job

        ^

        I don't really care who Clarence Thomas socializes with on his off-hours, but if you have an actual sitting Supreme Court Justice expressing the opinion that the Bill of Rights is an impediment to the government's goals, that person should immediately be removed from the court as being clearly unfit for the position.

    3. damikesc   1 year ago

      She should be impeached over that comment alone.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        Along with the half of Americans who think she is correct. And brave, oh so brave.

    4. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

      Stupid line but that's the hot take clip world we live in. But to be fair, this how SCOTUS works, they ask questions sometimes very broadly to find the line. Unless someone thinks CP or ISIS promos should be available and are protected by 1A, then there is a line that shouldn't hamstring the government. My personal line being child porn and propaganda from a declared enemy of the USA.

      That all said I'll probably disagree with the decision she signs off on.

      1. Mike Parsons   1 year ago

        CP involves a party being harmed in a situation where they are unable to consent or often dont, and ISIS promos are treasonous and call for murder.

        She supports Biden shutting down discourse that her political opponents disagree with or talking about the now blatantly obvious lab leak.

        I could theoretically have a conversation on where the line is, but it is light years away from where the Biden admin drew it, and the response from anyone that wants to uphold the constitution towards them should be nothing but scorn

        1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

          SCOTUS fucked up 4 years ago by punting on "public health safety". They should have drawn a hard line for emergency government power at quarantine of the sick and issued injunctions against restrictions for the healthy. In particular by allowing churches to be closed by the government, they set the stage for restricting the 1st Amendment for any "health emergency".

          Idiots will argue contradicting public health experts is no different than yelling "fire" in a crowded theater (and that Trump said to drink bleach). KBJ strikes me as one of those that still thinks there was a ruling that decided that was an acceptable restriction and that it wasn't just a hypothetical that has no weight.

      2. JesseAz   1 year ago

        Her hypothetical was about a website encouraging kids to jump off buildings. She is an unserious jurist.

        1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

          LOL! That is literally the "if your friends all jumped off a bridge" fallacy.

          1. Longtobefree   1 year ago

            Behind the Bee by three years - - - - - -

            https://babylonbee.com/news/government-issues-new-directive-telling-everyone-to-jump-off-a-bridge

            1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

              It keeps becoming harder by the hour to be a Bee writer.

      3. Square = Circle   1 year ago

        Unless someone thinks CP or ISIS promos should be available and are protected by 1A, then there is a line that shouldn’t hamstring the government.

        There is, arguably, a line, but what's concerning in KBJ is the line of argument that since one can maybe think of a hypothetical example of the government being justified in shutting down certain speech therefore the government is always justified and she's audibly exasperated that this uncooperative fellow is asserting 1A rights in the first place.

        1. American Mongrel   1 year ago

          Do we think the white men Merrick Garland or Joe Biden would argue any differently?

          Top law schools are absolutely teaching that there are no such things as inalienable rights, only those the government choose to give you due process to fight for. Outside of abortion of course.

          When that kook on X was talking about where rights are derived from, you all didnt realize that all democrats agree with shim 100%.

          edit: wrong thread, sorry.

  2. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   1 year ago

    She's as dumb now as she was during the hearings, a government shill making excuses for other government agents. But you must forgive her; if she, being a woman, doesn't know what a woman is, how can she, a government shill, be expected to know what a government shill is?

    1. But SkyNet is a Private Company   1 year ago

      Who could have foreseen such an outcome when Brandon was strategically supported here?

    2. HorseConch   1 year ago

      How did we get to a point where stupidity is so heavily rewarded. The ranks of both parties are clogged with yes men/women who are for the most part too stupid to realize what they are. The rest of them are just corrupt and complicit.

      1. Zeb   1 year ago

        I think you answered your own question.

      2. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   1 year ago

        It's the nature of government. It's in the very common definition of having a monopoly of violence within a territory.

        Once burrocrats understand how powerful coercion is, the evil has been tasted and cannot be put back in the jar. Suasion is so much more difficult and slow than just ordering something be done, and using guns to back it up.

        1. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

          They closed public school buildings for a year and a half for something that is less dangerous to children 5-18 than a seasonal flu. There is no putting that kind of power back into the bottle.

          1. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   1 year ago

            No, it's like that Aesop's fable about getting the peas out of a bottle (paraphrased). Once you've got that hand full of power, you'll break the bottle to get your hand out rather than let go of any of the power.

            1. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   1 year ago

              Hmmmm. Not an Aesop's fable, apparently. The Boy and the Filberts

              A boy puts his hand into a pitcher of figs and filberts and grasps so many that he cannot withdraw his fist through the narrow opening. When he bursts into tears of frustration, a bystander advises him to take only half the quantity.

              1. R Mac   1 year ago

                I’ve been there with the Pringles.

                — Fat Jeffy

                1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

                  Can Jeff even get his pudgy fist into a Pringles can?

                  1. R Mac   1 year ago

                    I was referring to two fingers.

      3. Square = Circle   1 year ago

        Relevant.

    3. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      I have never really before thought I know law better than a SC justice, and would dare risking oral argument before the court. But this statement by Brown Jackson has convinced me otherwise.

  3. Knutsack   1 year ago

    The Tik Tok ban bill is too broad and will definitely lead to other, stupider bans by Congress under the guise of "national security".

    1. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

      Yup, or they'll use the threat of the law to silence critics. That's a nice social media platform you got there, hate for us to have take it from you because you allowed misinformation on it.

      1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

        Is that what they call “strong language “?

    2. R Mac   1 year ago

      There’s already Democrats tweeting that Elon is controlled by Putin. Their goal is to force him to sell. And a bunch of Republicans are too stupid to realize it. And others are in on it.

    3. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

      Yet Trump gets zero credit for backing off from the ban. Quelle surprise!

      1. R Mac   1 year ago

        Only leftists get to change their minds.

        — sarc (who’s totally not a leftist, just ask him, he’ll tell you)

  4. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

    Yesterday, the U.S. Supreme Court issued an order that blocks the enforcement of the law "until justices decide whether Texas should be allowed to enforce it before federal court challenges are resolved," reports The Texas Tribune.

    Pull a democrat move and ignore the SCOTUS's ruling. What can they possibly do?

    1. A Cynical Asshole   1 year ago

      "They've made their ruling, now let them enforce it."

    2. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

      There are wonky questions worth sussing out—How many low-skilled job-seekers can our labor market bear?

      Someone clearly isn't reading Fiona's articles because the answer is obviously INFINITY!

  5. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

    You know what they say, if you can't detained the invaders execute them

    1. JesseAz   1 year ago

      I just don't get the argument. Precedence is the state can't override federal law a d act against it under supremacy jurisprudence. But in this case the federal government is not upholding its duty under the take care clause. Unless the official federal policy is open borders, I don't understand the conflict here.

      1. Krokko   1 year ago

        We have to pass the immigrants to find out what's in them.

        1. A Cynical Asshole   1 year ago

          pass the immigrants

          What, like through our digestive tracts? No thanks, I'll pass.

          1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

            We could start with passing them through a car wash. And if that is not enough, them pass them through a cement kiln.

      2. Quicktown Brix   1 year ago

        I’m confused by this too. A quick search tells me states can only enforce federal law in cooperation with the feds but not alone?

        States may participate in various ways in the enforcement of federal criminal law as well, for example by arresting individuals for federal offenses. But states lack power to enforce federal criminal law directly, such as by prosecuting federal offenders themselves in state or federal court. States play a similar role
        with respect to federal immigration law. Under Section 287(g) of the Immigration and Naturalization Act, states or localities can sign a Memorandum of Understanding with the federal government to deputize officials to enforce federal immigration law “in relation to the investigation, apprehension, or detention of [noncitizens] in the United States.” 8 U.S.C. § 1357(g) (2006). Deputized state officials obtain federal training from the federal
        Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE) and work under ICE’s supervision.

        https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5183&context=faculty_scholarship

        1. JesseAz   1 year ago

          They are enforcing state law, not federal law. Try again.

          Did you know both states and feds have laws that cover similar issues? Such as robbery.

          1. Quicktown Brix   1 year ago

            OK, I made a mistake about Texas enforcing federal law. I wasn't trying to defend the decision, just understand it.

