Woke Mayor APOLOGIZES After Trump Border Czar THREATENS to ARREST Him

Not at all. SCOTUS has no jurisdiction in this case.
 
absolutely pitiful, shame on you Trump supporters.
The Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) has been associated with Donald Trump and Tom Homan in various contexts. Homan, a former acting director of ICE under Trump, has participated in events organized by FAIR, including a 2019 conference. He has also appeared in fundraising videos for FAIR's legal arm, the Immigration Reform Law Institute. [1][2].

FAIR itself is known for its anti-immigrant stance and has played a significant role in shaping immigration policy during the Trump administration, advocating for strict enforcement measures like the Zero-Tolerance Policy that led to family separations at the border. [1][4][6].

Sources:
[1] Former ICE Chief Taps Anti-Muslim Hate Group To Help Run Border-Focused Project
[2] The Anti-Immigrant Movement in the United States | The Pardee Atlas Journal of Global Affairs
[3] Tom Homan warns migrants to "self-deport": "We know who you are"
[4] 5 things to know about Tom Homan, Trump’s new border czar
[5] Trump associates' ties to extremists probed by Jan. 6 panel
[6] Trump's Highest-Profile Campaign Promise Will Be Incredibly Hard To Make A Reality
[7] Trump plans the ‘largest deportation’ ever. Here’s how it might start.
[8] EXPLAINER: A look at far-right extremists in Jan. 6 riot


The Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) is classified as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). It has ties to white supremacist ideologies and has promoted anti-immigrant rhetoric since its founding by John Tanton, who expressed views aimed at preserving a majority-white America. FAIR has received funding from eugenicist organizations and has employed individuals connected to white nationalist movements. Its policies and statements have often reflected extremist positions, particularly against Latino and immigrant communities. [1][2][4].

Be careful! Probably you're talking with the hate group! 😨

Sources:
[1] Federation for American Immigration Reform
[2] Factsheet: Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) - Bridge Initiative
[3] How Members of Anti-Immigrant Extremist Groups Have Worked Closely with — and Joined — the Trump Administration - American Oversight
[4] Federation for American Immigration Reform - Wikipedia
[5] When is quiet too quiet? Understanding shifts in extremist mobilization in 2024
[6] Trump associates' ties to extremists probed by Jan. 6 panel
[7] The Anti-Immigrant Movement in the United States | The Pardee Atlas Journal of Global Affairs
[8] EXPLAINER: A look at far-right extremists in Jan. 6 riot
 
Some wokey mayors in blue cities have been talking tough regarding President Trump's plans to carry out mass deportations. In Denver, Colorado, Democrat mayor Mike Johnston said "“More than us having the Denver Police Department stationed at the county line to keep them out, you would have 50,000 Denverites there,”

Trump’s incoming “border czar” Tom Homan, is going on a warpath after Johnston and other liberal leaders began issuing warnings in recent days, that they plan to defy the administration’s mass deportation orders.

Homan, a former ICE acting director in Trump’s first term, made perhaps his most striking remark Tuesday, when he threatened to throw the Democratic Denver mayor in jail, if it came to that.

“ We agree on one thing. He’s willing to go to jail. I’m willing to put him in jail,” Homan said of Mayor Mike Johnston during a television interview.

Homan then rattled off a federal statute he has cited in several interviews as his answer for defiant mayors. The statute, found under Title 8, Section 1324, prohibits “bringing in and harboring certain aliens.”

“Read about that, and don’t cross that line because it is a felony to harbor and conceal an illegal alien from ICE. Read the statute. Don’t cross that line,” Homan said last week of Boston’s Democratic mayor, Michelle Wu.

Here's a list of other outspoken Democrat leaders who vow to resist ICE, ad are putting themselves in direct line to be imprisoned on serious felony charges with long prison sentences >>

Gov. J.B. Pritzker (D-IL) said days after Trump won, “If you come for my people, you come through me.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA), who brought dozens of lawsuits against the first Trump administration, is plotting another expensive resistance effort in Trump’s second term and has said California is “ready to fight” Trump on all policy fronts.

Los Angeles Democratic Mayor Karen Bass successfully pushed through her city council a “sanctuary” ordinance in response to Trump’s win. Homan, unfazed, said he would send “twice as many” federal authorities to her city.




Who votes in these defects?
 
A convicted felon, with a cabinet of criminals telling others to obey the law.

