Judge Boasberg Allows Tren de Aragua Migrants to Appeal ‘Alien Enemies’ Deportations

The first wave of invaders from Mexico came because NAFTA destroyed their local economies.

That said, in South and Central America, the US has arms embargoes on four nations: Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela.

Those are the only nations currently under any sanctions by the US.

As of February 2025, active U.S. sanctions programs cover the following countries and regions, or companies and individuals within listed countries:

  • Afghanistan
  • The Balkans
  • Belarus
  • Burma
  • Central African Republic
  • China
  • Cuba
  • Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Ethiopia
  • Hong Kong
  • Iran
  • Iraq
  • Lebanon
  • Libya
  • Mali
  • Nicaragua
  • North Korea
  • Russia
  • Somalia
  • Sudan
  • South Sudan
  • Syria
  • Venezuela
  • Yemen

 
As of February 2025, active U.S. sanctions programs cover the following countries and regions, or companies and individuals within listed countries:

  • Afghanistan
  • The Balkans
  • Belarus
  • Burma
  • Central African Republic
  • China
  • Cuba
  • Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Ethiopia
  • Hong Kong
  • Iran
  • Iraq
  • Lebanon
  • Libya
  • Mali
  • Nicaragua
  • North Korea
  • Russia
  • Somalia
  • Sudan
  • South Sudan
  • Syria
  • Venezuela
  • Yemen

Yes, I misspoke.

I was speaking specifically of south and central American nations.
 
The U.S. sanctions which create the conditions causing people to flee their countries is the act of war.



Great. Then you understand that Judge Boasberg is not the bad guy in this story.


This would litterally not be a story if Trump wasn't shipping people to prison without due process.

The United States caused an earthquake in Haiti?

The Unites States caused it not to rain in Syria the worst drought in 700 years and a famine?

The United States caused Venezuela and Cuba to become communist?

Sometimes I think people have been tricked into magical thinking.

The Americans don't cause all of the problems in the world.
 
I figure that, no problemo, it was more informational to get an idea 👍
You won't get an argument from me that we should not be meddling in the internal affairs of other nations or that such meddling leads to instability and refugees.

Which is one reason why I support a trade, tariff and monetary policy that does not encourage toppling regimes for oil, sanctioning others for favorable treatment, rewarding others for keeping a supply of illicit drugs and human sex slaves flowing, or "carroting and sticking" yet others for child mined lithium for batteries.

We have the resources and ability to make damn near everything we need, right here.
 
Nope. Not all of them. That's why there needs to be due process. It's not that freaking hard of a concept. If you're going to send someone to PRISON whether that is a U.S. prison or a foreign prison then there needs to be due process.
All of the alien enemies act deportations were terrorist designations.
 
You won't get an argument from me that we should not be meddling in the internal affairs of other nations or that such meddling leads to instability and refugees.

Which is one reason why I support a trade, tariff and monetary policy that does not encourage toppling regimes for oil, sanctioning others for favorable treatment, rewarding others for keeping a supply of illicit drugs and human sex slaves flowing, or "carroting and sticking" yet others for child mined lithium for batteries.

We have the resources and ability to make damn near everything we need, right here.

There are atleast a half dozen other countries that meddle in other countries affairs and cause civil wars and destabilize them.

Other countries destabilize themselves because of power struggles most of the time.

So there will always be failed states. Walk into any museum and you will see 1000s of civilizations that failed.

Of course given the choice they want to come here but it's not possible to let everyone come here.
 
These are designated terrorists that are going to El Salvador because it's terrorist detention center and they take them. No other country is going to take terrorists.

Can you imagine another country shipping a bunch of terrorists into the United States how the people would react? That would be an act of war.

I would imagine that if another nation were going to deport criminals into our nation, we would want to meet them and take them into custody.
 
All of the alien enemies act deportations were terrorist designations.
You can repeat the same lie 1 million ties and it's still a lie. Andy Romero had no connection to crime or terrorism and he get deported to a prison in El Salvador. Trump should be impeached for this.
 
The United States caused an earthquake in Haiti?

The Unites States caused it not to rain in Syria the worst drought in 700 years and a famine?

The United States caused Venezuela and Cuba to become communist?

Sometimes I think people have been tricked into magical thinking.

The Americans don't cause all of the problems in the world.

The United States caused multiple coups in Haiti. U.S. DEA informants were involved in the most recent assassination in Haiti. U.S. trade policy destroyed Haiti's rice production.