      3. Mickey Rat   1 year ago

        It is the old principle of "Heads, I win. Tails, you lose."

      4. damikesc   1 year ago

        Yeah. I thought states could not override federal laws but executive POLICIES ain't laws.

    2. Longtobefree   1 year ago

      Not here legally.
      Not in the uniform of a recognized nation state.
      Therefore a spy behind the lines.
      Up against the wall.

    3. Eeyore   1 year ago

      They could just redefine what "detained" means. If we can redefine woman, we can redefine detained. When in court pretend you don't know how to define detained, because you are not a criminologist.

    4. Brett Bellmore   1 year ago

      That does seem to be the next step: Texas could amend it's laws, which are already pretty liberal, (In a literal sense, not the Orwellian sense the term has accumulated.) to allow trespassers to be legally shot, day or night, regardless of whether they're also committing some other crime. (You can already shoot them at night, if they're committing any sort of crime against the property owner.)

      Murder is a state matter. If a state decides that killing trespassers isn't murder, then it just isn't. The feds have no say in the matter.

      And most of the trespassers near the border are illegals. Life would get really dangerous for people illegally crossing the border.

      1. Jefferson Paul   1 year ago

        I may very well be wrong here, but my understanding is that for the state to execute migrants/invaders/illegals (whatever you want to call them) would violate due process. A state law can’t violate the Bill of Rights, even if the person killed is not a citizen, if they are on US land. Then again, I believe I was told not all of the 5th or 7th Amendments have been “incorporated” by the states, so I’m not sure.

        *I don’t think just shooting anyone who crosses the border is moral or constitutional, and am just looking at the legal ramifications of the suggestion.

        1. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

          It's not "execution" though. It's legalizing the shooting of trespassers.

  6. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

    Dealing with China is easy
    All companies revenue that is derived from a nation that currently supports slavery will have a 100% revenue tax on all dealings with that country and a 100% payroll tax on employees that worked on that deal.

    1. Chinny Chin Chin   1 year ago

      It takes a village to raise a child, and a government to get people to shop correctly.

      1. mad.casual   1 year ago

        100% revenue tax and 100% payroll tax is better than the conscription and million+ dead we went through tackling the forced labor issue last time.

      2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        We could treat people like fire fighters treat homes when threatened by wild fires. Houses that show evidence of fire-proofing, like removal of surrounding brush and construction with inflammable material get resources dedicated to protect them. Risky houses with careless owners get abandoned.

        When the Chinese invade, we could rate people by the amount of Made in China stuff they own, and deploy armed forces (and assign refugee status) accordingly.

    2. Zeb   1 year ago

      What could possibly go wrong?

      1. mad.casual   1 year ago

        China and the WEF progress further towards controlling the global economy, entrenching their respective surveillance states, and establishing their social credit programs?

        I know Libertarians enjoy the "free shit, debt accumulation" status quo but that train isn't going to roll on forever and things don't really get any better the longer it does roll on.

        1. Zeb   1 year ago

          I don't deny that China is a big problem. My point is that it's likely to suck either way and effectively banning all trade with China would cause a lot of pain for a lot of people in the US.

    3. Moderation4ever   1 year ago

      Of course, dealing with China is easy just as trade wars are easy to win.

    4. I, Woodchipper   1 year ago

      Which principle of limited government does this one fall under?

      1. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

        It's not, it's giving people what they want. If Nike and Google, etc want a country with totalitarian control give it to them. Same as I believe the people who are pushing the illegal invaders on us should be forced to house them in their own homes

  7. Randy Sax   1 year ago

    "S.B. 4 "allows police to question and arrest anyone they believe entered Texas through Mexico illegally and is currently without legal immigration status," per the Tribune."

    This concerns me. I don't know if this is verbatim what the law says or if it is an over exaggeration by the Tribune. "arrest anyone they believe" Seems like an unconstitutional excuse to pull over and detain American citizens and ask for their papers. We've seen it happen. Internal "checkpoints" are currently in operation.

    1. Ron   1 year ago

      Unlike the NY subway system

    2. ducksalad   1 year ago

      Link to the text:

      https://legiscan.com/TX/text/SB4/id/2851390#:~:text=Bill%20Title%3A%20Relating%20to%20prohibitions,authorizing%20or%20requiring%20under%20certain

      It makes entering other than at a port of entry (by an alien) a state crime, no mention of any particular detention or arrest authority. One assumes the standard of reasonable suspicion to stop and question, and probable cause to arrest, are still there. I disagree with the policy and wouldn't vote for it, but I don't think it's breaking any new ground on the 4th Amendment.

      The internal checkpoints w/o individualized suspicion are a separate and distinct problem, but the feds are the primary offenders on that one. The court decisions that allowed them specifically contemplated stops at places that very few ordinary citizens travelling within the country would pass through. But then in the actual implementation, the feds set up at places that stop *mostly* US citizens, with the goal of doing zero-cause drug searches. Another consequence of having too many judges from the NYC area who don't see what their decisions lead to in the real world.

      1. Randy Sax   1 year ago

        I guess the question becomes; "this guy looks foreign, I'll detain him. I reasonably suspect he came into the US at not a point of entry" Does that count? In my eyes, obviously not. Eyes of the court with immune cops? Maybe.

        1. ducksalad   1 year ago

          I agree that's the problem. But to be fair, it's a much bigger problem if the enforcement is done by inexperienced officers from up north, or someone with a white nationalist agenda who manages to get themselves into enforcement.

          Locally recruited officers are majority Hispanic themselves and aren't likely to hassle someone merely for brown skin and dark hair. They're looking at more subtle things and (I'm conceding this against my inclinations) actually seem to be pretty good at it.

          The National Guard supplemental personnel brought in as temps, not so much. But they're limited in what they're allowed to do.

          1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   1 year ago

            “….,someone with a white nationalist agenda…”

            Lol. Jesus fucking Christ, you people are idiots.

  8. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

    Kbj is an insult to America, she should resign or be impeached.
    As evil and retarded as Roberts, sotamaior, and kagan are Jackson is another level of trash

    1. Randy Sax   1 year ago

      I don't see much hope in that. I think we are gonna have to sit through 50 years of her retarded bullshit till she dies on the bench.

      1. I, Woodchipper   1 year ago

        She is clearly the least intelligent justice.

        I'm talking about them all, not just the current ones.

      2. A Cynical Asshole   1 year ago

        I don’t see much hope in that.

        Nope, especially with Congress being populated by feckless cowards. Although, if they did have the balls to do it I can only imagine the screaming, gnashing of teeth, and rending of garments - full on hissy fit the left would throw. It'll make their screaming at the sky during Trump's inauguration in 2016 look like a calm, measured, totally thoughtful reaction.

  9. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

    Kbj biggest complaint about the 3rd ammendment is that it keeps the gov from forcing you to house soldiers

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      Hey, the only way we can have a "proper" democracy is to obey our betters, as relayed through the government they created.

  10. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

    Intergenerational growth?
    Cold part of that problem be that Blackrock/vanguard are stealing everyone’s money and using it to buy up all the houses?
    At the same time the feds are attacking small business owners and doing a defacto transfer to Amazon, wallmart, Costco etc?
    All while saying that even if you own something, stealing from you is okay?

    1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      And we know that the cost of living figures have been absolute bullshit for the last 20 years.

    2. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

      Blackrock/vanguard are stealing everyone’s money….

      How?

      1. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

        You know when the fed does quantitative easing and pumps money into the country they give the money the printed out of thin air to the the huge bank and Capitol firms. They get "money" and we get inflation, a larger debt, and more intrest to pay

        1. R Mac   1 year ago

          Plus they’re about to get paid directly to help rebuild Ukraine.

  11. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    "There is either a red wave this November or America is doomed," wrote Elon Musk on X this past weekend...

    America must become bathed in red!

    1. Ajsloss   1 year ago

      Where you been? We’ve been commenting for nearly 30 minutes without you.

      1. HorseConch   1 year ago

        Immigrants seem to integrate and contibrute quite well in flyover country. The current crop of migrants seem to be different. Probably best for the majority of them to stay in the urban oases that love having the diverse cultural experiences that come with them.

        1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

          Food trucks!!!

        2. R Mac   1 year ago

          It’s important to note that until recently the vast majority of people illegally entering were from Mexico. Now they’re the minority. The numbers of Chinese, Africans, and south Asians are what’s skyrocketing.

