52% of Our Border Patrol Agents are Hispanic & 100% of them want The Wall!

Yep thank you for admitting your Jew hate. Back to Berlin with you.

Utterly incoherent psychobabble.

You posts are. Correct. Look you hate Jews the rest of your verbiage is semantics. Go jump in a frozen lake.



You're not up to a cogent discussion are you.

Not with anti semites no. That would be like asking an African American to have a civil discussion with David Duke. Sorry. Not happening. You are not civil and do not deserve civility.

I put this NAZI TROLL on ignore after just two posts.
Snowflake eh?
 
Much of what has lead to the shutdown was the lie that Mexico is paying for it, reimbursing us for it, is being taxed for it, is donating the funds for it or is in some other out of body way funding it.

When the cornerstone of your entire campaign and presidency is based on a lie….there is going to be issues when the shit hits the fan.
Wrong again. New Taxes for remittances being sent to the tune of Billions U$ Dollars a day sent back to Mexico can pay for The Wall. Also, more security equals more Drug Money Seizures which actually can be used to fund border security. Trump in his plain speaking way is telling The Truth. Mexico will be paying for The Wall.


Revealed: How immigrants in America are sending $120 BILLION to their struggling families back home | Daily Mail Online

The amount of money being sent by migrants across the entire world reached $530 billion last year, making it a larger economy than Iran or Argentina, the data from the World Bank showed.

This worldwide figure has tripled in the last ten years and is now three times bigger than the total aid budgets given by countries around the world. It has sparked debate whether this so-called remittance money could be a viable alternative to relying on help from other governments.

In the United States last year, more than $120 billion was sent by workers to families abroad - making it the largest sender of remittances in the world. More than $23 billion went to Mexico, $13.45 billion to China, $10.84 billion to India and $10 billion to the Philippines, among other recipients.
Taxes on this side of the border is in no way making Mexico pay for anything

So if I go to court and Garnish Your Wages because you are a slime ball cheat and a liar, yes you are still paying me, because the money you were expecting to be yours in your pocket instead is going in to my pockets.

It's the same as if you reached in to your own wallet and handed me the money you owe me only its more convenient for me.
 
Much of what has lead to the shutdown was the lie that Mexico is paying for it, reimbursing us for it, is being taxed for it, is donating the funds for it or is in some other out of body way funding it.

When the cornerstone of your entire campaign and presidency is based on a lie….there is going to be issues when the shit hits the fan.
Wrong again. New Taxes for remittances being sent to the tune of Billions U$ Dollars a day sent back to Mexico can pay for The Wall. Also, more security equals more Drug Money Seizures which actually can be used to fund border security. Trump in his plain speaking way is telling The Truth. Mexico will be paying for The Wall.


Revealed: How immigrants in America are sending $120 BILLION to their struggling families back home | Daily Mail Online

The amount of money being sent by migrants across the entire world reached $530 billion last year, making it a larger economy than Iran or Argentina, the data from the World Bank showed.

This worldwide figure has tripled in the last ten years and is now three times bigger than the total aid budgets given by countries around the world. It has sparked debate whether this so-called remittance money could be a viable alternative to relying on help from other governments.

In the United States last year, more than $120 billion was sent by workers to families abroad - making it the largest sender of remittances in the world. More than $23 billion went to Mexico, $13.45 billion to China, $10.84 billion to India and $10 billion to the Philippines, among other recipients.
Taxes on this side of the border is in no way making Mexico pay for anything

So if I go to court and Garnish Your Wages because you are a slime ball cheat and a liar, yes you are still paying me, because the money you were expecting to be yours instead is going in to my pockets.
dude, they have no concept of economics. like debating the wall itself.
 
Much of what has lead to the shutdown was the lie that Mexico is paying for it, reimbursing us for it, is being taxed for it, is donating the funds for it or is in some other out of body way funding it.

When the cornerstone of your entire campaign and presidency is based on a lie….there is going to be issues when the shit hits the fan.
Wrong again. New Taxes for remittances being sent to the tune of Billions U$ Dollars a day sent back to Mexico can pay for The Wall. Also, more security equals more Drug Money Seizures which actually can be used to fund border security. Trump in his plain speaking way is telling The Truth. Mexico will be paying for The Wall.


Revealed: How immigrants in America are sending $120 BILLION to their struggling families back home | Daily Mail Online

The amount of money being sent by migrants across the entire world reached $530 billion last year, making it a larger economy than Iran or Argentina, the data from the World Bank showed.

This worldwide figure has tripled in the last ten years and is now three times bigger than the total aid budgets given by countries around the world. It has sparked debate whether this so-called remittance money could be a viable alternative to relying on help from other governments.

In the United States last year, more than $120 billion was sent by workers to families abroad - making it the largest sender of remittances in the world. More than $23 billion went to Mexico, $13.45 billion to China, $10.84 billion to India and $10 billion to the Philippines, among other recipients.
Taxes on this side of the border is in no way making Mexico pay for anything

So if I go to court and Garnish Your Wages because you are a slime ball cheat and a liar, yes you are still paying me, because the money you were expecting to be yours instead is going in to my pockets.
dude, they have no concept of economics. like debating the wall itself.

They have no concept of America either. They'd rather be under the thumb or Sharia Law or some Marxist Dictator. That's what they understand.
 
A great article to back up the discussion. Facts, Facts, and more Facts.

I Dare The Open Borders Communist Traitors to America on this board to debate The Following Facts:


Illegal Alien Crime and Violence by the Numbers: We’re All Victims

Gangs add to the toll.

The invasion of illegal aliens has established a bloody battlefront in the form of street gangs.

What fuels the growth of gangs is money — easily obtainable via drug smuggling. A 2011 report from the National Gang Intelligence Center makes the connections between the Mexican drug cartels and various U.S.-based gangs, especially illegal alien rings such as Los Aztecas and MS-13.

