Will “mass deportation” actually happen (1 Viewer)

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    superchuck500

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    It’s so repulsive to see people cheering for what is basically 80% the same thing as the Holocaust - different end result but otherwise very similar.

    Economists have said it would tank the economy and cause inflation - notwithstanding the cost.

    Is it going to actually happen or is this Build The Wall 2.0?

     
    You can take this to your local Kinko’s, or UPS store and turn it into a poster, I’m gonna do this, and stick them in my local markets, where the majority of the employees are of Spanish descent/background
     

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    A military deportation flight to Guatemala ordered by Donald Trump likely cost at least $4,675 per migrant, according to data provided by US and Guatemalan officials.

    That is more than five times the $853 cost of a first class ticket on American Airlines from El Paso, Texas, the departure point for the flight, according to a review of publicly available airfares.

    It is also significantly higher than the cost of a commercial charter flight by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

    President Trump launched the military deportation flights last week as part of his national emergency declaration on immigration, so far sending six planeloads of migrants on flights to Latin America.…..

     
    The Trump administration is seeking to grant U.S. immigration officers access to databases that contain the information on hundreds of thousands of immigrant teens and children who crossed into the United States without their parents, White House border czar Tom Homan told The Washington Post in an interview Friday.

    The Office of Refugee Resettlement, or ORR, at the Department of Health and Human Services, which maintains the database, is responsible for caring for unaccompanied minors taken into U.S. custody along the border. The refugee agency then identifies and screens potential sponsors who can take custody of the teens and children — often close relatives living in the United States — to get them out of government shelters.

    The office has long operated independently of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement out of concern that the minors’ undocumented family members and sponsors may not come forward to claim them, fearing arrest.

    A similar effort during President Donald Trump’s first term drew swift outrage from civil-liberties groups who said it forced children to stay in federal custody longer, and led to the arrests of immigrant adults who had no criminal histories.

    Homan said he would not rule out the use of the data for enforcement purposes in the future, but said the main focus of the information sharing is to verify that the children, who had been released from ORR custody in the past few years, were safe.

    “This is about finding the kids,” Homan said. “The data won’t be used for enforcement work.”..............

    Trump administration seeking access to database of immigrant minors


     
    The Trump administration is seeking to grant U.S. immigration officers access to databases that contain the information on hundreds of thousands of immigrant teens and children who crossed into the United States without their parents, White House border czar Tom Homan told The Washington Post in an interview Friday.

    The Office of Refugee Resettlement, or ORR, at the Department of Health and Human Services, which maintains the database, is responsible for caring for unaccompanied minors taken into U.S. custody along the border. The refugee agency then identifies and screens potential sponsors who can take custody of the teens and children — often close relatives living in the United States — to get them out of government shelters.

    The office has long operated independently of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement out of concern that the minors’ undocumented family members and sponsors may not come forward to claim them, fearing arrest.

    A similar effort during President Donald Trump’s first term drew swift outrage from civil-liberties groups who said it forced children to stay in federal custody longer, and led to the arrests of immigrant adults who had no criminal histories.

    Homan said he would not rule out the use of the data for enforcement purposes in the future, but said the main focus of the information sharing is to verify that the children, who had been released from ORR custody in the past few years, were safe.

    “This is about finding the kids,” Homan said. “The data won’t be used for enforcement work.”..............

    Trump administration seeking access to database of immigrant minors


    The data won’t be used for enforcement work.

    Yeah, right.

    It is about extorting the parents of the kids in order to deport more.
     
    People undertaking it upon themselves to try to be immigration agents is the least surprising part of this.

    Yup....

    So, I wonder what the real story was here. The guy couldn't speak English, but no idea if he was here legally or not. And the caller got in trouble. I'd assume that means the caller was dead wrong and taking the keys was a theft..
     
    Yup....

    So, I wonder what the real story was here. The guy couldn't speak English, but no idea if he was here legally or not. And the caller got in trouble. I'd assume that means the caller was dead wrong and taking the keys was a theft..
    Even if the man was undocumented I would assume taking his keys would be theft, wouldn’t it? I mean you can’t commit crimes against people because they are undocumented.
     
    Confirmation that this is mostly performative at this point, anyway.

    “The Trump administration aggressively publicized the arrests of more than 8,000 immigrants by federal agents since Inauguration Day, with the promise that those detained would be part of a historic mass deportation. But NBC News has learned that some have already been released back into the United States on a monitoring program, according to five sources familiar with the operations.

    Since he took office, President Donald Trump and his allies have promoted immigration operations in cities like Chicago and New York, where agents across federal agencies were called in to increase the number of arrests.