          This is an invasion, and our tax dollars are helping to pay for it.

          1. HorseConch   1 year ago

            Not only were they entering from Mexico, they were coming up for gainful employment. It seems more like the new crowd is happy with their shitty lifestyles and just want to move North.

            1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

              Actually, for decades people from Mexico and Central American countries came north for weeks or months, earned money, and went home. Making the border harder to cross inspired seasonal workers to relocate permanently, and to bring the fam.

          2. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   1 year ago

            Don't forget Haiti. It certainly seems like all the sane people have already fled. Like in Gaza, all the aid in world can't feed 5 million Haitians if it can't be distributed.

            1. R Mac   1 year ago

              I haven’t seen recent numbers but I’m sure you’re right.

              The sad thing is that having your country overrun by cannibal gangs is probably a legit reason for asylum, but the system has been overrun by people that don’t qualify, cheered on by the open borders uber alles crowd so they can virtue signal and feel good about themselves.

              1. HorseConch   1 year ago

                They would probably be the most qualified in the world these days. Unfortunately for the actual victims, asylum is a dirty word now.

          3. mamabug   1 year ago

            Also important to note in light of the great American myth of immigration - the immigrants during the relatively unrestricted period of the 19th century were mostly skilled according to the general level at the time (roughly 8th grade education plus general handyman and/or farming skills), the US had so much land it was handing it out to anyone over 18, and we were in the middle of an industrial revolution and railroad building spree. IOW - we had plenty of jobs available and the migrants coming had the skills needed to fill them.

            We are now a service and learning based society which needs those with either college educations or skilled tradesmen and that is not who is coming through the southern border.

            Honestly, we'd be better off tightening the borders to keep out the less skilled and creating fast naturalization paths for H-B1 visa holders.

      2. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

        Dentist.

    2. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      "America must become bathed in red!"

      Elon quoted Hitler!

      1. Sevo   1 year ago

        I remember, specifically, Hitler saying "America", "must", "in", and certainly "red", so just like Trump, Musk is using Hitler's language.

        1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

          OMG! Hitler also started a car company!

          1. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

            And controlled all social media!

          2. Ajsloss   1 year ago

            Surprised that you of all people haven't noticed that Hitler, Trump and Musk share the same skin color... at least Hitler and Musk do.

            1. R Mac   1 year ago

              AND ALL THREE OF THEM DRINK WATER!

              1. JesseAz   1 year ago

                I've seen Musk with facial hair but not Trump.

                1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

                  I wonder if a Trump beard would have the same wave?

                  1. R Mac   1 year ago

                    It’d be the biggest, most beautiful beard in the world.

                    1. Longtobefree   1 year ago

                      And then the comparisons projected by leftists would be Castro, not Putin - - - -

        2. HorseConch   1 year ago

          They've gone so fucking crazy that they all blow up over one word. Next thing you know, he'll use a word starting with n while talking about himself. When he does, all the scum will inundate Twitter and the Sunday talk shows to let us know he just used code to come out as a nazi.

    3. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

      So he's pussy-grabbing while she's on the rag too? That wouldn't be good in zero-Gs!

  12. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Are there certain low-cost-of-living areas of the country that can better accommodate migrants?

    THIS IS A DOG WHISTLE FOR CONTAIN IMMIGRANTS IN FLYOVER COUNTRY YOU CAN'T FOOL ME

    1. Longtobefree   1 year ago

      Well, there actually is.
      Any area rich enough to declare itself a sanctuary city for illegals, and clearly afford to deal with them.
      In fact, President Trump should nationalize the National Guard of all sanctuary states and use their logistical abilities to transport all illegals to the nearest sanctuary.

  13. Moderation4ever   1 year ago

    "How many low-skilled job-seekers can our labor market bear?"

    Every indication is that we have jobs that need to be filled and that natives are not interested in those jobs. So, I would suggest that we let people who wish to work do so.

    1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

      Every indication is that we have jobs that need to be filled and that natives are not interested in those jobs.

      Bull shit. There are no "immigrants" where I live. Guess who does all of the shit jobs?

      1. Moderation4ever   1 year ago

        That may be the case where you live but not everywhere. I am also guessing you don't have to travel far to find immigrant labor. An estimate put immigrant as 5% of Wisconsin's population but Wisconsin's dairy industry uses about 10% immigrant labor. I was recently on holiday and flew to Georgia. I noted that on the plane the flight crew was native, but getting off the plan the staff waiting to clean the plane was all immigrants. Immigrants are out there and you don't need to look far to find them.

        1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

          I am also guessing you don’t have to travel far to find immigrant labor.

          Quantify “far”. There’s plenty fruit pickers in Wenatchee. ~200 miles

          1. Moderation4ever   1 year ago

            Bob, how far are you from a dairy farm? According to Idaho Dairy Association 90% of on farm laborers are Spanish speaking immigrants. Idaho also lists immigrants as 6% of the population. I suggest if you don't see immigrants, you are not looking.

            https://idahodairymens.org/governmental-affairs/immigration-reform

            1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

              How do you say "I know nothing about the Idaho panhandle" without saying I know nothing about the Idaho panhandle?

              You know what we grow up here? Lumber. None of the loggers I have ever met are migrants.

      2. sarcasmic   1 year ago

        Where I live there are help wanted signs for shit jobs everywhere. Call me crazy, but that gives me the impression that natives are not interested in the work.

        1. JesseAz   1 year ago

          Yeah. Generous welfare benefits surely aren't the problem. Let's import a new underclass that will too go to welfare. Problem solved!

    2. R Mac   1 year ago

      The natives in Perry, Iowa say you’re full of shit.

      https://justthenews.com/nation/economy/tyson-foods-closes-iowa-plant-looks-hire-42000-immigrant-workers

      1. HorseConch   1 year ago

        I've heard that they are looking for 10000 migrants to hire at several dollars less per hour than the current help. I'm sure they won't be taking any jobs from citizens, though.

        1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

          No minimum wage, no health plan, no safety standards to worry about… best thing since Congolese child cobalt miners. They raise shit, you send them back.

          Why would you staff your factory with fat lazy expensive Americans? If Covid taught us anything it was that overseas supply chain interruptions can lead to problems, so just bring the third world here but with a nebulous status so you don't have to fulfill all the stupid regulations. Win-win.

          1. HorseConch   1 year ago

            Our local processors are full of Congolese. I think we got the ones smart enough not to mine Cobalt. From friends who work with them, they aren't exactly great help, but that's what they keep importing.

    3. JesseAz   1 year ago

      Example of unfilled jobs. Robbing rich people.

      https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-03-16/los-angeles-police-south-american-crime-tourism

      Jobs are unfilled because of generous welfare. See labor participation. The latest set of immigrants also enjoy welfare benefits.

      1. JesseAz   1 year ago

        I apologize. I'm sure there's another side to the story and this is defensible. I'll wait for sarc to figure out what it is.

        1. R Mac   1 year ago

          No no, it’s YOUR job to find the other side of the story. Otherwise keep this to yourself.

        2. Chupacabra   1 year ago

          Let's see...fighting white supremacy? Climate justice? Justicia por la raza?

          1. JesseAz   1 year ago

            Maybe repatriation for LA being on stolen land?

    4. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

      Wait, you mean the peon labor you guys imported over the last 35 years isn’t stepping up to the plate anymore? And your big solution is to import MORE peon labor, which is going to require MORE housing, MORE schools, MORE healthcare, MORE services, MORE infrastructure, etc.? And who exactly fills THOSE jobs?

      You "moderates" really don’t understand that limits of scale, do you?

      1. Moderation4ever   1 year ago

        Well thirty-five years ago I was working but now I am retired. I assume this is also true for the immigrant labor. Your assumption is that their children would just take up mom's and dad's job. But like all immigrants those parents wanted more for their children. So those people doing the dirty jobs 35 years ago are retired and their children are educated and have better jobs. So, you still have a need for workers. In addition, with people like me getting older more of us are going to care facilities. These care facilities have 20 to 25 percent of their staff made up of immigrants. So, the need for workers goes on.

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

          LOL, stop projecting your solipsism onto national socio-economic issues, or offering up glittering generalities such as "like all immigrants those parents wanted more for their children," as if citizens don't have those same desires.