US-based gangs have established strong working relationships with Central American and MDTOs (Mexican Drug Trafficking Organizations) to perpetrate illicit cross-border activity, as well as with some organized crime groups in some regions of the United States. US-based gangs and MDTOs are establishing wide-reaching drug networks; assisting in the smuggling of drugs, weapons and illegal immigrants along the Southwest Border; and serving as enforcers of MDTOs interests on the US side of the border.[26]

The report notes that, “Federal, state, and local law enforcement officials are observing a growing nexus between the Mexican drug cartels, illegal alien smuggling rings, and US-based gangs. It is estimated that criminals earn billions of dollars each year by smuggling aliens through Mexico into the United States.”[27]

One of the better-known illegal alien gangs is the violent MS-13, the abbreviation for Mara Salvatrucha (loosely translated as “street smart clique”) — dubbed the “The World’s Most Dangerous Gang” by usually restrained National Geographic. Michael Sullivan, a former director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, says the Salvadoran gang’s use of brute force to keep control of its operations has kept MS-13 from being infiltrated. “MS-13’s foothold in the U.S. is expanding,” Sullivan says, with known affiliates in 42 states, up from 33 in 2005. The FBI believes that the gang’s L.A. members have a higher status among the group. The gang typically targets high school and even middle school students for recruitment. Aaron Escorza, chief of the FBI’s MS-13 National Gang Task Force says a “revolving door” on the border has kept the gang’s numbers steady even as many illegal immigrant members are deported.[28] Reporter Dave Gibson notes that according to FBI records, there are at least 70,000 MS-13 gang members operating between Central America and the United States.[29]

Another rapidly expanding gang, Florencia 13, works closely with the Mexican Mafia and is based out of South Los Angeles. Florencia 13 is part of a terrifying gang war scene that has turned L.A. into one of the most dangerous counties in the country. It also has members and influence in states like Virginia and Iowa. The gang has racked up charges ranging from piracy to conspiracy to sell drugs and murder over the last few years. They also have been cited for infiltrating the U.S. military.

Originally based out of El Paso, Los Aztecas have become a powerful paramilitary force on both sides of the Mexico border. Now many of the gang’s members are recruited from Texas prisons, and some of its work takes place inside prison walls, such as heroin production. Los Aztecas work with the Juarez and Los Zetas cartels running drugs, smuggling illegal aliens and murdering consulate officials. In March 2011, 35 members of the gang were charged with a variety of crimes, including 10 gangsters involved in the murder of the U.S. Consulate employee and several family members.

The ultra-violent Trinitarios has its roots in New York’s prison system in the 1980s, but quickly spread to the streets as inmates were released. Its influence is now felt in all five boroughs of New York and in at least 10 states covering all corners of the country. The predominantly Dominican gang, with deadly rivalries with other Hispanic gangs, is notorious for recruiting in high schools throughout New York and New Jersey, and is said to be behind a number of teen shootings and machete deaths.

A quick scan of the Internet finds sickening evidence of the carnage caused by illegal alien gangs on the prowl.

  • Police in the Sanctuary City of Austin, TX arrested two Mexican nationals who reportedly participated in the gang rape of a 13-year-old girl on June 29. As many as 13 men took turns sexually assaulting the girl. Many cheered and filmed the crime on their cell phones. Juan Lozano Ortega, 25, and Edgar Gerardo Guzman Perez, 26, were charged with aggravated sexual assault of a child. Both men, Mexican nationals, are currently being held in the Travis County Jail on immigration detainers.[30]
  • Pinal County Arizona Sheriff Babeu recounts this story: “On December 14th 2010, Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry was patrolling with three other members of his tactical team in Peck Canyon that is a notorious drug-smuggling corridor. At the same time five illegal aliens, all of whom were armed with weapons, were also patrolling in the same canyon. According to one of them who was later arrested, at least two of the illegal aliens carried their assault rifles “at the ready position.” After the Border Patrol agents identified themselves in Spanish as police officers, one of the illegal aliens opened fire striking Brian Terry in the back. The bullet pierced his aorta and he began to bleed profusely. He died at the scene. At the time of the shooting, Brian Terry was armed with a ‘less lethal’ beanbag shotgun [the weapon is designed to deliver a blow that will briefly render a violent suspect immobile]. Two of AK-47s recovered at the scene came from the failed ‘Fast and Furious’[31] operation.”
What will be the tally?

The 2012 illegal alien population in the United States, based on Pew Research Center estimates, is an estimated 11.7 million U.S., up from a recent low of 11.3 million in 2009. Since 1990, the illegal alien population has more than tripled, and shows no sign of slowing.

Financial analyst and economics journalist, Edwin Rubenstein, Ph.D., noted in this journal that there “are the divergent trends [in criminal incarcerations] of the two most recent years for which we have data. From 2008 to 2009 the number of white male inmates declined by 15,000 (-2.6 percent); black male inmates declined by 5,000 (-0.6 percent); while the count of incarcerated Hispanic males rose by 15,000 (+3.5 percent.)” He also observed that, “Hispanic males were 37 percent more likely to be incarcerated than non-Hispanic males. More importantly, the gap is growing. From 2000 to 2009 non-Hispanic incarceration rates declined while Hispanic incarceration rates rose.”[32] The only change seems to be a growing number of illegal alien criminals.

Counting off face-to-face.

The overall perspective of the criminal behavior of illegal aliens is grim. In a 2007 Government Accountability Office study of 55,322 illegal aliens, analysts discovered that they were arrested at least a total of 459,614 times, averaging about eight arrests per illegal alien: 70 percent had between two and 10 arrests, and 26 percent (about 15,000) had 11 or more arrests. Drug or immigration offenses accounted for 45 percent of all offenses, and approximately 12 percent (over 6,600 illegal aliens) were arrested for violent offenses such as murder, robbery, assault, and sex-related crimes.[14]

An FBI crime study also shows heavy illegal alien involvement in criminal activity revealed these statistics:

  • 75 percent of those on the most wanted criminals list in Los Angeles, Phoenix and Albuquerque are illegal aliens.
  • One quarter of all inmates in California detention centers are Mexican nationals, as are more than 40 percent of all inmates in Arizona and 48 percent in New Mexico jails.
  • Over 53 percent of all investigated burglaries reported in California, New Mexico, Nevada, Arizona, and Texas are perpetrated by illegal aliens.
  • 63 percent of cited drivers in Arizona have no license, no insurance and no registration for the vehicle. Of that number, 97 percent are illegal aliens. 66 percent of cited drivers in New Mexico have no license, no insurance and no registration for the vehicle. Of that 66 percent, 98 percent are illegal aliens.[15]
The numbers don’t show attitude or intent. “United States is stupid … I come back every time,” asserted Mexican national Rolando Mota-Campos to a Virginia-based immigration agent after his 11th arrest — for crimes ranging from abduction, assault, four DUIs, vehicular assault, attempted robbery, and domestic violence. Mota-Campos has been deported three times and has vowed to return again.[16]

