Wednesday, June 17, 2020

PELOSI'S INVASION OF UNREGISTERED DEMOCRAT VOTERS - DRUGS & ILLEGALS FOUND IN AZ STASH HOUSE NEAR NON-BORDER

New York Democrat Explains How Defunding Police Will Help Gangs Like MS-13

Julio Rosas
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Posted: Jun 17, 2020 12:50 PM
New York Democrat Explains How Defunding Police Will Help Gangs Like MS-13
Source: AP Photo/Moises Castillo
Steve Bellone, the County Executive for New York's Suffolk County, told "Fox & Friends" on Wednesday that while county leadership understands the protests that were sparked after George Floyd's death, it is wrong to try to remedy it by defunding the police as it will help violent gangs, like MS-13.
Progressive activists and politicians across the country are calling for the defunding, and the dismantling, of police departments as they view them as being too far gone to be reformed. In Seattle, protesters are occupying a few city blocks around the police's East Precinct and have repeatedly called for the city's police department to be abolished in favor of a community-based approach. 
"But this notion of defunding the police and what it implies that somehow we don’t need the police doesn’t make any sense. It may make for catchy slogan at a protest, but as a matter of public policy, it just doesn’t work," Bellone, a Democrat, said.
"The fact of the matter is crime has not gone away. Every day there are bad people out there trying to do bad things and it could be property crimes, violent crimes, domestic violence incidents. We have our police officers breaking up sex trafficking rings and battling brutal criminal organizations like MS-13 to get them off our streets. Just this past week we had somebody walk into one of our local hospitals with a backpack that had explosives and hatchet concealed and it was an off-duty police officer that saw something suspicious that ultimately allowed our detectives to apprehend this individual and prevent a tragedy from happening," he continued.
Bellone praised the over 100 protests that have occurred within the county as being peaceful and said they have not experienced any of the destructive looting that the rest of the country experienced.

"I think as we move forward and look at criminal justice here in the state, they are starting to look at the court system and how do we make that independent, how we select judges. I think this isn’t just policing. We need to have a broader conversation. The police are out there doing the most difficult work, putting their own safety on the line every day. And we need to recognize that even in the midst of what is happening in our country," he said.


 Drugs, Migrants Found in Arizona Stash House near Border

Nogales Station Border Patrol agents apprehend 21 migrants found in a human smuggling stash house near the Arizona border. (Photo: U.S. Border Patrol/Tucson Sector)
Photo: U.S. Border Patrol/Tucson Sector
2:48

Tucson Sector Border Patrol agents discovered a human stash house on Friday. The raid followed a traffic stop by Nogales, Arizona, police officers which identified two Mexican illegal immigrants in a vehicle.
Nogales Station Border Patrol agents responded on Friday to a request for assistance from the city’s police department after an officer stopped a vehicle believed to be carrying migrants from Mexico, according to information obtained from Tucson Sector Border Patrol officials. Agents responded and identified the two passengers of a Honda sedan as Mexican nationals illegally present in the United States. The agents arrested the driver and the two smuggled aliens and transported them to the station for processing and investigation.
Border Patrol agents contacted U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Homeland Security Investigations special agents questioned the two aliens and leaned about a nearby human smuggling stash house, officials stated. The Border Patrol and HSI agents went to the residence and found 21 Mexican nationals inside the home. Officials stated all 21 were illegally present in the United States.
During a search of the property, the agents also found two pounds of fentanyl.
Agents transported the 21 Mexican nationals to the Nogales Station where they undergo a medical screening and criminal background investigation. During the criminal background records check, the agents identified one of the Mexican men as a previously deported member of the Surenos street gang.
The gang member now faces federal felony charges for illegal re-entry after removal as a member of a dangerous gang. If convicted he could face up to 20 years in federal prison.
The agents arrested the driver of the Honda sedan carrying the first two migrants. He faces federal felony charges relating to human smuggling.
Officials did not disclose if they found a manager of the stash house or if anyone is being charged in connection to the fentanyl discovered in the stash house.
The remaining illegal immigrants will be processed for removal under Title 42 Coronavirus protection protocols put in place by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Nearly all migrants apprehended by Border Patrol agents are currently being removed under those protocol upon completion of a medical screening and biometric background investigation.
Bob Price serves as associate editor and senior news contributor for the Breitbart Texas-Border team. He is an original member of the Breitbart Texas team. Price is a regular panelist on Fox 26 Houston’s What’s Your Point? Sunday-morning talk show. Follow him on Twitter @BobPriceBBTX and Facebook.



