Trump Unleashes Tariffs On Mexico "Until Illegal Immigration Stops"

LOL

Not at all, everything I stand for is absolutely against it.
It violates our sovereignty and our ability to defend our rights against globalists and hostile foreign countries.


What sovereignty? We do not even have a right to Private Property. What sovereignty are you talking about? Nationalist? Individual? You keep saying "our" but in what context?
 
What sovereignty? We do not even have a right to Private Property. What sovereignty are you talking about? Nationalist? Individual? You keep saying "our" but in what context?
Both, globalist treaties further erode both.
 
Both, globalist treaties further erode both.

You did not answer the question. Put another way:

We do not even have a right to Private Property. What "individual" sovereignty are you talking about?
 
List them.
I'm not going to waste the time, there are too many.

We do not live in the USSR, there are many countries currently that violate their citizens' rights far worse than the US.

If we had nothing left to lose you wouldn't be so concerned with all of the ways we might lose more.
 
I'm not going to waste the time, there are too many.

We do not live in the USSR, there are many countries currently that violate their citizens' rights far worse than the US.

If we had nothing left to lose you wouldn't be so concerned with all of the ways we might lose more.


You said: "The few rights we still have."

List 3.

Go ahead, I dare you.

Unless you can't.
 
You said: "The few rights we still have."

List 3.

Go ahead, I dare you.

Unless you can't.
We still have the right to own guns.
We still have the right to speak freely.
We still have the right to free exercise of religion.
There are some infringements but we are much better off than most other countries

That's just three, don't play stupid games, we have much left to lose.
 
We still have the right to own guns.
We still have the right to speak freely.
We still have the right to free exercise of religion.
There are some infringements but we are much better off than most other countries

That's just three, don't play stupid games, we have much left to lose.

Stupid games?

You are being appeased. You have none of those rights.

"We still have the right to own guns." Until you are pulled over by LEO and told to immediately disarm. Or answer your own door and told to immediately surrender your weapon.

"We still have the right to speak freely." Until you are told to move on, otherwise the onus is on you by way of court battles and attorney fees.

"We still have the right to free exercise of religion." This can be thread of its own.

"Some infringements"? Even the Bill of Rights was written to limit your rights and grant the government more power than you.


I asked you to list 3 Rights and you failed to do so.
 
Stupid games?

You are being appeased. You have none of those rights.

"We still have the right to own guns." Until you are pulled over by LEO and told to immediately disarm. Or answer your own door and told to immediately surrender your weapon.

"We still have the right to speak freely." Until you are told to move on, otherwise the onus is on you by way of court battles and attorney fees.

"We still have the right to free exercise of religion." This can be thread of its own.

"Some infringements"? Even the Bill of Rights was written to limit your rights and grant the government more power than you.


I asked you to list 3 Rights and you failed to do so.
More stupid games.

We have far more rights than most of humanity has or has had throughout history.

Perfectionism is good for setting goals but taken too far it is the sin of ingratitude.
 
More stupid games.

We have far more rights than most of humanity has or has had throughout history.

Perfectionism is good for setting goals but taken too far it is the sin of ingratitude.


Your response is exactly the reason you have no rights. And before one can have those rights, the most important right cannot be rejected.
 
The head of Mexico's immigration agency, Tonatiuh Guillén, tendered his resignation to President Andrés Manuel López Obrador on Friday, according to the Associated Press. It is unclear whether Guillén quit voluntarily or was asked to step down.
Tonatiuh-Guille%CC%81n-Lo%CC%81pez.jpg

López Óbrador acknowledged earlier Friday that controls are lacking at dozens of migrant crossing points at the country's southern border, and vowed to correct the situation.
stopping%20migrants1c.png

"We have identified 68 crossings like that, and in all of them there will be oversight," said López Óbrador during a morning news conference.
The president, who took office Dec. 1, attributed the problem to residual corruption at the National Migration Institute and the customs agency and noted that more than 500 immigration workers have been let go as part of a purge.
We are cleaning house, but this work takes time,” López Obrador said. -AP
Mexico has taken steps over the past few months to step up enforcement in southern Mexico - seeing up highway checkpoints and more recently raiding a Central American migrant caravan to keep them from boarding the infamous northbound train known as "the beast."
Trump to step up asylum returns

Also on Friday, a Mexican immigration official announced that the United States would be doubling the number of asylum seekers it sends back to Mexico from El Paso, Texas.
Luis Carlos Cano, a spokesman for Mexico’s national immigration agency in Ciudad Juarez, across the border from El Paso, said starting Thursday some 200 asylum seekers per day were being sent back, up from 100 previously.
Under pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump, Mexico agreed last week to expand the program, known as the Migrant Protection Protocols, which forces mostly Central American asylum seekers arriving at the U.S. southern border to remain in Mexico to await the outcome of their U.S. asylum claims. -Reuters
The program, 'Remain in Mexico' has returned close to 12,000 people to Mexico since January.