And the numbers don’t show the depth of depravity of some illegal alien criminals. In Arizona, Mexican national Santana Batiz Aceves was charged with 47 counts of rape based on DNA evidence. He has already been deported twice for drug charges in California. Aceves also faces charges of kidnapping, aggravated assault, sexual abuse of a minor, giving police false information, providing false documents, and trespassing.[17]

The statistics are traumatic, but the anecdotal stories are horrifying.

  • A year after Baltimore’s mayor signed an order officially converting the city into a sanctuary for illegal immigrants, federal authorities arrested an undocumented Ecuadorian national wanted for the brutal rape of a nine-year-old girl.[18]
  • Carlos Martinelly-Montano, a Bolivian national who killed a Virginia nun in a drunk-driving accident, was on a new federal government supervised release program, allowing the illegal alien — who committed a series of crimes — to remain on the streets despite being subject to deportation. Rather than detaining Montano, authorities determined that he was a candidate for the Alternatives to Detention (ATD) program, which supposedly monitored his whereabouts.[19]
  • Guatemalan illegal alien Juan Tzun killed California sheriff’s dispatcher Dominick Durden. In 2008, Tzun was charged with two felonies. He pled guilty to one felony and the other was dropped. Tzun was given 3 years probation but should have been deported. A year later he was caught driving drunk. Three more years probation, but again, no deportation. Another year later, Tzun was caught driving drunk a second time and was released — two months later he drove into Durden and instantly killed him. Finally, ICE detained Tzun until an immigration judge freed him on bond. Tzun spent all of 35 days in jail, and is now in detention pending deportation.[20]
 
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This is what we need to build:

30 Surprising Facts about Hadrian's Wall - English Heritage Blog

Stretching from coast to coast, Hadrian’s Wall was the north-western frontier of the Roman Empire. 2017 marks an important anniversary in the history of Hadrian’s Wall – 30 years since becoming a UNESCO World Heritage Site. In gaining this status, the landmark is officially acknowledged as a site of ‘outstanding value to humanity’ which will be protected and preserved for future generations to enjoy as we do now.

It remains a site of major importance with a rich and surprising history. We challenged our historians and curators to find 30 things that you might not have known about Hadrian’s Wall. Let us know in the comments how many surprised you.

1. Hadrian’s Wall is not just a wall
Its signature feature was a continuous curtain wall of stone or turf, but in front was a ditch and sometimes other obstacles. Along the line of the Wall were turrets, small fortlets known as milecastles, and forts for larger garrisons. These were all linked by a military road. Running parallel a little further to the south were two large earthworks either side of a ditch called the vallum.

2. It took around 15,000 men about 6 years to build
Hadrian’s Wall was built by legionaries – the citizen-soldiers of the Roman army. The army contained specialists in masonry, engineering and architecture.

It took units from all three of Britain’s legions to construct the Wall: the II Augusta based in Caerleon in South Wales, the VI Victrix from York and the XX Valeria Victrix from Chester – who were also once based around Wroxter Roman City.

3. Soldiers from Syria were stationed there
Hadrian’s Wall was garrisoned by auxiliary soldiers from across the Roman Empire. These were non-citizens who were recruited into the army and often stationed far away from their homeland.

Although generally the soldiers manning Hadrian’s Wall came from northern Europe, there are also examples of units posted there from much further afield. Examples included Asturians (from northern Spain) at Chesters Roman Fort and Dacians (from Romania) at Birdoswald. Perhaps the furthest from home were the Syrians at Housesteads, who lived alongside the Tungrians from modern day Belgium.

4. We know the names of men who built Hadrian’s Wall
The Clayton Collection contains 53 centurial stones. Centurial stones give us the names of centurions who, with their men, built Hadrian’s Wall. Each group would have been given a set length of wall to build, and they often inscribed a stone when they had finished.

5. Cavalry soldiers lived alongside their horses
In Roman cavalry barracks, such as those at Chesters Fort, the soldiers lived in the rear room, while their horses lived in the front separated only by a narrow wall. Covered pits were dug beneath the horses to take away the waste!
 
This is what we need to build:

30 Surprising Facts about Hadrian's Wall - English Heritage Blog

Stretching from coast to coast, Hadrian’s Wall was the north-western frontier of the Roman Empire. 2017 marks an important anniversary in the history of Hadrian’s Wall – 30 years since becoming a UNESCO World Heritage Site. In gaining this status, the landmark is officially acknowledged as a site of ‘outstanding value to humanity’ which will be protected and preserved for future generations to enjoy as we do now.

It remains a site of major importance with a rich and surprising history. We challenged our historians and curators to find 30 things that you might not have known about Hadrian’s Wall. Let us know in the comments how many surprised you.

1. Hadrian’s Wall is not just a wall
Its signature feature was a continuous curtain wall of stone or turf, but in front was a ditch and sometimes other obstacles. Along the line of the Wall were turrets, small fortlets known as milecastles, and forts for larger garrisons. These were all linked by a military road. Running parallel a little further to the south were two large earthworks either side of a ditch called the vallum.

2. It took around 15,000 men about 6 years to build
Hadrian’s Wall was built by legionaries – the citizen-soldiers of the Roman army. The army contained specialists in masonry, engineering and architecture.

It took units from all three of Britain’s legions to construct the Wall: the II Augusta based in Caerleon in South Wales, the VI Victrix from York and the XX Valeria Victrix from Chester – who were also once based around Wroxter Roman City.

3. Soldiers from Syria were stationed there
Hadrian’s Wall was garrisoned by auxiliary soldiers from across the Roman Empire. These were non-citizens who were recruited into the army and often stationed far away from their homeland.

