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Part of me really isn't liking this.
What happens when we run out of illegals to put in these camps?
There's nothing more permanent than a "temporary" gubmint operation.
I’ll do my best to give a ****.Several Indigenous groups, particularly the Miccosukee Tribe, consider the construction of the "Alligator Alcatraz" detention center a violation of their treaty rights and an affront to their ancestral lands.
And you never buried it.
BwahhhhhhhhhahhhhhhhahhhhhhhhWe could call it: ‘Oh Snap!
I’ll do my best to give a ****.
Ooh, no. I’m even worse at stretching than **** giving.Yer ***** are worthless, try stretching and bathing.
It’s dumb. Wompum Slimy Fish died in that swamp 300 years ago, it’s a sacred place. I don’t think so chief.Being paid to ***** about it you can be sure.
I funny see any of the Indians themselves living in that patch.
Oh you can almost be certain that the DNC is funneling ***** bucks into the tribe. They don't honestly give a shit about any of that stuff.It’s dumb. Wompum Slimy Fish died in that swamp 300 years ago, it’s a sacred place. I don’t think so chief.
It’s dumb. Wompum Slimy Fish died in that swamp 300 years ago, it’s a sacred place. I don’t think so chief.
"Crunch Crunch" go the illegals>Florida is ideal. Most of the coastal area is prime real estate, but much of the inlands especially in the peninsula are marshy wetlands not much good for too many things other than crocodiles.
And deportees on their way out.
Extra crispy?"Crunch Crunch" go the illegals>
And Boas, escaped constrictors have been devastating the local animal population.Florida is ideal. Most of the coastal area is prime real estate, but much of the inlands especially in the peninsula are marshy wetlands not much good for too many things other than crocodiles.
And deportees on their way out.
We will fill them from other lakesNo alligators in a Florida lake, huh?
Yes, Burmese pythons are present in the Florida Everglades and are considered an invasive species. They are well-established and pose a significant threat to the native wildlife and ecosystem. It's estimated that there are between 100,000 to 300,000 Burmese pythons in the Everglades, according to Everglades Holiday Park.I’ve never seen a python in the Everglades either. Using your “logic” there are no pythons in the Everglades, Simp.