for people that were here to work, as we have seen an increase of the market. reforming the system and making it work, back logging immigration more than it already is, the 6,000 cases for asylum that are waiting in the huge backlog waiting for illegal immigration processes is not the answer, so shutting down the united states and saying that everybody needs to have the extreme vetting, what is extreme bedding, i am waiting on the memorandum to see what it is. it is doing investigations in the field to determine who is actually in the country, by the way, we displace american workers with foreign workers,rk drives down wages, because immigration has become a delivery system for an on limited supply of cheap labor, and they are immigration attorneys also. pete: want to know who is coming here and having skills pay and not american workers. and atin the lowest rate possible, that is not a real reason.
who can work as we ve already seen an increase. so it is about reforming it. the 6,000 cases that we have for asylum letter waiting in the courts. the backlog we have. all waiting for legal immigration process is, it s the answer. shutting down and sang everyone has to have extreme vetting, what is that? will tell you what it is. it s doing investigations into the field to see who is in the country. we keep displacing american workers with foreign workers. it has become a delivery system. immigration clients, they happen to be immigration attorneys als also. we don t want that displacing american workers. threatening our safety. pete: we will leave it right there.
department is fully capable of doing investigations. the i.g. can do some of them. the southern district can do some. the district of columbia can do some. you really should have to show an extraordinary need to go outside the usual channels of the justice department to justify bringing somebody in and giving that person a special task. even if it s a case as allegedly complex as the potential for collusion or coordination between a campaign and a foreign entity? i can tell you, the southern district has handled many, many more complex cases than that. i mean, there are so many complex cases. international cases, you know, it really is an insult to the existing civil servants in the justice department to suggest that they can t do the job well. especially when you have an ig looking over them. the president couldn t complain. he would, to be sure, he complained about anything. but you have less of a basis for complaining if it was a routine investigation, done by the southern distr
it seems president trump watched a certain law professor saying the upcoming inspector general s report on possible fbi mistakes in the clinton e-mail investigation proved there was no need for robert mueller s russia probe. the president tweeted, alan dershowitz, harvard law professor, it all proves we never needed a special counsel. all of this could have been done by the justice department. don t need a multi-million dollar group of people with a target on someone s back. not the way justice should operate. so true! with us to discuss it is professor dershowitz, the author of the upcoming book, the case against impeaching trump, and also with us, jeffrey toobin. professor dershowitz, the fact that the inspector general report is expected to fault comey and mccabe, how does that prove that a special counsel isn t necessary? i think the justice department is fully capable of doing investigations. the ig can do some of them. the southern district can do
puerto rican towns, mayor where they had zero access to clean water and already drinking from creeks and streams to stay alive. that s how you get something like leapt sporosis. and this is not us doing investigations, this is me sitting and talking to local officials. puerto rican mayor sounding alarm, letting mainland united states know through the national media as far as back two weeks ago this is what americans were having to do for drinking water, springs and creeks and streams. three weeks into the crisis, still how they have to cope. third of the island with no drinking water as of now. not by choice but necessity, american citizens still drinking from rivers and creeks, springs. collecting rain water.