Although generally the soldiers manning Hadrian’s Wall came from northern Europe, there are also examples of units posted there from much further afield. Examples included Asturians (from northern Spain) at Chesters Roman Fort and Dacians (from Romania) at Birdoswald. Perhaps the furthest from home were the Syrians at Housesteads, who lived alongside the Tungrians from modern day Belgium.

4. We know the names of men who built Hadrian’s Wall
The Clayton Collection contains 53 centurial stones. Centurial stones give us the names of centurions who, with their men, built Hadrian’s Wall. Each group would have been given a set length of wall to build, and they often inscribed a stone when they had finished.

5. Cavalry soldiers lived alongside their horses
In Roman cavalry barracks, such as those at Chesters Fort, the soldiers lived in the rear room, while their horses lived in the front separated only by a narrow wall. Covered pits were dug beneath the horses to take away the waste!
Mexico willing to pay for it? If not then the answer is no.
 
Fuck Israel, and fuck the US for supporting Israel.

U.S. Senate’s First Bill, in the Midst of the Shutdown, Is a Bipartisan Defense of the Israeli Government From Boycotts

But in the 2019 GOP-controlled Senate, the first bill to be considered — S.1 — is not designed to protect American workers, bolster U.S. companies, or address the various debates over border security and immigration. It’s not a bill to open the government. Instead, according to multiple sources involved in the legislative process, S.1 will be a compendium containing a handful of foreign policy-related measures, the main one of which is a provision — with Florida’s GOP Sen. Marco Rubio as a lead sponsor — to defend the Israeli government. The bill is a
top legislative priority for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.

In the previous Congress, that measure
was known as S.170, and it gives state and local governments explicit legal authority to boycott any U.S. companies which themselves are participating in a boycott against Israel. As The Intercept reported last month, 26 states now have enacted some version of a law to punish or otherwise sanction entities that participate in or support the boycott of Israel, while similar laws are pending in at least 13 additional states. Rubio’s bill is designed to strengthen the legal basis to defend those Israel-protecting laws from constitutional challenge.

Punishment aimed at companies that choose to boycott Israel can also sweep up individual American citizens in its punitive net because individual contractors often work for state or local governments under the auspices of a sole proprietorship or some other business entity. That was the case with
Texas elementary school speech pathologist Bahia Amawi, who lost her job working with autistic and speech-impaired children in Austin because she refused to promise not to boycott goods produced in Israel and/or illegal Israeli settlements.

U.S. Senate’s First Bill, in the Midst of the Shutdown, Is a Bipartisan Defense of the Israeli Government From Boycotts

Yep thank you for admitting your Jew hate. Back to Berlin with you.

Utterly incoherent psychobabble.

You posts are. Correct. Look you hate Jews the rest of your verbiage is semantics. Go jump in a frozen lake.



You're not up to a cogent discussion are you.

Not with anti semites no. That would be like asking an African American to have a civil discussion with David Duke. Sorry. Not happening. You are not civil and do not deserve civility.



So basically you can just fling labels and label your way out of defending your values, take your toys and stroll off self-righteously to your safe space? Israel's ethnic cleansing is anything but civility Nancy, and I shall not be joining you in supporting the slaughter even if americans help fund it. Good thing the US withdrew from the UN Council on Human Rights; we had no business there given our penchant for war, endless global occupations, and our support for ¾’s of the worlds military dictatorships.
 
Last edited:
This is what we need to build:

30 Surprising Facts about Hadrian's Wall - English Heritage Blog

Stretching from coast to coast, Hadrian’s Wall was the north-western frontier of the Roman Empire. 2017 marks an important anniversary in the history of Hadrian’s Wall – 30 years since becoming a UNESCO World Heritage Site. In gaining this status, the landmark is officially acknowledged as a site of ‘outstanding value to humanity’ which will be protected and preserved for future generations to enjoy as we do now.

It remains a site of major importance with a rich and surprising history. We challenged our historians and curators to find 30 things that you might not have known about Hadrian’s Wall. Let us know in the comments how many surprised you.

1. Hadrian’s Wall is not just a wall
Its signature feature was a continuous curtain wall of stone or turf, but in front was a ditch and sometimes other obstacles. Along the line of the Wall were turrets, small fortlets known as milecastles, and forts for larger garrisons. These were all linked by a military road. Running parallel a little further to the south were two large earthworks either side of a ditch called the vallum.

2. It took around 15,000 men about 6 years to build
Hadrian’s Wall was built by legionaries – the citizen-soldiers of the Roman army. The army contained specialists in masonry, engineering and architecture.

It took units from all three of Britain’s legions to construct the Wall: the II Augusta based in Caerleon in South Wales, the VI Victrix from York and the XX Valeria Victrix from Chester – who were also once based around Wroxter Roman City.

3. Soldiers from Syria were stationed there
Hadrian’s Wall was garrisoned by auxiliary soldiers from across the Roman Empire. These were non-citizens who were recruited into the army and often stationed far away from their homeland.

Although generally the soldiers manning Hadrian’s Wall came from northern Europe, there are also examples of units posted there from much further afield. Examples included Asturians (from northern Spain) at Chesters Roman Fort and Dacians (from Romania) at Birdoswald. Perhaps the furthest from home were the Syrians at Housesteads, who lived alongside the Tungrians from modern day Belgium.

4. We know the names of men who built Hadrian’s Wall
The Clayton Collection contains 53 centurial stones. Centurial stones give us the names of centurions who, with their men, built Hadrian’s Wall. Each group would have been given a set length of wall to build, and they often inscribed a stone when they had finished.

5. Cavalry soldiers lived alongside their horses
In Roman cavalry barracks, such as those at Chesters Fort, the soldiers lived in the rear room, while their horses lived in the front separated only by a narrow wall. Covered pits were dug beneath the horses to take away the waste!
Mexico willing to pay for it? If not then the answer is no.


I hear Mexico said whenever Don pays off his thus far reneged upon bet with Liz Warren.
 