See: https://haitisolidarity.net/in-the-...tates-crippled-haitis-domestic-rice-industry/



And LOL at blaming communism for the problems in Venezuela (which is socialist and not communist) and Cuba while at the same time the U.S. is fretting over the economic dominance of China. Note that we trade with China and we have sanctions against the other two countries. The sanctions are causing the economic misery.

Syria survived droughts before without any problems. Syria has plenty of oil. The U.S. bombed a Syrian dam as a part of it's war in support of terrorists against Syria.


Sometimes I think you have been tricked into stupidity thinking so that you pretend what America has already ADMITTED to doing somehow didn't happen.
 
The United States caused multiple coups in Haiti. U.S. DEA informants were involved in the most recent assassination in Haiti. U.S. trade policy destroyed Haiti's rice production.

See: https://haitisolidarity.net/in-the-...tates-crippled-haitis-domestic-rice-industry/



And LOL at blaming communism for the problems in Venezuela (which is socialist and not communist) and Cuba while at the same time the U.S. is fretting over the economic dominance of China. Note that we trade with China and we have sanctions against the other two countries. The sanctions are causing the economic misery.

Syria survived droughts before without any problems. Syria has plenty of oil. The U.S. bombed a Syrian dam as a part of it's war in support of terrorists against Syria.


Sometimes I think you have been tricked into stupidity thinking so that you pretend what America has already ADMITTED to doing somehow didn't happen.

It was the worst famine in 700 years caused by drought.

Hundreds of thousands of farmers fled the region and then some of them tried to change their government because their dictator still got to eat.
 
It was the worst famine in 700 years caused by drought.

Hundreds of thousands of farmers fled the region and then some of them tried to change their government because their dictator still got to eat.
And, as a typical bootlicking neocon, you're just going to ignore the bombing of the dam. Got it.
 
Trump wins a technicality in the lower court...

Judge Ho is not taking kindly to the Supreme Court inferring that judges must take orders (instantly) from the ACLU.

---------
Via Julie Kelly @julie_kelly2:

"WHOO BOY it's hard to know where to start in Judge James Ho's withering rebuke of the Supreme Court in the AEA case that SCOTUS kicked back to Fifth Circuit (his court) last week.

(Ho was on the 3-judge panel in April that denied ACLU's immediate appeal of district court ruling denying 1st temp restraining order)

"As an inferior court, we’re duty-bound to follow Supreme Court rulings—whether we agree with them or not. We don’t have to like it. But we have to do it.

So I concur in our order today expediting our consideration of this matter, as directed by the Supreme Court. But I write to state my sincere concerns about how the district judge as well as the President and other officials have been treated in this case. I worry that the disrespect they have been shown will not inspire continued respect for the judiciary, without which we cannot long function."

In their initial denial in April, the appellate court noted the very unreasonable 42 minute timeline the ACLU gave the lower court judge--James Hendrix--to respond to its emergency motion to halt deportations. SCOTUS, however, misrepresented the timeline and claimed Hendrix did not act for 14 hours and 28 minutes (still a ridiculously short amount of time further considering it was Easter weekend.)

Alito also called out his 7 colleagues for misrepresenting the timeline.

Ho: "Rather than commend the district court, however, the Supreme Court charged the district court with 'inaction—not for 42 minutes but for 14 hours and 28 minutes.'

This inaction was, according to the Court, tantamount to 'refusing' to rule on the injunction. This charge is worth exploring.

To get to 14 hours and 28 minutes (rather than 42 minutes), the Court was obviously starting the clock at 12:34 a.m., rather than 12:48 p.m. (when Petitioners told the district court for the first time that they wanted a ruling before the Government could respond).

But starting the clock at 12:34 a.m. not only ignores the court’s express instructions respecting the Government’s right to respond. It also ignores the fact that the Court is starting the clock at—12:34 a.m.

We seem to have forgotten that this is a district court—not a Denny’s. [PURE GOLD LOL]

This is the first time I’ve ever heard anyone suggest that district judges have a duty to check their dockets at all hours of the night, just in case a party decides to file a motion. If this is going to become the norm, then we should say so: District judges are hereby expected to be available 24 hours a day—and the Judicial Conference of the United States and the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts should secure from Congress the resources and staffing necessary to ensure 24-hour operations in every district court across the country."

 
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