          Literally nothing in your response refuted what I said, and a one-off demographic event like the Boomers aging isn't particularly relevant to those broader issues.

          1. Moderation4ever   1 year ago

            It seems that American citizens want more for their children but not if it means cleaning hotel rooms, processing chickens, taking care of the elderly, picking fruit, etc.

            That one off demographic event will take a long time to work its way through the system.

            1. mad.casual   1 year ago

              It seems that American citizens want more for their children but not if it means cleaning hotel rooms, processing chickens, taking care of the elderly, picking fruit, etc.

              ^Tell me you hate niggers without saying "I hate niggers."

              1. Moderation4ever   1 year ago

                What are suggesting here? That the jobs I listed should be done by black Americans? The jobs I listed are out there for anyone to take without regard to race, gender or sexual orientation.

                1. mad.casual   1 year ago

                  I didn’t say “should”, you did. I know this is hard for someone like you to comprehend, but it's possible to recognize someone's race, actions, and social status without a preconceived notion of what they "should" be.

                  The jobs I listed are out there for anyone to take without regard to race, gender or sexual orientation.

                  But specifically *with* regard to income and education. You’re rather clearly indicating that you don’t care because they’re displacing lazy, lower class laborers.

                  And it’s not like this is subtle either. Martha’s Vineyard evicted a few dozen immigrants in less than a day, but the S. Side of Chicago and several other cities are losing community centers and schools and your reply is, apparently, to crack the whip at them and tell them lazy bastards to get back to work.

                  The most obnoxious part of it, per RRWP’s point, you aren’t even addressing the actual issues involved. You’re just blaming the “poor kids who are just as smart and just as talented as white kids” because you’re certain that they’re stupid and lazy.

            2. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

              It seems that American citizens want more for their children but not if it means cleaning hotel rooms, processing chickens, taking care of the elderly, picking fruit, etc.

              Which still doesn't refute a single thing I wrote. Where is the money going to come from the pay for all the other shit I listed?

              That one off demographic event will take a long time to work its way through the system.

              Which still doesn't refute a single thing I wrote. When it does, there's a fat hole in demand on the back end that isn't needed anymore.

      2. sarcasmic   1 year ago

        American birth rates aren’t even at replacement levels. Currently it's 1.6, not the 2.1 necessary to maintain population. So we’re going to need immigrants to do those jobs. There won’t be enough native born Americans. Just not mathematically possible.

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

          American birth rates aren’t even at replacement levels.

          And? Population decline would be a deflationary event. Heavens to Betsy we might even not have to pay as much for shit!

          So we’re going to need immigrants to do those jobs.

          Not if the demand drops. If jobs can't be filled, the jobs will disappear. Importing more people is not the solution to job vacancies. The job market adapting to what's actually available for people to fill is.

          1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

            And? Population decline would be a deflationary event. Heavens to Betsy we might even not have to pay as much for shit!

            You'll have to elaborate on that. As I understand it deflation, like inflation, is a function of the quantity of money relative to the quantity of stuff it can buy. Deflation could be caused by the same amount of money chasing more stuff, or less money chasing the same amount of stuff. I don't get the connection to population decline.

            Not if the demand drops.

            Fewer young people means less demand for teachers and such. I guess.

            If jobs can’t be filled, the jobs will disappear.

            As will the goods and services that the people in those jobs created. Is that a good thing?

            Importing more people is not the solution to job vacancies.

            It is if you want to maintain the same level of goods and services absent Americans willing to do the work.

            The job market adapting to what’s actually available for people to fill is.

            I guess. What you describe sounds to me like society becoming poorer as a whole because there's less stuff to go around. I don't see that as a good thing.

            1. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

              As I understand it deflation, like inflation, is a function of the quantity of money relative to the quantity of stuff it can buy.

              It's not just the money supply, there's actual demand involved, as well. Housing costs wouldn't be through the roof if the demand for it wasn't so high. It's not just because of all the liquidity that's been injected.

              Fewer young people means less demand for teachers and such. I guess.

              Fewer people means less demand for a lot of things, including government services.

              As will the goods and services that the people in those jobs created. Is that a good thing?

              Has increasing the population decreased the demand for goods and services?

              It is if you want to maintain the same level of goods and services absent Americans willing to do the work.

              Or, the market will adapt for jobs that Americans are willing to do.

              I guess. What you describe sounds to me like society becoming poorer as a whole because there’s less stuff to go around. I don’t see that as a good thing.

              I'm not an extreme materialist, so less shit to go around isn't a concern. Not turning our societies into Calhoun rat experiments is a higher priority for me.

    5. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      And no possible way that if we want to get some jobs done badly enough, we will have to pay wages high enough to attract workers?

      Are you an economic moron, or more all-around?

  14. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    How quickly should work authorization be processed?

    Ohhh no, we don't cut down our bureaucracy for no foreigners.

    1. Longtobefree   1 year ago

      Better question:
      How quickly should work permits be denied?

  15. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Inside the strange breed of New York criminal that attempts to…break into subway cars and drive them.

    Police: "They drove into a tunnel, we don't know where they are!"

    1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

      They must be good at covering their tracks!

  16. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Is Cuba about to collapse?

    Wait. It is considered effectively still standing right now?

    1. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

      If all the Cubans went to one side it would flip over

      1. Hank Johnson   1 year ago

        That’s right.

      2. Dillinger   1 year ago

        I believe Hank's preferred term is CAP ... siiize

    2. JesseAz   1 year ago

      I thought Obama saved Cuba by attending that baseball game.

    3. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

      Yes, they don’t have enough ingredients to make sammiches, albeit judging from intel from some here, you’d never know.
      🙂
      😉

  17. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

    Trump has been unable to get bond for $464 million judgment, his lawyers say
    In a filing to an appeals court, Trump's attorneys said getting the bond needed to halt proceedings while they appeal is a "practical impossibility."

    https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/trump-unable-get-bond-464-million-judgment-lawyers-say-rcna143860

    Will Donnie hit Vlad up for a loan?

    Will Donnie be forced to liquidate into a bad NY real estate market?

    #DisgorgeThePig

    1. Commenter_XY   1 year ago

      Sevo will be along shortly.

      1. Ajsloss   1 year ago

        The board is like San Francisco. Just step over turd and keep moving.

        1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

          Turd lies. Turd lies and knows it. We know Turd lies. Turd knows we know Turd lies. Turd lies on the sidewalk and steams in the sun.

    2. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      Imagine bragging about fraudulent legal warfare against a political opposition candidate and then invoking Russia.

      Shrike's hypocrisy must coat his skin like a layer of grease.

      1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

        Be serious for once. Donnie has successfully lawyered up and extended the criminal trials past election day.

        And I admit that anyone else in NY would not face this civil trial.

        But he did fuck over hundreds of contractors, his charity, investors, and people who trusted his sham Trump “University”. Justice would be if they ruined his con-man ass financially.

        1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

          No, not really

        2. JesseAz   1 year ago

          Yes. He called you a fascist. Thanks for admitting you are.

          All failing business should end in criminal trials!

        3. R Mac   1 year ago

          We already know you’re a fascist. You don’t have to remind us everyday.

        4. Sevo   1 year ago

          turd lies. turd lies when he knows he’s lying. turd lies when we know he’s lying. turd lies when he knows that we know he’s lying.
          turd lies. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit and a pederast besides.

        5. Super Scary   1 year ago

          " Donnie has successfully lawyered up and extended the criminal trials past election day."

          How dare he not just lay down and take it!

          1. JesseAz   1 year ago

            Thats the true sign of criminal intent.

          2. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

            Imagine defending yourself in court. The gall.

        6. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

          "But he did fuck over hundreds of contractors, his charity, investors, and people who trusted his sham Trump “University”. Justice would be if they ruined his con-man ass financially."

          Imagine thinking it would be a good idea to say this is your concept of "Justice". You're pretty much lost without an Open Society/Media Matters manager to handle you, aren't you?

          Also, if Trump University was so unjust why are the Soros prosecutors resorting to crazy shit like James is, and not going after that?

          1. R Mac   1 year ago

            Yeah, here’s turd admitting he’s cool with the whole “show me the man and I’ll show you the crime” approach to “justice”.