This is what we need to build:

30 Surprising Facts about Hadrian's Wall - English Heritage Blog

Stretching from coast to coast, Hadrian’s Wall was the north-western frontier of the Roman Empire. 2017 marks an important anniversary in the history of Hadrian’s Wall – 30 years since becoming a UNESCO World Heritage Site. In gaining this status, the landmark is officially acknowledged as a site of ‘outstanding value to humanity’ which will be protected and preserved for future generations to enjoy as we do now.

It remains a site of major importance with a rich and surprising history. We challenged our historians and curators to find 30 things that you might not have known about Hadrian’s Wall. Let us know in the comments how many surprised you.

1. Hadrian’s Wall is not just a wall
Its signature feature was a continuous curtain wall of stone or turf, but in front was a ditch and sometimes other obstacles. Along the line of the Wall were turrets, small fortlets known as milecastles, and forts for larger garrisons. These were all linked by a military road. Running parallel a little further to the south were two large earthworks either side of a ditch called the vallum.

2. It took around 15,000 men about 6 years to build
Hadrian’s Wall was built by legionaries – the citizen-soldiers of the Roman army. The army contained specialists in masonry, engineering and architecture.

It took units from all three of Britain’s legions to construct the Wall: the II Augusta based in Caerleon in South Wales, the VI Victrix from York and the XX Valeria Victrix from Chester – who were also once based around Wroxter Roman City.

3. Soldiers from Syria were stationed there
Hadrian’s Wall was garrisoned by auxiliary soldiers from across the Roman Empire. These were non-citizens who were recruited into the army and often stationed far away from their homeland.

Although generally the soldiers manning Hadrian’s Wall came from northern Europe, there are also examples of units posted there from much further afield. Examples included Asturians (from northern Spain) at Chesters Roman Fort and Dacians (from Romania) at Birdoswald. Perhaps the furthest from home were the Syrians at Housesteads, who lived alongside the Tungrians from modern day Belgium.

4. We know the names of men who built Hadrian’s Wall
The Clayton Collection contains 53 centurial stones. Centurial stones give us the names of centurions who, with their men, built Hadrian’s Wall. Each group would have been given a set length of wall to build, and they often inscribed a stone when they had finished.

5. Cavalry soldiers lived alongside their horses
In Roman cavalry barracks, such as those at Chesters Fort, the soldiers lived in the rear room, while their horses lived in the front separated only by a narrow wall. Covered pits were dug beneath the horses to take away the waste!
Mexico willing to pay for it? If not then the answer is no.

Mexico is already paying for it in seized drug monies, and will pay even more for it in taxed remittances.
 
If you think our Hispanic American Citizens here in the USA don't oppose Illegal Immigration you are either tragically stupid and uninformed or you are just a LIAR.

All 16 patrol districts on the border were recently asked to submit proposals to the White House to mitigate the illegal immigration surge we are having after The Democrats took The House back in the 2018 midterms, and all 16 districts proposed a wall, wall and fencing reinforcements and improvements and strengthening border security with more infrastructure, technology and manpower.


Border Patrol agents back Trump wall, survey finds

Border Patrol agents say they can’t be much clearer: They want more walls along the U.S.-Mexico border.

In a survey conducted by the National Border Patrol Council, the agents’ union, they overwhelmingly supported adding a “wall system” in strategic locations, embracing President Trump’s argument that it will boost their ability to nab or deter would-be illegal immigrants.

Agents also said they need the government to change the “catch and release” policy. They often have to immediately release illegal border crossers they arrest, giving them the chance to disappear into the shadows with the 11 million other illegal immigrants in the U.S.

The findings, shared with The Washington Times, appear to undercut the argument of congressional Democrats, who released a report last month concluding that line agents didn’t support Mr. Trump’s plans for a wall. The report was based on an internal tool used by Homeland Security to evaluate security gaps.

The NBPC’s survey, of more than 600 agents in two of the Border Patrol’s busiest sectors, found just the opposite: A stunning 89 percent of line agents say a “wall system in strategic locations is necessary to securing the border.” Just 7 percent disagreed.


Fact Check: Are Half of All Border Patrol Agents Hispanic?

Fact Check:

Pavlich mentioned the proportion of Border Patrol agents after pundits and politicians (Democrats) made Nazi comparisons when criticizing the Trump administration’s separation of families crossing the southern border.

“This is the United States of America. It isn’t Nazi Germany, and there’s a difference,” Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein said in an MSNBC interview last week.

Former CIA Director and CNN national security analyst Michael Hayden tweeted a photo on June 16 of the Birkenau death camp at Auschwitz. “Other governments have separated mothers and children,” he said.

Pavlich noted the prevalence of Hispanic Border Patrol agents in response. “Something you won’t hear much about: 52 percent of Border Patrol agents are Hispanic,” she tweeted. “But sure, continue your Nazi narrative.”

The U.S. Customs and Border Protection Public Affairs Office told The Daily Caller News Foundation that about 51 percent of Border Patrol agents were Hispanic or Latino at the end of fiscal year 2016. About 50 percent of all Border Patrol staff, not just agents, were Hispanic or Latino.

The percentage of Hispanic agents was about the same nearly a decade ago. The Houston Chronicle reported in 2008 that 52 percent of Border Patrol agents were Hispanic.

The Border Patrol has a much higher percentage of Hispanic and Latino agents than the general population. The U.S. Census Bureau estimated that about 18 percent of the population was Hispanic or Latino in 2017.

The agency also has a higher proportion of Hispanic and Latino staff than some other law enforcement agencies. A Bureau of Justice Statistics report on local police department personnel across the U.S. found that 11.6 percent of police officers were Hispanic or Latino in 2013. The Dallas News reported that about 7 percent of Secret Service agents were Hispanic in 2014.

Of course they support the wall. Everyone knows that federal employees are lazy and good for nothing. They think we can just build a wall and there will be no more illegals, so they'll be able to sit around all day and get paid to do nothing. Well guess what leeches, no more free paychecks!
 
This is what we need to build:

30 Surprising Facts about Hadrian's Wall - English Heritage Blog

Stretching from coast to coast, Hadrian’s Wall was the north-western frontier of the Roman Empire. 2017 marks an important anniversary in the history of Hadrian’s Wall – 30 years since becoming a UNESCO World Heritage Site. In gaining this status, the landmark is officially acknowledged as a site of ‘outstanding value to humanity’ which will be protected and preserved for future generations to enjoy as we do now.