:auiqs.jpg:
Felon and a rapist and second worst President ever. Startling,
conman, grifter and the list is BIGLY

comp.jpg
 
Mayors can’t block Immigration Agents but they are under no obligation to assist them

Looks like a lot of Dim Mayors are willing to go to jail. Maybe they can be in a cell with some Venezuelan illegal gang bangers and be their *****. :D

Problem is they'd probably like it.
 
Mayors can’t block Immigration Agents but they are under no obligation to assist them
well, that's exactly what Denver's mayor threatened. “More than us having the Denver Police Department stationed at the county line to keep them out, you would have 50,000 Denverites there,”
 
15th post
The Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) has been associated with Donald Trump and Tom Homan in various contexts. Homan, a former acting director of ICE under Trump, has participated in events organized by FAIR, including a 2019 conference. He has also appeared in fundraising videos for FAIR's legal arm, the Immigration Reform Law Institute. [1][2].

FAIR itself is known for its anti-immigrant stance and has played a significant role in shaping immigration policy during the Trump administration, advocating for strict enforcement measures like the Zero-Tolerance Policy that led to family separations at the border. [1][4][6].

Sources:
[1] Former ICE Chief Taps Anti-Muslim Hate Group To Help Run Border-Focused Project
[2] The Anti-Immigrant Movement in the United States | The Pardee Atlas Journal of Global Affairs
[3] Tom Homan warns migrants to "self-deport": "We know who you are"
[4] 5 things to know about Tom Homan, Trump’s new border czar
[5] Trump associates' ties to extremists probed by Jan. 6 panel
[6] Trump's Highest-Profile Campaign Promise Will Be Incredibly Hard To Make A Reality
[7] Trump plans the ‘largest deportation’ ever. Here’s how it might start.
[8] EXPLAINER: A look at far-right extremists in Jan. 6 riot


The Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) is classified as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). It has ties to white supremacist ideologies and has promoted anti-immigrant rhetoric since its founding by John Tanton, who expressed views aimed at preserving a majority-white America. FAIR has received funding from eugenicist organizations and has employed individuals connected to white nationalist movements. Its policies and statements have often reflected extremist positions, particularly against Latino and immigrant communities. [1][2][4].

Be careful! Probably you're talking with the hate group! 😨

Sources:
[1] Federation for American Immigration Reform
[2] Factsheet: Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) - Bridge Initiative
[3] How Members of Anti-Immigrant Extremist Groups Have Worked Closely with — and Joined — the Trump Administration - American Oversight
[4] Federation for American Immigration Reform - Wikipedia
[5] When is quiet too quiet? Understanding shifts in extremist mobilization in 2024
[6] Trump associates' ties to extremists probed by Jan. 6 panel
[7] The Anti-Immigrant Movement in the United States | The Pardee Atlas Journal of Global Affairs
[8] EXPLAINER: A look at far-right extremists in Jan. 6 riot
Up to now I thought you had a brain in your head. You just made an utter fool out of yourself, referring to the Southern Poverty laughingstock Center for a source. The SPLC is a total JOKE, and so are the idiots in the Jan 6 panel, who might well be on their way to jail next year.

A little background on the SPLC can clear things up about this phony organization, which has nothing to do with either “poverty” or “law”, and is primarily about stuffing their pockets with donations from wary liberals, whom they scare to death with exaggeration reports.

Journalists who have no ideological or financial interest in skewing the outcome one way or the other have conducted examinations of the SPLC’s nearly 40-year history. While the political leanings of the publications and journalists who undertook several of the investigations would lead one to expect a favorable evaluation of the SPLC, quite the opposite was the case.

Articles published in The Nation, Harper’s, and even the SPLC’s hometown newspaper, the Montgomery Advertiser all make the same assertion: the SPLC exaggerates, and manipulates incidents of “hate” for the sole purpose of raising vast sums of money.

The Nation: In response to a letter published in the February 26, 2001 edition of the magazine from Richard Cohen (the SPLC’s president and CEO) defending the SPLC’s activities, journalist JoAnn Wypijewski questioned what the organization does with its vast war chest: The center doesn’t devote all of its resources to any kind of fight. In 1999 it spent $2.4 million on litigation and $5.7 million on fundraising, meanwhile taking in more than $44 million—$27 million from fundraising, the rest from investments.

A few years ago the American Institute of Philanthropy gave the SPLC an F for ‘excessive’ reserves. On the subject of ‘hate groups,’ though, Cohen is almost comically disingenuous. No one has been more assiduous in inflating the profile of such groups than the center’s millionaire huckster Morris Dees, who in 1999 began a begging letter, ‘Dear Friend, The danger presented by the Klan is greater now than at any time in the past ten years.’ Hate sells; poor people don’t, which is why readers who go to the center’s web site will find only a handful of cases on such unlucrative causes as fair housing, worker safety or healthcare, many of those from the 1970s and ‘80s.