            I think you must be right, his talking points are much more blatantly fascist than they used to be. He’s untethered.

          2. Michael Ejercito   1 year ago

            Also, if Trump University was so unjust why are the Soros prosecutors resorting to crazy shit like James is, and not going after that?
            How much of that judgment will go to Trump's alleged victims?

      2. A Cynical Asshole   1 year ago

        Shrike’s hypocrisy must coat his skin like a layer of grease.

        Hate to tell you this, but that’s not grease. At least not after he’s had his daily CP fix…

    3. Sevo   1 year ago

      Yawn.
      turd, the ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
      If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
      turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.

  18. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Disagreements over the future of the committee underscore Congress' deep divides over how aggressive to be in handling threats from China...

    The Biden White House's collusion* remains unhandled.

    * - I love using the buzzwords.

  19. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    We find that each of the past four generations of Americans was better off than the previous one...

    When the Millennials decided as a generational first to sacrifice its young for its own supposed health we might have seen a turning point. I mean, at least throw them into a war if you want to do a number on the younger generation, like your parents did.

  20. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    Once America's hottest housing market, Austin is running in reverse...

    Oh no, people can afford homes.

    1. Dillinger   1 year ago

      hat tip: zombie horde roving between Colorado River and 9th Street

  21. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    "Don't be so down on D.C.," Democratic Mayor Muriel Bowser told Axios...

    "...or else."

  22. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

    "My biggest concern is that your view has the First Amendment hamstringing the government in significant ways."

    Jesus Fucking Christ

    1. Fist of Etiquette   1 year ago

      Ladies and gentlemen, one of the greatest legal minds of our generation.

      1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

        To be fair she was nominated for those opinions.

        1. Mike Parsons   1 year ago

          those plus her skin color and genitalia

          1. R Mac   1 year ago

            What are you, a biologist?

      2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        Is that the generation that wants to get beyond a living Constitution, and just kill it once and for all?

    2. Randy Sax   1 year ago

      *Titty-Fucking

    3. TheReEncogitationer   1 year ago

      Careful now. KJB may be one of those choichin’-up types!
      🙂
      😉
      Fortunately, Fred G. Sanford had an answer for Holy-Rollers and their threats to freedom.
      https://youtu.be/OqEo0eY8IFk?si=MVl4UjMqU9r2MTCY
      🙂
      😉
      I might add, Elijah Lovejoy and Sons, Frederick Douglass, and William Lloyd Garrison would all seriously beg to differ with this stupid Totalitarian bitch!

  23. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

    "We find that at age 36–40 (our focal age range because it allows for comparisons across five generations) broad income has risen for every generation relative to the previous one, though at a slower rate for Generation X and Millennials. The median 36–40 year old from the Silent generation had a household income that was 34 percent higher than the Greatest Generation’s median person for the same age range. Baby Boomers in this age range had a median income that was 27 percent above that of the Silent generation. The intergenerational income growth rate was a lower 16 percent for Generation X and 18 percent for Millennials. The rate of broad income growth was also positive at the 25th and 75th percentiles for each generation compared to the previous one, with a similar slowdown for the more recent generations"

    It looks like they're adjusting for inflation using the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index, but they're not looking at the difference in the cost of a home or an automobile.

    Things are a little different here in Canada though.

    Daunting Climb: A 39-Year Wait for a Home Down Payment

    "Utilizing Statistics Canada’s Q4 2023 household savings rate, the stark finding is that with an average house price of $1,026,703 in January 2024, a household earning a median income of $85,000 would require precisely 39 years to amass the minimum down payment of $205,341. This assumes a savings rate of 6.2% of annual income, a 25-year amortization period, and a fixed five-year mortgage rate of 4.84%."

    Although some areas of the US aren't too far behind:

    Singles need 28 years to save for a starter home in Portland

    1. JesseAz   1 year ago

      They should stop buying cheesy poof and spittin tobaccy.

    2. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

      Turns out that when you inject a bunch of liquidity into the market, and spend the previous 10-20 years importing increasing numbers of individuals to supposedly make up for declining birth rates, the cost of shit like housing skyrockets.

      1. A Cynical Asshole   1 year ago

        Who knew? Other than anyone with a passing knowledge of economics?

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

          "Economics", at least the kind with numbers and equations and logic, is white patriarchal colonizing.

    3. HorseConch   1 year ago

      America is in the same boat, but we are being buyoyed by deficit spending and the top 25% still having money. The rungs of the ladder holding up broke people keep getting higher and breaking. The talking heads are either all lying or don't dig any deeper when they see the booming economic numbers that the 70% of the country who say we're heading in the wrong direction don't feel.

  24. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

    In Germany, the far right is on the rise again. How did it happen?
    BERLIN (AP) — When Sabine Thonke joined a recent demonstration in Berlin against Germany's far-right party, it was the first time in years she felt hopeful that the growing power of the extremists in her country could be stopped.
    .
    Thonke, 59, had been following the rise of the Alternative for Germany, or AfD, with unease. But when she heard about a plan to deport millions of people, she felt called to action.
    .
    “I never thought such inhuman ideas would be gaining popularity in Germany again. I thought we had learned the lessons from our past," Thonke said.
    .
    Many Germans believed their country had developed an immunity to nationalism and assertions of racial superiority after confronting the horrors of its Nazi past through education and laws to outlaw persecution.
    .
    The AfD's rise has been propelled by anger over inflation and, above all, rising immigration.

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/in-germany-the-far-right-is-on-the-rise-again-how-did-it-happen/ar-BB1k48Oa?ocid=msedgntp&pc=HCTS&cvid=3490c98d41de449aa643bb15e75b4186&ei=12

    Not everyone on the right is a genocidal maniac, AP.

    1. Sevo   1 year ago

      turd, the TDS-addled ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
      If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
      turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.

      1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

        Sevo, don't you think the AP is being disingenuous? A reasonable limit on immigration does not make a person a NAZI.

        Now go take your Droxy.

        1. JesseAz   1 year ago

          Is this you pretending you weren't pushing AP narratives and lies about Moreno on saturday?

        2. Sevo   1 year ago

          "...Now go take your Droxy."

          This is turd's attempt at clever repartee'!
          turd certainly is dishonest, but he’s got a heaping helping of stupid to go with his dishonesty. Stupid, lying, despicable steaming pile of lefty shit and proud off it!
          Anyone with a triple digit IQ would have died of embarrassment long ago.

    2. JesseAz   1 year ago

      Imagine thinking recognizing borders was far right and inhumane.

    3. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      OK, so those classic 'white culture' ideas like going to work, supporting families, and even being prompt and using logic are not 'superior' (as the Smithsonian reminded us a few years ago). But they sure as shit seem to be necessary for a functioning modern economy and society.

  25. Krokko   1 year ago

    You've heard of carjacking, but what about trainjacking? Inside the strange breed of New York criminal that attempts to…break into subway cars and drive them.

    The shittiest remake yet of The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3.

    1. JesseAz   1 year ago

      At least movie studios can now justify the remake with diverse casting.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        The original (with Walter Matthau) was better. Actual sarcasm and characters who sniped at each other.

  26. A Cynical Asshole   1 year ago

    Color me shocked:

    There are wonky questions worth sussing out—How many low-skilled job-seekers can our labor market bear? Are there certain low-cost-of-living areas of the country that can better accommodate migrants? How quickly should work authorization be processed?—but both political parties have chosen to sidestep these questions in favor of political posturing that does very little to serve the border-crossers in question.

    Political posturing is easy and keeps the mouth breathers who elected them satisfied that they're "doing something" even as they do nothing. Making actual policy is hard. Also, policy making requires them to not only posture but also to take a stand one way or the other when legislation comes to the floor for a vote and they have to go on record. Why do that when posturing, grand standing, and virtue signaling is good enough for most of their idiot voters?

    1. JesseAz   1 year ago

      The policy already exists. There is no reason to make new policy to answer these hypothetical. This is justification for Biden ignoring current laws.

      1. HorseConch   1 year ago

        Immigration laws are like gun laws. When the left refuses to enforce them, results are as expected, then we're told we need way more to fix it. If I didn't know any better, I would think it's just more power being grabbed by the shitbags in charge. I'm sure that's not the case, though.