It remains a site of major importance with a rich and surprising history. We challenged our historians and curators to find 30 things that you might not have known about Hadrian’s Wall. Let us know in the comments how many surprised you.

1. Hadrian’s Wall is not just a wall
Its signature feature was a continuous curtain wall of stone or turf, but in front was a ditch and sometimes other obstacles. Along the line of the Wall were turrets, small fortlets known as milecastles, and forts for larger garrisons. These were all linked by a military road. Running parallel a little further to the south were two large earthworks either side of a ditch called the vallum.

2. It took around 15,000 men about 6 years to build
Hadrian’s Wall was built by legionaries – the citizen-soldiers of the Roman army. The army contained specialists in masonry, engineering and architecture.

It took units from all three of Britain’s legions to construct the Wall: the II Augusta based in Caerleon in South Wales, the VI Victrix from York and the XX Valeria Victrix from Chester – who were also once based around Wroxter Roman City.

3. Soldiers from Syria were stationed there
Hadrian’s Wall was garrisoned by auxiliary soldiers from across the Roman Empire. These were non-citizens who were recruited into the army and often stationed far away from their homeland.

Although generally the soldiers manning Hadrian’s Wall came from northern Europe, there are also examples of units posted there from much further afield. Examples included Asturians (from northern Spain) at Chesters Roman Fort and Dacians (from Romania) at Birdoswald. Perhaps the furthest from home were the Syrians at Housesteads, who lived alongside the Tungrians from modern day Belgium.

4. We know the names of men who built Hadrian’s Wall
The Clayton Collection contains 53 centurial stones. Centurial stones give us the names of centurions who, with their men, built Hadrian’s Wall. Each group would have been given a set length of wall to build, and they often inscribed a stone when they had finished.

5. Cavalry soldiers lived alongside their horses
In Roman cavalry barracks, such as those at Chesters Fort, the soldiers lived in the rear room, while their horses lived in the front separated only by a narrow wall. Covered pits were dug beneath the horses to take away the waste!
Mexico willing to pay for it? If not then the answer is no.

Mexico is already paying for it in seized drug monies, and will pay even more for it in taxed remittances.
Mexico is giving the US seized drug money? What taxed remittances?
 
Much of what has lead to the shutdown was the lie that Mexico is paying for it, reimbursing us for it, is being taxed for it, is donating the funds for it or is in some other out of body way funding it.

When the cornerstone of your entire campaign and presidency is based on a lie….there is going to be issues when the shit hits the fan.
Wrong again. New Taxes for remittances being sent to the tune of Billions U$ Dollars a day sent back to Mexico can pay for The Wall. Also, more security equals more Drug Money Seizures which actually can be used to fund border security. Trump in his plain speaking way is telling The Truth. Mexico will be paying for The Wall.


Revealed: How immigrants in America are sending $120 BILLION to their struggling families back home | Daily Mail Online

The amount of money being sent by migrants across the entire world reached $530 billion last year, making it a larger economy than Iran or Argentina, the data from the World Bank showed.

This worldwide figure has tripled in the last ten years and is now three times bigger than the total aid budgets given by countries around the world. It has sparked debate whether this so-called remittance money could be a viable alternative to relying on help from other governments.

In the United States last year, more than $120 billion was sent by workers to families abroad - making it the largest sender of remittances in the world. More than $23 billion went to Mexico, $13.45 billion to China, $10.84 billion to India and $10 billion to the Philippines, among other recipients.
Taxes on this side of the border is in no way making Mexico pay for anything

So if I go to court and Garnish Your Wages because you are a slime ball cheat and a liar, yes you are still paying me, because the money you were expecting to be yours instead is going in to my pockets.
dude, they have no concept of economics. like debating the wall itself.

They have no concept of America either. They'd rather be under the thumb or Sharia Law or some Marxist Dictator. That's what they understand.

That's why Don needs his wall hon, to take you there, the rabble must be walled into the compound where they will be fish in a barrel for the militarized corporate state police.

Now about this "no concept of america" mantra. Yep. Some have no clue, no clue at all.

Here’s a pop quiz: How long has corporate corruption existed? Answer: As long as corporations as we know them have been in business. Thanks to journalist David Montero’s meticulously sourced survey, “Kickback: Exposing the Global Corporate Bribery Network,” the consumer public now has access to a wealth of details about the astonishingly shady antics in which multinationals have been engaging since the retro-imperialist heyday of the British East India Company.

And this malignant strain of corporatism is only getting worse. As Robert Scheer remarks to Montero in this week’s episode of “Scheer Intelligence,” it amounts to nothing short of a “virulent, corrosive, murderous arrangement that has only accelerated in recent years.” Some potential reasons why this global scourge hasn’t been more aggressively treated include: greed; willful ignorance; the widely supported myth that the phenomenon is “just” about white-collar crime; a false sense that corporate malfeasance ranges outside of various states’ jurisdictions; and powerful companies engaging in a race to the bottom because, well, everyone else is doing it.


Exposing the Corporate Bribery Network
Exposing the Corporate Bribery Network

 
If you think our Hispanic American Citizens here in the USA don't oppose Illegal Immigration you are either tragically stupid and uninformed or you are just a LIAR.

All 16 patrol districts on the border were recently asked to submit proposals to the White House to mitigate the illegal immigration surge we are having after The Democrats took The House back in the 2018 midterms, and all 16 districts proposed a wall, wall and fencing reinforcements and improvements and strengthening border security with more infrastructure, technology and manpower.


Border Patrol agents back Trump wall, survey finds

Border Patrol agents say they can’t be much clearer: They want more walls along the U.S.-Mexico border.

In a survey conducted by the National Border Patrol Council, the agents’ union, they overwhelmingly supported adding a “wall system” in strategic locations, embracing President Trump’s argument that it will boost their ability to nab or deter would-be illegal immigrants.

Agents also said they need the government to change the “catch and release” policy. They often have to immediately release illegal border crossers they arrest, giving them the chance to disappear into the shadows with the 11 million other illegal immigrants in the U.S.

