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Is this a first?

aix_xpert

Heisman Winner
Sep 5, 2001
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In the past week, Trump has deported 7300 illegal immigrants. And per multiple other reports we're now seeing only 5-600 daily Border encounters. Does that mean that for the first time in recent memory, the US has net negative illegal immigration? I wonder how far back one would have to go to match that? I know Obama deported several million, but he also allowed several million in so I don't think we were net negative. And while Trump did more to secure the border in his first term, I'm not sure he put as much focus on deportations so not sure if he was ever net-negative. Obviously with 20M+ illegal aliens in the country, the net negative needs to get much larger, but the journey has to start somewhere.
 
I truly think that ICE should let sanctuary cities have their policies, and broadcast loudly which cities are sanctuaries. That way the illegals will self-locate to those regions and those citizens can deal with the consequences of their votes. That's how you flip the map red. Saving Chicago from itself doesn't change voter behavior.
 
I truly think that ICE should let sanctuary cities have their policies, and broadcast loudly which cities are sanctuaries. That way the illegals will self-locate to those regions and those citizens can deal with the consequences of their votes. That's how you flip the map red. Saving Chicago from itself doesn't change voter behavior.
Does California deserve all them electoral votes?
 
Expect the number of illegals that self deport start to increase as well, especially if we can get Congress off it's ass to pass real immigration reform that includes forbidding people that have been deported the ability to legally immigrate.
 
Expect the number of illegals that self deport start to increase as well, especially if we can get Congress off it's ass to pass real immigration reform that includes forbidding people that have been deported the ability to legally immigrate.
Get rid of the "anchor" babies. Would be a helluva start. Cut out the confusion and misinterpretation.
 
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Get rid of the "anchor" babies. Would be a helluva start. Cut out the confusion and misinterpretation.
Anchor babies is the whole foundation of the Dems immigration policy. They wanted open borders, and then set court appointments for years in the future (some were dated in 2032) in order to give those immigrants time to have anchor babies and then be allowed to stay to support their US citizen children. And if it weren't for Dems letting the criminal element run wild in within the illegal immigrant population, then it probably would have worked exactly as planned.
 
Anchor babies is the whole foundation of the Dems immigration policy. They wanted open borders, and then set court appointments for years in the future (some were dated in 2032) in order to give those immigrants time to have anchor babies and then be allowed to stay to support their US citizen children. And if it weren't for Dems letting the criminal element run wild in within the illegal immigrant population, then it probably would have worked exactly as planned.
God bless Donald.
 
Way back when Slick Willy was POSUS (not a spelling error, thats what Dave used to call Trump)
The Tards used to Love Deportations.
What happened? Flippy floppy.


https://cis.org/Kammer/Clinton-Admi...ere-Considered-Essential-Credible-Immigration

"Just before the 1996 presidential election, the Clinton White House held a press briefing to boast about record numbers of deportations of illegal immigrants. The principal spokesperson for the administration was Doris Meissner, Commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service. "I am proud once again to announce that the Clinton administration's determination to remove criminal aliens and other deportable aliens from the United States has produced record results," said Meissner."

"Meissner, a Clinton appointee, said 67,094 illegal immigrants – criminal and non-criminal – had been deported in the 1995 fiscal year. In a dutiful tribute to Clinton that echoed statements from the White House and the Justice Department, she contrasted his performance to that of his predecessors. "For too many years, under-enforcement of our nation's immigration laws undermined their credibility," she said. "But this administration's unprecedented expansion of and support for strong but fair enforcement of immigration laws…is restoring that credibility."

"In another bow to Clinton's leadership, Meissner declared that the INS "means business when it comes to enforcing immigration laws in the workplace." That echoed language Clinton had used the day after Patrick Buchanan's surprising second-place finish in the 1996 Iowa caucuses, when he issued an executive order barring companies that had knowingly hired unauthorized workers from receiving government contracts. "American jobs belong to America's legal workers," Clinton said. "This executive order will make clear that when it comes to enforcing our nation's immigration laws, we mean business. We are determined to restore the rule of law to our nation's immigration system."

"A day earlier, INS agents had arrested 20 Mexicans and Hondurans at the construction site for a $200 million federal office building directly across from the INS offices in Atlanta. Four days before that, agents arrested 22 Mexicans working at Camp Lejeune, a Marine Corps base in North Carolina, where they were employed by companies that had received federal contracts worth $37 million."
 
Way back when Slick Willy was POSUS (not a spelling error, thats what Dave used to call Trump)
The Tards used to Love Deportations.
What happened? Flippy floppy.


https://cis.org/Kammer/Clinton-Admi...ere-Considered-Essential-Credible-Immigration

"Just before the 1996 presidential election, the Clinton White House held a press briefing to boast about record numbers of deportations of illegal immigrants. The principal spokesperson for the administration was Doris Meissner, Commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service. "I am proud once again to announce that the Clinton administration's determination to remove criminal aliens and other deportable aliens from the United States has produced record results," said Meissner."

"Meissner, a Clinton appointee, said 67,094 illegal immigrants – criminal and non-criminal – had been deported in the 1995 fiscal year. In a dutiful tribute to Clinton that echoed statements from the White House and the Justice Department, she contrasted his performance to that of his predecessors. "For too many years, under-enforcement of our nation's immigration laws undermined their credibility," she said. "But this administration's unprecedented expansion of and support for strong but fair enforcement of immigration laws…is restoring that credibility."

"In another bow to Clinton's leadership, Meissner declared that the INS "means business when it comes to enforcing immigration laws in the workplace." That echoed language Clinton had used the day after Patrick Buchanan's surprising second-place finish in the 1996 Iowa caucuses, when he issued an executive order barring companies that had knowingly hired unauthorized workers from receiving government contracts. "American jobs belong to America's legal workers," Clinton said. "This executive order will make clear that when it comes to enforcing our nation's immigration laws, we mean business. We are determined to restore the rule of law to our nation's immigration system."

"A day earlier, INS agents had arrested 20 Mexicans and Hondurans at the construction site for a $200 million federal office building directly across from the INS offices in Atlanta. Four days before that, agents arrested 22 Mexicans working at Camp Lejeune, a Marine Corps base in North Carolina, where they were employed by companies that had received federal contracts worth $37 million."
Sleepy says "what?"
 
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