        1. JesseAz   1 year ago

          ACA is broken but we can only replace it with something exactly like ACA.

          1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

            That is what Donnie said.

            DonnieCare was going to cover more people and be cheaper than the ACA.

            Of course he was lying again.

            1. JesseAz   1 year ago

              Is this like you lying about ACA being the heritage plan?

    2. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

      Are there certain low-cost-of-living areas of the country that can better accommodate migrants?

      There's nowhere that can "better accommodate" them anymore. There isn't enough fucking housing to "accommodate" the people already here, much less half the fucking planet that the rootless cosmopolitans and the neocon vermin want to import here.

      1. JesseAz   1 year ago

        It is the ole let Red states pay for them gambit.

      2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

        OK, but there are places where hordes of dysfunctional illegal immigrants, along with domestic hobos, would be less annoying and not take over resources designed for local working people.

        The country is full of dead or dying small towns in flyover country. We could drop a few thousand migrants in each one, and wait for the economic miracles.

        1. rbike   1 year ago

          Nope. Don't want them.

  27. damikesc   1 year ago

    I liked Shaun King (Talcum X) trying to create a robust but pro bono legal team to help with him with defamation suits. That is some impressive grifting.

  28. A Cynical Asshole   1 year ago

    What do you expect from the same dumb cunt who couldn’t define the word “woman?”

    Kentaji Brown Jackson grills LA solicitor general, says that because the govt can occasionally censor, they can also occasionally coerce:
    …
    KBJ doubles down: “My biggest concern is that your view has the First Amendment hamstringing the government in significant ways.”

    That is, quite literally, the entire point of the First Amendment—of the entire Bill of Rights.

    It would have been great if the LA solicitor general she was talking down to had actually said the bolded part in response to her idiotic drivel, but that’s probably asking too much. Unfortunately deep down, he probably agrees with her.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

      Dumb cunt, or scheming totalitarian Democratic cunt?

  29. Sandra (formerly OBL)   1 year ago

    OMG

    I've always been against doxxing. But darn it, I'm breaking that rule. I've discovered Buttplug's real name.

    It's John Pavlovitz.

    He messed up by making the exact same defense of Biden on Twitter, under his real name, that he makes here under his (stupid, childish) alias.

    Behold! Republicans: Are you better off than you were four years ago? America: Four years ago we couldn’t find bread, hand sanitizer, or toilet paper, and as thousands of Americans were dying daily, Trump gave a press conference suggesting injecting disinfectant. #VoteBlue2024

    The style is unmistakable. The #DefendBidenAtAllCosts desperation. The reference to the worst days of the pandemic as the hurdle Dementia Joe's reign triumphantly cleared. The refusal to acknowledge widespread dissatisfaction with Bidenomics.

    Yep, I'd recognize that pathetic work anywhere.

    Buttplug = John Pavlovitz

    1. JesseAz   1 year ago

      Lol.

      John Pavlovitz
      @johnpavlovitz
      ·
      2h
      Of all the misogynists in the world, Republican women are among the most confounding.

      Liberal men just can't help themselves.

      1. JesseAz   1 year ago

        Sorry. I'm not a biologist. He may identify as simp or cuck.

      2. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

        Of course they're misogynists. The Democratic party swears it's the Party of Women, and if you're voting against the Party of Women you must be a misogynist.
        The same logic holds for the Black, Hispanic and gay vote.

    2. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

      Author of If God Is Love, Don't Be a Jerk?

      Sandy, you can't be serious.

      1. JesseAz   1 year ago

        Not shocked you rushed to defend him.

        1. Sandra (formerly OBL)   1 year ago

          Note that PB didn't say "That's silly, I don't defend Biden with such outrageously stupid arguments!"

          Instead he essentially admitted Yeah, OK, I defend Biden just like that guy - but he's religious and I'm not! So THERE!!!!!!

          LOL

          1. JesseAz   1 year ago

            He isnt even religious. He is one of the atheists telling religious people how to act and what to believe.

            1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

              "I have nothing but disdain for the superstitious and their sky fairy but maybe if I concern troll for a bit they'll do what I want"

            2. Truthfulness   1 year ago

              Atheists telling people what to think and not how to think. That was the failure of the so-called freethought movement.

        2. Ska   1 year ago

          And don't call me Sandy.

          1. Dillinger   1 year ago

            surely someone other than the two of us saw this.

            1. R Mac   1 year ago

              I don’t speak jive.

      2. Sevo   1 year ago

        The TDS-addled turd lies. turd lies when he knows he’s lying. turd lies when we know he’s lying. turd lies when he knows that we know he’s lying.
        turd lies. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit and a pederast besides.

    3. R Mac   1 year ago

      Lol.

  30. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>Since the federal government has immigration-enforcement authority

    overturn Marbury v. Madison.

  31. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>"There is either a red wave this November or America is doomed," wrote Elon Musk

    Morbo on line 2 ...

    1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

      DOOOM!

  32. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

    Huh. Haven't seen this reported on CNN.
    https://americanmind.org/salvo/biden-broke-haiti/
    Biden Broke Haiti
    "A first round of national elections was set for November 7, 2021, along with a constitutional referendum that might finally put Haiti on the road to self-governance after years of devastating hurricanes, earthquakes, and political disorder.
    International organizations and the United States had been planning these elections for years. Haiti’s “Provisional Electoral Council” was intended as the crucial first step necessary to finally set Haiti up for a shot at long-term stability, security, and accountable governance.
    But it wasn’t to be.
    The Biden Administration, through its State Department, installed Henry as Haiti’s de facto dictator and then let Henry cancel those elections in exchange for accepting air deportations from Texas.
    This is according to the Biden-appointed former U.S. Special Envoy to Haiti, Ambassador Daniel Foote, who first relayed the surprising backstory to me in an interview for my book many months afterward:
    I am confident that the chief reason they did that is [Henry’s] malleability and the fact that he agreed that he would take all the deportees that they wanted to send,” Foote told me. “It wasn’t long after that…we started putting them on planes.
    The U.S. carried out a non-democratic transfer of power. We were just kicking the can down the road so that we don’t upset the vote moving toward the mid-terms."

    1. HorseConch   1 year ago

      Our State Dept is just an international FBI. Has there been any crisis like this in the last 50+ years that our State Dept wasn't involved in? Just like every time there's a major crime or terrorist attack we quietly hear that the perp had been on the FBI radar.

    2. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      It's really amazing how much the mainstream media isn't reporting nowadays. There's a huge void that needs to be filled.

      1. HorseConch   1 year ago

        A lot of this gets reported by lesser sources, but never gets enough attention to be heard by the masses. I don't know many people that are regulars on X and fewer that even know what Substack is.

        1. Dillinger   1 year ago

          nobody cares a fake bombing attempt of the VP who totally on purpose wasn't even in the right place J6 went down just up the street from Flowers By Irene totally on purpose igniting a mess with flashbangs ... it's mindboggling

        2. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

          The problem isn't that people aren't telling others about it. The problem is that they have no access to the megaphone.

    3. R Mac   1 year ago

      They installed their own guy who canceled elections? Well I never…

      1. mad.casual   1 year ago

        They did the lame, real world inversion of 'They did the thing!' Where they actually installed a dictatorship and overthrew a democracy.

  33. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>Scenes from New York:

    ya if the National Guard wasn’t enough I hear they pulled the sex-scandal card on the mayor

  34. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

    Oh .......... My ......... Gawd.......

    Slavery reparations panel members blamed climate change on ‘White folk,’ called Tim Scott 'Uncle Tim'
    .
    "'Uncle Tim,' Scott that is, Who Picked Cotton On the Plantation, Is ‘Still On the Plantation’ = Picked to Be the ‘Black Face’ To Suppress/Black Power/Black Freedom On Behalf of White Supremacy/White Power and That's ‘The Cotton Picking Truth’ #BewareofUncleTim," he said on X in May 2021.

    https://www.foxnews.com/media/slavery-reparations-panel-members-blamed-climate-change-white-folk-called-tim-scott-uncle-tim

    Lurie Daniel Favors?

    She gonna be famous on wingnut.com

    1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

      So us Whitey's caused climate change?

      That is actually true. Turns out modern civilization is mostly Caucasian.