The findings, shared with The Washington Times, appear to undercut the argument of congressional Democrats, who released a report last month concluding that line agents didn’t support Mr. Trump’s plans for a wall. The report was based on an internal tool used by Homeland Security to evaluate security gaps.

The NBPC’s survey, of more than 600 agents in two of the Border Patrol’s busiest sectors, found just the opposite: A stunning 89 percent of line agents say a “wall system in strategic locations is necessary to securing the border.” Just 7 percent disagreed.


Fact Check: Are Half of All Border Patrol Agents Hispanic?

Fact Check:

Pavlich mentioned the proportion of Border Patrol agents after pundits and politicians (Democrats) made Nazi comparisons when criticizing the Trump administration’s separation of families crossing the southern border.

“This is the United States of America. It isn’t Nazi Germany, and there’s a difference,” Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein said in an MSNBC interview last week.

Former CIA Director and CNN national security analyst Michael Hayden tweeted a photo on June 16 of the Birkenau death camp at Auschwitz. “Other governments have separated mothers and children,” he said.

Pavlich noted the prevalence of Hispanic Border Patrol agents in response. “Something you won’t hear much about: 52 percent of Border Patrol agents are Hispanic,” she tweeted. “But sure, continue your Nazi narrative.”

The U.S. Customs and Border Protection Public Affairs Office told The Daily Caller News Foundation that about 51 percent of Border Patrol agents were Hispanic or Latino at the end of fiscal year 2016. About 50 percent of all Border Patrol staff, not just agents, were Hispanic or Latino.

The percentage of Hispanic agents was about the same nearly a decade ago. The Houston Chronicle reported in 2008 that 52 percent of Border Patrol agents were Hispanic.

The Border Patrol has a much higher percentage of Hispanic and Latino agents than the general population. The U.S. Census Bureau estimated that about 18 percent of the population was Hispanic or Latino in 2017.

The agency also has a higher proportion of Hispanic and Latino staff than some other law enforcement agencies. A Bureau of Justice Statistics report on local police department personnel across the U.S. found that 11.6 percent of police officers were Hispanic or Latino in 2013. The Dallas News reported that about 7 percent of Secret Service agents were Hispanic in 2014.

Of course they support the wall. Everyone knows that federal employees are lazy and good for nothing. They think we can just build a wall and there will be no more illegals, so they'll be able to sit around all day and get paid to do nothing. Well guess what leeches, no more free paychecks!

Your lazy ass border agents included? Not to worry, they're not being paid.
 
This is what we need to build:

30 Surprising Facts about Hadrian's Wall - English Heritage Blog

Stretching from coast to coast, Hadrian’s Wall was the north-western frontier of the Roman Empire. 2017 marks an important anniversary in the history of Hadrian’s Wall – 30 years since becoming a UNESCO World Heritage Site. In gaining this status, the landmark is officially acknowledged as a site of ‘outstanding value to humanity’ which will be protected and preserved for future generations to enjoy as we do now.

It remains a site of major importance with a rich and surprising history. We challenged our historians and curators to find 30 things that you might not have known about Hadrian’s Wall. Let us know in the comments how many surprised you.

1. Hadrian’s Wall is not just a wall
Its signature feature was a continuous curtain wall of stone or turf, but in front was a ditch and sometimes other obstacles. Along the line of the Wall were turrets, small fortlets known as milecastles, and forts for larger garrisons. These were all linked by a military road. Running parallel a little further to the south were two large earthworks either side of a ditch called the vallum.

2. It took around 15,000 men about 6 years to build
Hadrian’s Wall was built by legionaries – the citizen-soldiers of the Roman army. The army contained specialists in masonry, engineering and architecture.

It took units from all three of Britain’s legions to construct the Wall: the II Augusta based in Caerleon in South Wales, the VI Victrix from York and the XX Valeria Victrix from Chester – who were also once based around Wroxter Roman City.

3. Soldiers from Syria were stationed there
Hadrian’s Wall was garrisoned by auxiliary soldiers from across the Roman Empire. These were non-citizens who were recruited into the army and often stationed far away from their homeland.

Although generally the soldiers manning Hadrian’s Wall came from northern Europe, there are also examples of units posted there from much further afield. Examples included Asturians (from northern Spain) at Chesters Roman Fort and Dacians (from Romania) at Birdoswald. Perhaps the furthest from home were the Syrians at Housesteads, who lived alongside the Tungrians from modern day Belgium.

4. We know the names of men who built Hadrian’s Wall
The Clayton Collection contains 53 centurial stones. Centurial stones give us the names of centurions who, with their men, built Hadrian’s Wall. Each group would have been given a set length of wall to build, and they often inscribed a stone when they had finished.

5. Cavalry soldiers lived alongside their horses
In Roman cavalry barracks, such as those at Chesters Fort, the soldiers lived in the rear room, while their horses lived in the front separated only by a narrow wall. Covered pits were dug beneath the horses to take away the waste!
Mexico willing to pay for it? If not then the answer is no.

Mexico is already paying for it in seized drug monies, and will pay even more for it in taxed remittances.
Mexico is giving the US seized drug money? What taxed remittances?


Don's full of shit and so are all who believed him, Mexico ain't giving Don anything.
 
If you think our Hispanic American Citizens here in the USA don't oppose Illegal Immigration you are either tragically stupid and uninformed or you are just a LIAR.

All 16 patrol districts on the border were recently asked to submit proposals to the White House to mitigate the illegal immigration surge we are having after The Democrats took The House back in the 2018 midterms, and all 16 districts proposed a wall, wall and fencing reinforcements and improvements and strengthening border security with more infrastructure, technology and manpower.


Border Patrol agents back Trump wall, survey finds

Border Patrol agents say they can’t be much clearer: They want more walls along the U.S.-Mexico border.

In a survey conducted by the National Border Patrol Council, the agents’ union, they overwhelmingly supported adding a “wall system” in strategic locations, embracing President Trump’s argument that it will boost their ability to nab or deter would-be illegal immigrants.

Agents also said they need the government to change the “catch and release” policy. They often have to immediately release illegal border crossers they arrest, giving them the chance to disappear into the shadows with the 11 million other illegal immigrants in the U.S.