Why SPLC continues to keep ‘Poverty’ (or even ‘Law’) in its name can be ascribed only to nostalgia or a cynical understanding of the marketing possibilities in class guilt. The Nation’s opinion of the SPLC has only diminished with the passage of time. Syndicated columnist Alexander Cockburn wrote a scathing article entitled “King of the Hate Business,” for the April 29, 2009 edition of the magazine. In his piece, Cockburn lambasted the SPLC and its founder, Morris Dees. Noting the election of Barack Obama and solid Democratic majorities in both houses of Congress, Cockburn observed, “It’s also horrible news for people who raise money and make money selling the notion that there’s a right resurgence out there in the hinterland with legions of haters ready to march down Main Street draped in Klan robes, a copy of Mein Kampf tucked under one arm and a Bible under the other.” Cockburn, like just about everyone else who has examined the SPLC’s record, noted the organization’s shameful record of hyping hate for profit.

What is the archsalesman of hatemongering, Morris Dees of the Southern Poverty Law Center, going to do now? Ever since 1971, U.S. Postal Service mailbags have bulged with his fundraising letters, scaring dollars out of the pockets of trembling liberals aghast at his lurid depictions of a hate-sodden America in dire need of legal confrontation by the SPLC.

Harper’s: In the November 2000 edition, Washington editor Ken Silverstein published an exposé of the SPLC and its tactics and operational activities. Entitled “The Church of Morris Dees,” Silverstein concluded that the SPLC “spends most of its time—and money—on a relentless fundraising campaign, peddling memberships in the church of tolerance with all the zeal of a circuit rider passing the collection plate."

In a follow-up in March 2007, Silverstein noted that not much had changed since his 2000 article. Back in 2000, I wrote a story in Harper’s about the Southern Poverty Law Center of Montgomery, Alabama, whose stated mission is to combat disgusting yet mostly impotent groups like the Nazis and the KKK. What it does best, though, is to raise obscene amounts of money by hyping fears about the power of those groups; hence the SPLC has become the nation’s richest “civil rights” organization.

The Montgomery Advertiser, the city’s leading newspaper, began scrutinizing the SPLC, headquartered in Montgomery, Alabama, as early as 1994. In 1995, the Pulitzer Board nominated the Advertiser’s eight-part series of investigative reports as a finalist for its distinguished Pulitzer Prize. In a May 1999 seminar at Harvard University’s Nieman Center, then managing editor Jim Tharpe described the SPLC’s efforts to intimidate his reporters during their investigation: “Our series was published in 1995 after three years of very brutal research under the threat of lawsuit the entire time.” Like Harper’s and The Nation, the Advertiser’s investigation concluded that the SPLC was little more than a hugely successful fundraising operation that delivered little of what it promised to its donors. Tharpe stated: "The Center was building up a huge surplus. It was 50-something million at that time; it’s now approaching 100 million, but they’ve never spent more than 31 percent of the money they were bringing in on programs, and sometimes they spent as little as 18 percent. Most nonprofits spend about 75 percent on programs."

A sampling of their donors showed that they had no idea of the Center’s wealth. The charity watchdog groups, the few that are in existence, had consistently criticized the Center, even though nobody had reported that. By looking at 990s, what few financial records we did have available, we were able to corroborate much of that information, many of the allegations they had made, the fact that the Center didn’t spend very much of its money that it took in on programs, the fact that some of the top people at the Center were paid very high salaries, the fact that there weren’t minorities in management positions at the Center. But the Advertiser’s investigative reporters found something even more remarkable for an organization that prides itself on “exposing” racism in others.

The newspaper was able to corroborate institutional racism within the SPLC. Addressing Harvard’s Nieman Center, Tharpe stated: "There was a problem with black employees at what was the nation’s richest civil rights organization; there were no blacks in the top management positions. Twelve out of the 13 black current and former employees we contacted cited racism at the Center, which was a shocker to me. As of 1995, the Center had hired only two black attorneys in its entire history."

None of these 3 publications had any obvious political or economic interest in discrediting the SPLC. In fact, Tharpe, whose newspaper was literally next door to the SPLC’s headquarters, noted, “They [SPLC officials] were friends with people at the paper; we hung out with them.” Nevertheless, all three, after closely examining the SPLC, independently arrived at the conclusion that the organization is not a credible or objective source of information.

And American Oversight are leftist woke wackos.
 

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