      But congrats Fox News. You hit the racist trifecta on that one. (Whitey, reparations, Uncle Tim)

      1. Sevo   1 year ago

        turd lies. That's not a surprise to anyone who reads his constant stream of bullshit.
        But it's becoming obvious that as Misek is too stupid to understand the concepts of "evidence" or "relevance", the concept of "honesty" is simply beyond turd's ken.

      2. Mickey Rat   1 year ago

        So climate activists then stand against modern civilization, and therefore are looking to reduce us to a more primitive time.

        1. Michael Ejercito   1 year ago

          I have known this since the mid-1990's.

      3. EISTAU Gree-Vance   1 year ago

        “Turns out modern civilization is mostly Caucasian.”

        Sounds like white supremacist talk. Unless you don’t think “modern civilization” is superior to third world “culture”.

        Slippery slope to white nationalism, thanks to you virtue signaling idiots.

        1. R Mac   1 year ago

          I’ve been assured that the Macedonians were really black.

    2. Sevo   1 year ago

      turd lies when he knows he’s lying. turd lies when we know he’s lying. turd lies when he knows that we know he’s lying.
      turd lies. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit and a pederast besides.

    3. JesseAz   1 year ago

      I am shocked. You democrats all use the same forms of racism.

      1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

        Newsflash. "Tim Scott" isn't a race. It is an amoeba that feeds on the curdled cheese inside Donnie's ass flaps.

        1. R Mac   1 year ago

          Look at this lying piece of shit pretending calling him Uncle Tim isn’t racist.

          You realize nobody buys your bullshit, right?

        2. Sevo   1 year ago

          turd lies. turd lies when he knows he’s lying. turd lies when we know he’s lying. turd lies when he knows that we know he’s lying.
          turd lies. turd is a TDS-addled lying pile of lefty shit and a pederast besides.

    4. Super Scary   1 year ago

      "Two members of the newly appointed New York reparations panel have made past anti-Israel statements, claims that Whites were responsible for climate change and endorsements of the defund the police movement."

      Ahhh, more racist anti-Semites with shitty opinions? I'm shocked.

      1. Michael Ejercito   1 year ago

        I was told there were very fine people on both sides.

  35. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>KBJ doubles down: “My biggest concern is that your view has the First Amendment hamstringing the government in significant ways.”

    I'm not gonna admit to being on a cliff or anything but the drugs are barely helping the disillusion anymore lolwtf

  36. Dillinger   1 year ago

    >>"Don't be so down on D.C.,"

    ya those cherry blossoms are fucking beautiful once in awhile.

  37. MWAocdoc   1 year ago

    “There are wonky questions worth sussing out—How many low-skilled job-seekers can our labor market bear?”

    This is, quite simply, FALSE and Reason writers should KNOW better! None of these three questions is wonky or worth sussing out. The way to find out how many low-skilled jobs there are in America is let anyone who wants to work try to find a job at any mutually-agreed-upon wage. The way to find out where people can afford to live and work is to let them and observe the result. And, finally, ANYONE who wants to work in America should be allowed to. No work permits are needed, beneficial or even justified as part of government authority!

    1. sarcasmic   1 year ago

      Don't know about where you're at, but around here there are help wanted signs everywhere.

    2. EISTAU Gree-Vance   1 year ago

      And when you don’t like what you find out, welfare for everyone!

      Idiot.

  38. MWAocdoc   1 year ago

    "We find that each of the past four generations of Americans was better off than the previous one"

    Kevin and Jeff must immediately be sentenced to Facebook Jail for presenting misinformation that is likely to undermine official narratives on marginalized populations and wealth transfers! How DARE they publish facts based on actual science?!

  39. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    ' Last year, Texas Senate Bill (S.B.) 4—which would've allowed Texas police to arrest those who illegally cross the southern border—passed. Yesterday, the U.S. Supreme Court issued an order that blocks the enforcement of the law "until justices decide whether Texas should be allowed to enforce it before federal court challenges are resolved'

    Uncle Charles gets a stiffy, and Fiona eagerly supplies lip service.

  40. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    'ut one thing that will surely get worse, regardless of who gets elected in November, is the degree of polarization driving Americans further away from each other on this issue in particular. There are wonky questions worth sussing out—How many low-skilled job-seekers can our labor market bear? Are there certain low-cost-of-living areas of the country that can better accommodate migrants? How quickly should work authorization be processed?—but both political parties have chosen to sidestep these questions in favor of political posturing that does very little to serve the border-crossers in question.'

    At least that posturing is more directly connected to fundamental questions. We can worry about wonky stuff AFTER we decide what (if any) restrictions on immigration of all kinds we agree on.

    1. MWAocdoc   1 year ago

      No AGREEMENT is necessary! The default position should always have been to let anyone who wants to visit the United States of America to visit as long as they are not already known to be criminals according to American law (and as long as they are not obviously contagious with a dangerous public health threat) and should be allowed to work for pay while visiting the United States. Any proposed modification of that default position should be supported by overwhelming evidence of necessity due to clear and present danger and passed into law by Congress as long as the legislation is not unconstitutionally broad or vague.

      1. R Mac   1 year ago

        How much property do you own along the border?

        1. MWAocdoc   1 year ago

          If you let everyone who wanted to visit the United States enter through the very large number of legal entry points already in existence, property owners along the border would no longer have to worry about illegals crossing their property without permission, so go peddle it somewhere else. And, for the record, building the “big beautiful wall” of your wet dreams would do far more harm to property owners along the border than the current “repel boarders” policy has been causing lately, not to mention the damage to wildlife and underground tunnels the current “walls” have caused. You really should not try so hard to display your cluelessness in public.

          1. R Mac   1 year ago

            You forgot to call me a racist.

      2. sarcasmic   1 year ago

        If it was easier for non-criminals looking for work to legally enter the country, then they wouldn't need to sneak in. That would free border agents to go after actual criminals and smugglers instead of being distracted by hoards economic migrants.

        1. R Mac   1 year ago

          Ah yes, they “need(ed) to” trespass. Good job sarc.

  41. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    'Is Cuba about to collapse?

    Like Atlantis? But with more socialism.

    1. Randy Sax   1 year ago

      I'm not talking about about Atlantean socialism, that sunk their civilization into the sea. I'm talking about Democratic Atlantean socialism that will sink our civilization into the sea. (democratically)

  42. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    "We find that each of the past four generations of Americans was better off than the previous one, using a post-tax, post-transfer income measure"

    Well, duh, if we want the current (and future) generations to be even more better off, we'd better ramp up those transfers.

  43. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 year ago

    'KBJ doubles down: “My biggest concern is that your view has the First Amendment hamstringing the government in significant ways.”'

    Fucking leftist CRT totalitarian cunt. Or maybe she is just really, really stupid.

    1. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

      It can be both.

      1. R Mac   1 year ago

        It’s definitely both.

    2. mamabug   1 year ago

      My totally unwanted news feed MSFT keeps trying to shove down my throat is already turning this into a 'Maga's pounce' story.

  44. Moonrocks   1 year ago

    Peter Navarro is set to become America's highest profile political prisoner.

    1. R Mac   1 year ago

      Meh.

      — Reason

      1. Z Crazy   1 year ago

        He defied a subpoena.

        If you think a subpoena's wrongheaded, you can go to court.

        But if you don't go to court in time, or the court upholds the subpoena, you have to comply.

        1. Michael Ejercito   1 year ago

          Furthermore, the material under subpoena may not be destroyed, unless a court order dissolving the subpoena goes into effect (such orders are typically stayed until all avenues of direct appeal are exhausted)

          The Cunt®™ (legally known as Hillary Rodham Clinton) was subpoenaed, having to turn over contents of an e-mazil server.

          If she used BleachBit to wipe the contents of the server while the subpoena was pending, she would have been in big trouble! /sarc

          1. R Mac   1 year ago

            That’s (D)ifferent. Laws only apply to some people.

            1. Dillinger   1 year ago

              in Fulton County all it takes is one backwards dress ...

        2. Longtobefree   1 year ago

          Unless your name is Biden.

        3. R Mac   1 year ago

          Do you imagine he’s the first person to do this?

    2. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      If you're going to be in contempt of congress and want to avoid jail you need to be (D)ifferent than Navarro.

