37,007 Criminal Aliens Released Last Year So We Can Stand for Love
August 26, 2014
According to Federal officials, a Supreme Court decision in 2001 requires the release of criminal aliens who can’t be deported. A total of 169 killers and 37,007 criminal aliens were released into our communities last fiscal year and no one knows who they are or where they are. They are free to commit crimes again.
ICE has released 169 criminal alien killers this past year who cannot be deported because their home countries won’t take them back. Almost every country refusing to take them back receives aid from the United States. We do not insist the aid be contingent on them taking these people back. Iran doesn’t have relations with the U.S. and we apparently have their killers also.
Photo: Matt Brown (AP)
A fight is brewing in Montana over legislation that, if passed, would compel the state’s attorney general wide to investigate environmental groups and give them wide latitude to do so. The result could be a protracted legal battle and have a chilling effect on free speech around the transition away from coal and toward renewables.
Advertisement
The fight centers around the town of Colstrip and its state senator. Colstrip, as the name might make you guess, has one big business: coal. The town began as a waypoint to supply railroads with coal, and in the 1970s, the open pit mines that ring it began feeding Colstrip power plant. Satellite images show the scale of the industry, which dwarfs the town’s small grid of streets.
Border Security Coalition Demands Biden Address Border Crisis
April 21, 2021
Share
A coalition of more than two dozen former administration officials, former members of Congress, and top policy experts signed a letter to President Joe Biden demanding action to reverse the exploding crisis at the southern border. The list includes former Acting DHS Deputy Secretary Ken Cuccinelli, former Acting Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection Mark Morgan, Former Director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Tom Homan, former Congressmen Lamar Smith, Dave Brat, Bob McEwan and John Hostettler, as well as the Texas Public Policy Foundation’s CEO Kevin Roberts and former Ambassador Ken Blackwell.
The real presidential immigration villain is Bill Clinton
Then came Clinton’s 1995 State of the Union address, where he said the following: “All Americans… are rightly disturbed by the large numbers of illegal aliens entering our country. The jobs they hold might otherwise be held by citizens or legal immigrants. The public service they use impose burdens on our taxpayers.”
That sounds positively Trumpesque.
The following year, Clinton did one of the most anti-immigrant things a U.S. president has ever done. He signed The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, authored by Rep. Lamar Smith, R-TX. The enforcement-only measure made it easier to deport people and nearly impossible for them to return legally once deported. The bill passed thanks to the votes of many Democrats, including 22 Democratic senators.