^ That man makes me want to puke.
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The only recent CNN link I see in this thread is a video segment from a TV show consisting of political commentary by political commentators. I presume you are referring to the remarks by Bill Kristol?
The man really has an inadequacy issue, doesn't he? He's always blaming Obama and Hillary for his own shortcomings.smokeshadow said:the Donald now blames President Obama for the child separation policy and claims that he was the one that stopped it
The only recent CNN link I see in this thread is a video segment from a TV show consisting of political commentary by political commentators.
I think he means the linked analysis by Stephen Collinson entitled The law or the President: The Trump appointees' dilemma.
This is another one of those "are you going to believe me or your lying eyes" things that Trump says when we have the video of Sessions announcing the child-separation policy and Congress has the documentation from Dec-2017 that says that this was a DHS policy and that Trump pushed for it.
Trump lies like a hound dog on a summer day. Little that he says anymore is the truth.
Based upon some of the latest reports, the President is instructing officers and leadership of the DHS to violate US law[/URL] and defy court orders.
I still don’t see it.
@ mikey3000
It helps if you make clear to whom (or to what content) you are responding in your posts. Generally speaking, random remarks are subject to removal if they fail to demonstrate an obvious connection to the discussion.
Please quote the JUB post containing whatever CNN “piece” you indicate is “linked above.”
This is the quote..
https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/09/politics/donald-trump-kirstjen-nielsen-immigration/index.html
It would also help if you wouldn't censor and/or edit all my replies and release them many hours after I try to post them. As you can see, it really confused the issues. Just saying.
STandard thing with alt right. Make claim, innundate people with links behind wich are lengthy unreadable reports sometimes in pdf formate.
The point is to look like they are proofing their point, not to actually proof it.
Normally to a reply such as yours the alt rightist will reply "Well read it for yourself its right in there" ANd then you reply "no it's not", Then they accuse you off reading comprehension problems and when you start pushing for page and paragraph the alt rightist will accuse you off laziness and call it proof you didn't bother to read at all.
The point is too look like they are right to people on the fence, they link evidence, you dont and apparently cant be bothered to even read. They arent talking to you, they are trying to convince dumb people. Just the fact that you say "oi, your links proof nothing" makes you not who they want to convince. Plenty of people will assume the linker is right because no-one in their right minds links evidence that does not support them, so they wont even check if you were right about the info not being there.
-largePenisLover
also, I don't think that English is this poster's first language
No. “What” is crossing the southern border is now much more likely to include children and entire families seeking to escape violent crime, unrestrained gangs, and government failure by Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras to protect the poor in those countries against threats and violence. According to your definition, those people are not migrants.
What does this have to do with the thread?Note: Most US migration happens to and from regions within the country and doesn’t involve the crossing of national borders. In recent decades US migration has resulted in a loss of population in the Northeastern and Midwestern states and an increase of population in Western and Southern states.
No. Reading the first definition of migrant again. There is no war or government persecution they are fleeing, they are not refugees, they are migrants. They fit the definition to a "T".
So, people fearing for their lives as a result of crime violence doesn't count? Do their lives not matter to you?
Honestly, it's a moot question.
The US is a nation of laws. There are judges that hear the asylum seekers' claims and make a decision based upon their circumstance and immigration law.
The stats say that immigrants who can afford an attorney are more likely to be granted asylum. Overall about 1/3 of those who apply are granted asylum by the immigration judges.
The other reason that this is a moot point is that many of the people who are crossing the border are only being held temporarily. Because of the failed policies of the Trump Administration, the shelters are at capacity and the number of people crossing the border has increased. The Trump Administration doesn't want their base to know that illegal immigration and the number of people asking for asylum has been increasing since Trump took office. When the shelters get full, they just dump asylum seekers at bus stations in nearby cities like El Paso and Brownsville.
Laws can be dispensed with under discretion. There are many such examples of this, and it happens all the time in our courts, e.g. enforcement of marijuana laws in the United States is increasingly lax. The law on this matter, however, is so infamous as to escape respect entirely, and unenforceable by any moral person. According to the system, by your own account, poor asylum seekers are less human. Also, the immigration court in Baltimore is notoriously difficult to find, maybe purposefully so, and this is just one example in the 94 federal districts. Some asylum immigrants can't find it, or don't know enough English to ask for directions, and then miss their hearings and get deported. The Spanish speaking attorney I used to work for ran into this problem with some frequency. You say judges make a decision "based upon their circumstance;" would that it only be true as you say.