      Be (D)ifferent like Hunter Biden, Louis Lerner, Eric Holder, and Hillary Clinton aide Bryan Pagliano.

    3. chemjeff radical individualist   1 year ago

      When a Democrat breaks the law, is caught, and sent to jail, that is called ‘justice’.
      When a Republican breaks the law, is caught, and sent to jail, that is called ‘political persecution’.

      You see, Republicans are inherently good people. They are Real Muricans who believe in the real American values that Real Patriots are supposed to believe in. Therefore if they break the law, they should be given the benefit of the doubt. They had good intentions and were trying to do the right thing.

      But Democrats are inherently evil people. They are traitors in all but name only. They hate America and *when* they break the law, it is evidence of their evil criminal intent and they should be locked up forever, if not summarily executed.

      1. Michael Ejercito   1 year ago

        One law about subpoenas is that it prohibits destroying the material under subpoena, even if the subpoena is being judicially challenged. Only if the courts allow an order dissolving the subpoena to go into effect (which does not happen until all avenues of appeal are exhausted) may the owner of the material dispose of it.

        What happened to Hillary Clinton?

      2. R Mac   1 year ago

        How many Dem admin officials have gone to jail for this?

        Should Eric Holder have gone to jail?

      3. Red Rocks White Privilege   1 year ago

        Bitch, who was the last Democrat who actually got jailed for breaking the law? Sandy Berger?

        1. R Mac   1 year ago

          Lying Jeffy pretends he’s not a leftist then throws out this obvious bullshit.

      4. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

        Except when the Democrat breaks the law, is caught, they aren't sent to jail, and you call that ‘justice’. Hunter Biden, Louis Lerner, Eric Holder, and Hillary Clinton aide Bryan Pagliano all were in contempt and got off.

        When a Republican breaks the law for the exact same thing as all the Democrats got off for, is caught, and sent to jail, that really is ‘political persecution’, shill.

        This is why I call you a Nazi, Creemjeff. Because you're happy with two-tiered justice and even happier to lie about it.

        1. chemjeff radical individualist   1 year ago

          You call me a Nazi because you are a weak-minded stupid idiot who couldn't argue honestly out of a paper bag. You resort to insults and every fallacy under the sun because you cannot confront an uncomfortable argument honestly and directly. You're an asshole and an idiot who deserves scorn.

          Right in your response, you lie about me and excuse the behavior of your teammates' illegal behavior because, allegedly, "their team did it too". The moment you argue honestly is the moment the Sun goes supernova, because that's about how long it will take.

          1. R Mac   1 year ago

            2 days later…yet you won’t address questions from this thread…

  45. Z Crazy   1 year ago

    https://www.threads.net/@beereinstein/post/C4qkUZZP6tH

    This is an atrocity. 20 years of savings wiped out in five months?

    States should impose price controls on health care, and if health care is overcharged by one cent, the doctor should be put to death!

    1. Longtobefree   1 year ago

      At last!
      The true libertarian perspective - - - - - - - -

    2. Its_Not_Inevitable   1 year ago

      At least in Canada they'll just suicide you and the husband keeps most of their savings. Win-Win!

  46. Yuno Hoo   1 year ago

    "No matter how emphatic Texas' criticism of the federal government's handling of immigration on the border may be to some," wrote U.S. District Judge David A. Ezra when ruling on the case last month, "disagreement with the federal government's immigration policy does not justify a violation of the [U.S. Constitution's] Supremacy Clause."

    "Nor does it justify a violation of the first sentence of the Declaration of Independence."

  47. Think It Through   1 year ago

    both political parties have chosen to sidestep these questions in favor of political posturing that does very little to serve the border-crossers in question.

    A radical idea -- instead of serving "the border-crossers in question," maybe our elected politicians should serve THE CITIZENS OF THIS COUNTRY.

    1. chemjeff radical individualist   1 year ago

      How about if the government serves the cause of liberty, first and foremost? What do you think?

      1. Think It Through   1 year ago

        Liberty is fine but as far as our government is concerned, it should not be addressing liberty for EVERYONE. This misguided concept is what has us playing policeman of the world. And letting in the world. Both wrong, wrong, wrong.

        1. chemjeff radical individualist   1 year ago

          it should not be addressing liberty for EVERYONE

          Yes it should. Liberty is the birthright of every human being.

          This misguided concept is what has us playing policeman of the world. And letting in the world.

          No it doesn't, not necessarily. It is the difference between ideology and implementation.

          1. Its_Not_Inevitable   1 year ago

            Sorry, Typical Collectivist, but the US government, and by extension, the citizens of the US are not responsible for everyone in the world.

          2. Think It Through   1 year ago

            Yes it should.

            No it shouldn't.

            Liberty is the birthright of every human being.

            Which has exactly 0.0 to do with whether the government of a particular nation handles that business for every human on Earth, as opposed to just its own.

          3. R Mac   1 year ago

            The government is coercion, and everything it does it does with confiscated money from citizens.

            Fuck off Lefty Jeffy.

    2. Foo_dd   1 year ago

      that was a poor choice of words. “dealing with” or “addressing” would have been better. the point remains valid that neither party wants to actually DO ANYTHING about the problem.

      1. EISTAU Gree-Vance   1 year ago

        We have laws. They should be enforced.

        If you pretend the laws don’t exist, then yes we have a perpetual problem.

        1. R Mac   1 year ago

          Anarcho Tyranny is all the rage with leftists these days.

  48. chemjeff radical individualist   1 year ago

    S.B. 4 "allows police to question and arrest anyone they believe entered Texas through Mexico illegally and is currently without legal immigration status,"

    Oh. Well that won't lead to any racial profiling whatsoever. What is to worry about?

    1. Dillinger   1 year ago

      I think their backs literally must still be wet.

  49. Think It Through   1 year ago

    The headline sure didn't last long. SCOTUS lets Texas proceed, within the last hour.

  50. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

    Texas Barred From Detaining Border-Crossers
    Yeah OK but Wait? What?!
    https://www.zerohedge.com/political/blow-biden-supreme-court-sides-texas-over-enforcement-immigration-law
    In Blow To Biden, Supreme Court Allows Texas To Start Arresting And Deporting Illegal Aliens

    1. Brett Bellmore   1 year ago

      Yeah, they suddenly changed their mind. Bet there's an interesting backstory there.

    2. Dillinger   1 year ago

      the Elon tweet at the end of your link is awesome.

      1. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

        We don't deserve Musk.

        1. R Mac   1 year ago

          I propose a constitutional amendment to let him be president.

          Did you see that interview with Don Lemon? Holy shit that dude is dumb. Like sarc level dumb.

          1. mad.casual   1 year ago

            Did you see that interview with Don Lemon? Holy shit that dude is dumb. Like sarc level dumb.

            I love the part where he says that there are several studies that have been done that show that DEI isn't resulting in lower standards in Med School like we don't have a SCOTUS jurist who can't answer "What is a woman?" and a significant portion of the medical community saying, "Ooh... that's a good question!"

            Like we didn't all just sit here through 2019 and watch the NIAID, CDC, FDA, NHS, WHO, etc., etc. step on their dicks serially for two years worse than Donald "I'm a real estate mogul" Trump (not) telling people to inject bleach into their veins.

            How do you not realize what a grifting, soulless, propaganda hack you present yourself as when saying that?

    3. Brett Bellmore   1 year ago

      This one graph is pretty brutal: All the job growth since Biden took office has been absorbed by illegal immigrants. Every last bit of it. Employment for actual Americans has been stagnant.

      1. R Mac   1 year ago

        *Lefty Jeffy gets wood.

  51. AT   1 year ago

    after longtime residents of the U.S. who once crossed illegally

    Um, that doesn't make them residents. It makes them squatters.

  52. TJJ2000   1 year ago

    "disagreement with the federal government's immigration policy does not justify a violation of the [U.S. Constitution's]

    Supremacy Clause.
    This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof ... and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.

    Now wait just a minute ... So when was this supposed US Law passed that stated all national invaders must be allowed to trespass and invade?

    SCOTUS needs to find US Law prohibiting State's from enforcing US Law in order for this BS to fly. With all the 'assistance' the Feds have asked of the State I'll laugh when they find it. A rogue Nazi-Empire executive in D.C. doesn't get to force their lawlessness onto everyone do they?

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