More at: https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019...esigns-lopez-obrador-vows-crackdown-crossings
 
Long lines of migrants, mostly Central Americans, line up daily outside the Tapachula offices of the refugee agencies of Mexico and the United Nations.
Meanwhile, a polyglot throng including people from Africa, Asia and the Caribbean regularly gathers at the local headquarters of the National Institute of Immigration, Mexico's agency for migrant affairs.
Almost all those seeking help have a common destination - the United States - but they find themselves caught in an expanding Mexican immigration crackdown prompted by U.S. pressure and marooned in this sweltering city in southern Mexico.


In recent weeks, Mexican authorities have set up immigration checkpoints along the main northbound highway and have been aggressively detaining and deporting thousands of migrants.
The law enforcement squeeze seems destined to tighten with Mexico's vow to deploy some 6,000 National Guard forces to its southern border as part of a deal reached last week with the Trump administration to avert U.S. tariffs.


The Mexican strategy is a familiar one: Position checkpoints on the limited number of roads radiating north from the notoriously porous Guatemalan border, which stretches for some 600 miles along jungle, mountain and river terrain. The idea is to bottle up and detain migrants in the south. Mexico also appears to have stepped up enforcement against northbound freight trains, another popular mode of migrant travel.
In March, the Mexican interior minister, Olga Sanchez Cordero, said Mexico planned to create an enforcement containment belt along the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, Mexico's narrowest point, about 125 miles across from the Pacific to the Gulf of Mexico, to keep the migrant flow from advancing north.
The current scenario in the southern state of Chiapas is far removed from the atmosphere of months past, when tens of thousands of Central Americans - both in organized caravans and in small groups - moved freely through the corridor. Many were quickly granted humanitarian visas as part of Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's vow to assist migrants. The welcome mat has now been yanked.
Mexican officials reported deporting more than 30,000 foreigners during April and May, almost 70% more than during the same period a year earlier. Police also broke up the two most recent northbound migrant caravans, arresting hundreds.

Migrants who make it to Tapachula, some 20 miles north of the Guatemalan border, say they have little choice but to remain and apply for immigration paperwork - visas, temporary visitor permits, refugee status or departure documents that give recipients 30 days to get out of Mexico. But it has become a tortuous waiting game.

More at: https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/worl...down-spurred-by-us/ar-AACVAdT?ocid=spartanntp
 
Mexican officials have detained nearly 800 undocumented migrants discovered in four trucks in eastern Mexico in four trucks
Mexico's National Migration Institute (INM) said in a statement late on Saturday that 791 foreign nationals were found in the trucks stopped in the eastern state of Veracruz, confirming earlier reports of mass arrests.
The discovery of the illegal immigrants was one of the biggest swoops by the INM in recent months.

More at: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...ly-800-undocumented-migrants-four-trucks.html
 
Mexico's efforts to slow Central American migration across its territory showed some bite Monday as some people turned around to head south in the face of increased enforcement, while government officials said they would target human smuggling rings.One government official announced that the 6,000 National Guard members who officials had repeatedly said would be sent to the southern border will actually be distributed across the northern border and other areas as well, while another suggested measures were showing results.
A senior Mexican official, who requested anonymity to discuss negotiations with the U.S., said that three weeks ago about 4,200 migrants were arriving at the U.S. border daily and that now that number has dropped to about 2,600 per day. The official warned it was too early to draw conclusions from such a small window, but that Mexico was optimistic its measures would work.
On the Suchiate river that forms part of Mexico's southern border with Guatemala, usually bustling cross-water commerce appeared to slow at this border town a day after just a half dozen marines showed up on the Mexican shore.
Tomas Leyva, a 65-year-old construction worker turned pastor from El Salvador, was preparing to board a raft back to Guatemala. Saying he fled his home under threat from a gang, he planned to return later to Mexico vis the border bridge and apply for asylum at an official immigration control station .


More at: https://news.yahoo.com/mexico-target-human-traffickers-immigration-143550750.html
 
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