    But arresting more people inside the United States on allegations of immigration violations means they need to be held somewhere. And significant space constraints in Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facilities — and federal court orders forbidding indefinite detention — have forced the agency to release some of those arrested in the roundups rather than hold them until deportation.”

     
    more craziness. Wtf.

    Read up on Nayib Bukele, the president of El Salvador. Dude is the iron fist Q-Anon wet dreams about, who has branded himself "the world's coolest dictator". Trump probably wears Bukele pajamas.

    He also is a bitcoin pioneer of sort. He declared bitcoin legal tender 4 or so years ago; probably from whom Trump got the idea.

    He will house any criminal for ₿₿₿
     
    As 2025 legislative sessions power up across the country, red-state lawmakers who back President Donald Trump’s mass deportation plans are pushing increasingly restrictive measures that could reshape immigration enforcement and further constrain migrants’ lives.

    Missouri and Mississippi lawmakers have proposed allowing bounty hunters to detain undocumented immigrants and offering $1,000 rewards for tips that lead to arrests.

    A Tennessee lawmaker, meanwhile, wants his state to bill parents for enrolling undocumented children in public schools. He titled his effort the TRUMP Act — for the Tennessee Reduction of Unlawful Migrant Placement.

    In the Midwest, Iowa and South Dakota lawmakers introduced bills requiring state driver’s licenses to indicate whether the driver is a U.S. citizen.

    Out West, Montana lawmakers would make immigration status checks a mandatory part of traffic stops there and compel employers to check the immigration status of those they hire.

    “The thrust is costs and how do we help President Trump on the enforcement side?” said Andrew Good, director of state government relations at NumbersUSA, a right-wing group advocating immigration restrictions. “It’s definitely exciting.”

    This wave of proposed laws and policies — the biggest in a decade, say legal experts — challenges long-established legal precedents ensuring undocumented immigrants have access to state legal, medical and education services.…..

    Texas is leading the way. Legislators in Austin are pursuing a slew of actions, building on Republican Gov. Greg Abbott’s 2024 order that hospitals track the cost of treating undocumented immigrants.

    Among the measures: fingerprinting undocumented migrant children, barring undocumented migrants from receiving taxpayer-funded legal aid, creating a Texas Border Protection Unit and giving state law enforcement the power to deport migrants stopped near the border.

    Florida lawmakers also have an extensive agenda. They have passed the Tackling and Reforming Unlawful Migration Policy — another TRUMP Act — to create a state immigration czar with 150 staff members and $500 million in funding, increase penalties for crimes committed by undocumented immigrants, force law enforcement agencies to join detention efforts, offer bonuses to police who assist in raids, and block in-state tuition rates for undocumented students……..

     
    As 2025 legislative sessions power up across the country, red-state lawmakers who back President Donald Trump’s mass deportation plans are pushing increasingly restrictive measures that could reshape immigration enforcement and further constrain migrants’ lives.

    Missouri and Mississippi lawmakers have proposed allowing bounty hunters to detain undocumented immigrants and offering $1,000 rewards for tips that lead to arrests.

    A Tennessee lawmaker, meanwhile, wants his state to bill parents for enrolling undocumented children in public schools. He titled his effort the TRUMP Act — for the Tennessee Reduction of Unlawful Migrant Placement.

    In the Midwest, Iowa and South Dakota lawmakers introduced bills requiring state driver’s licenses to indicate whether the driver is a U.S. citizen.

    Out West, Montana lawmakers would make immigration status checks a mandatory part of traffic stops there and compel employers to check the immigration status of those they hire.

    “The thrust is costs and how do we help President Trump on the enforcement side?” said Andrew Good, director of state government relations at NumbersUSA, a right-wing group advocating immigration restrictions. “It’s definitely exciting.”

    This wave of proposed laws and policies — the biggest in a decade, say legal experts — challenges long-established legal precedents ensuring undocumented immigrants have access to state legal, medical and education services.…..

    Texas is leading the way. Legislators in Austin are pursuing a slew of actions, building on Republican Gov. Greg Abbott’s 2024 order that hospitals track the cost of treating undocumented immigrants.

    Among the measures: fingerprinting undocumented migrant children, barring undocumented migrants from receiving taxpayer-funded legal aid, creating a Texas Border Protection Unit and giving state law enforcement the power to deport migrants stopped near the border.

    Florida lawmakers also have an extensive agenda. They have passed the Tackling and Reforming Unlawful Migration Policy — another TRUMP Act — to create a state immigration czar with 150 staff members and $500 million in funding, increase penalties for crimes committed by undocumented immigrants, force law enforcement agencies to join detention efforts, offer bonuses to police who assist in raids, and block in-state tuition rates for undocumented students……..


    And yet not a single one of those bills propose sanctions on employers hiring illegal immigrants, so basically they can hire someone for a month and then report them to authorities and not have to pay for the work done..
     

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