The findings, shared with The Washington Times, appear to undercut the argument of congressional Democrats, who released a report last month concluding that line agents didn’t support Mr. Trump’s plans for a wall. The report was based on an internal tool used by Homeland Security to evaluate security gaps.

The NBPC’s survey, of more than 600 agents in two of the Border Patrol’s busiest sectors, found just the opposite: A stunning 89 percent of line agents say a “wall system in strategic locations is necessary to securing the border.” Just 7 percent disagreed.


Fact Check: Are Half of All Border Patrol Agents Hispanic?

Fact Check:

Pavlich mentioned the proportion of Border Patrol agents after pundits and politicians (Democrats) made Nazi comparisons when criticizing the Trump administration’s separation of families crossing the southern border.

“This is the United States of America. It isn’t Nazi Germany, and there’s a difference,” Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein said in an MSNBC interview last week.

Former CIA Director and CNN national security analyst Michael Hayden tweeted a photo on June 16 of the Birkenau death camp at Auschwitz. “Other governments have separated mothers and children,” he said.

Pavlich noted the prevalence of Hispanic Border Patrol agents in response. “Something you won’t hear much about: 52 percent of Border Patrol agents are Hispanic,” she tweeted. “But sure, continue your Nazi narrative.”

The U.S. Customs and Border Protection Public Affairs Office told The Daily Caller News Foundation that about 51 percent of Border Patrol agents were Hispanic or Latino at the end of fiscal year 2016. About 50 percent of all Border Patrol staff, not just agents, were Hispanic or Latino.

The percentage of Hispanic agents was about the same nearly a decade ago. The Houston Chronicle reported in 2008 that 52 percent of Border Patrol agents were Hispanic.

The Border Patrol has a much higher percentage of Hispanic and Latino agents than the general population. The U.S. Census Bureau estimated that about 18 percent of the population was Hispanic or Latino in 2017.

The agency also has a higher proportion of Hispanic and Latino staff than some other law enforcement agencies. A Bureau of Justice Statistics report on local police department personnel across the U.S. found that 11.6 percent of police officers were Hispanic or Latino in 2013. The Dallas News reported that about 7 percent of Secret Service agents were Hispanic in 2014.

Of course they support the wall. Everyone knows that federal employees are lazy and good for nothing. They think we can just build a wall and there will be no more illegals, so they'll be able to sit around all day and get paid to do nothing. Well guess what leeches, no more free paychecks!

Your lazy ass border agents included? Not to worry, they're not being paid.
our lazy ass border agents? what is it you're saying there? are you saying now you are for open borders? ahha, I knew you all were. tilly tilly
 
I used to work at DHS as a contractor. I only happened to deal with a few Hispanic border patrol agents, but they were all very much against illegal immigration and believed that the border needed to be secured much better than it was.
 
This is what we need to build:

30 Surprising Facts about Hadrian's Wall - English Heritage Blog

Stretching from coast to coast, Hadrian’s Wall was the north-western frontier of the Roman Empire. 2017 marks an important anniversary in the history of Hadrian’s Wall – 30 years since becoming a UNESCO World Heritage Site. In gaining this status, the landmark is officially acknowledged as a site of ‘outstanding value to humanity’ which will be protected and preserved for future generations to enjoy as we do now.

It remains a site of major importance with a rich and surprising history. We challenged our historians and curators to find 30 things that you might not have known about Hadrian’s Wall. Let us know in the comments how many surprised you.

1. Hadrian’s Wall is not just a wall
Its signature feature was a continuous curtain wall of stone or turf, but in front was a ditch and sometimes other obstacles. Along the line of the Wall were turrets, small fortlets known as milecastles, and forts for larger garrisons. These were all linked by a military road. Running parallel a little further to the south were two large earthworks either side of a ditch called the vallum.

2. It took around 15,000 men about 6 years to build
Hadrian’s Wall was built by legionaries – the citizen-soldiers of the Roman army. The army contained specialists in masonry, engineering and architecture.

It took units from all three of Britain’s legions to construct the Wall: the II Augusta based in Caerleon in South Wales, the VI Victrix from York and the XX Valeria Victrix from Chester – who were also once based around Wroxter Roman City.

3. Soldiers from Syria were stationed there
Hadrian’s Wall was garrisoned by auxiliary soldiers from across the Roman Empire. These were non-citizens who were recruited into the army and often stationed far away from their homeland.

Although generally the soldiers manning Hadrian’s Wall came from northern Europe, there are also examples of units posted there from much further afield. Examples included Asturians (from northern Spain) at Chesters Roman Fort and Dacians (from Romania) at Birdoswald. Perhaps the furthest from home were the Syrians at Housesteads, who lived alongside the Tungrians from modern day Belgium.

4. We know the names of men who built Hadrian’s Wall
The Clayton Collection contains 53 centurial stones. Centurial stones give us the names of centurions who, with their men, built Hadrian’s Wall. Each group would have been given a set length of wall to build, and they often inscribed a stone when they had finished.

5. Cavalry soldiers lived alongside their horses
In Roman cavalry barracks, such as those at Chesters Fort, the soldiers lived in the rear room, while their horses lived in the front separated only by a narrow wall. Covered pits were dug beneath the horses to take away the waste!
Mexico willing to pay for it? If not then the answer is no.

Mexico is already paying for it in seized drug monies, and will pay even more for it in taxed remittances.
Mexico is giving the US seized drug money? What taxed remittances?


Don's full of shit and so are all who believed him, Mexico ain't giving Don anything.
they already are. you again like others in here are too illiterate to understand. So there is no point in informing you how. economics is something you don't understand.
 
I used to work at DHS as a contractor. I only happened to deal with a few Hispanic border patrol agents, but they were all very much against illegal immigration and believed that the border needed to be secured much better than it was.
Do people, ESPECIALLY THE LEFT,....forget that Hispanic Americans are PATRIOTIC TOO?

They love this country and understand that you have to protect it's freedoms for it's citizens (themselves) to remain prosperous.
 
I used to work at DHS as a contractor. I only happened to deal with a few Hispanic border patrol agents, but they were all very much against illegal immigration and believed that the border needed to be secured much better than it was.
and the dims snubbed their noses at those border agents. how american.
 

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