State and Local Politicians Move to Grant Coronavirus Relief to Illegal Aliens

By Matthew Tragesser

 

Study: More than 7-in-10 California Immigrant

Welfare




More than 7-in-10 households headed by immigrants in the state of California are on taxpayer-funded welfare, a new study reveals.

The latest Census Bureau data analyzed by the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS) finds that about 72 percent of households headed by noncitizens and immigrants use one or more forms of taxpayer-funded welfare programs in California — the number one immigrant-receiving state in the U.S.
Meanwhile, only about 35 percent of households headed by native-born Americans use welfare in California.
All four states with the largest foreign-born populations, including California, have extremely high use of welfare by immigrant households. In Texas, for example, nearly 70 percent of households headed by immigrants use taxpayer-funded welfare. Meanwhile, only about 35 percent of native-born households in Texas are on welfare.
In New York and Florida, a majority of households headed by immigrants and noncitizens are on welfare. Overall, about 63 percent of immigrant households use welfare while only 35 percent of native-born households use welfare.
President Trump’s administration is looking to soon implement a policy that protects American taxpayers’ dollars from funding the mass importation of welfare-dependent foreign nationals by enforcing a “public charge” rule whereby legal immigrants would be less likely to secure a permanent residency in the U.S. if they have used any forms of welfare in the past, including using Obamacare, food stamps, and public housing.
The immigration controls would be a boon for American taxpayers in the form of an annual $57.4 billion tax cut — the amount taxpayers spend every year on paying for the welfare, crime, and schooling costs of the country’s mass importation of 1.5 million new, mostly low-skilled legal immigrants.
As Breitbart News reported, the majority of the more than 1.5 million foreign nationals entering the country every year use about 57 percent more food stamps than the average native-born American household. Overall, immigrant households consume 33 percent more cash welfare than American citizen households and 44 percent more in Medicaid dollars. This straining of public services by a booming 44 million foreign-born population translates to the average immigrant household costing American taxpayers $6,234 in federal welfare.
John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter at @JxhnBinder. 

ORANGE BABOON TRUMP ATTEMPTS TO STOP JOHN BOLTEN'S BOOK - WHAT IS TRUMP AFRAID OF US SEEING?

by Korva Coleman and Jill Hudson

First Up

Former national security adviser John Bolton, seen in February, is scheduled to publish a memoir of his time with the Trump administration on June 23, and the Justice Department is trying to block publication.
Mark Humphrey/AP
Here's what we're following today.

A week before the scheduled June 23 release of a tell-all book of John Bolton's tenure as President Trump's national security adviser, the Trump administration mounted a last-ditch effort to block its publication. The Justice Department’s civil lawsuit says the publication of Bolton’s memoir, The Room Where It Happened, would be a violation of nondisclosure agreements and compromise national security. Publisher Simon & Schuster said the book, "shows a President addicted to chaos, who embraced our enemies and spurned our friends, and was deeply suspicious of his own government."
The Latest Book in the President's Way
The Trump Administration is no stranger to lawsuits meant to silence former lieutenants by preventing them from publishing tell-all books, and as of yesterday, John Bolton's forthcoming memoir is the latest to come under fire, with the Department of Justice claiming the book is rife with classified information. 

The Bolton publishing fracas is a swamp game that needs to end




Having failed to knock President Trump from office, former national security adviser John Bolton is working on a second swing at the president, this time with the release of his tell-all memoirs just ahead of elections.  He's running into interference from the White House, however, which is raising questions as to whether "public service" should always entitle an official to hold a policy sword over the president's head or make a big bundle of cash.
According to the Wall Street Journal:
The U.S. on Tuesday filed a breach-of-contract lawsuit against former national security adviser John Bolton, seeking to delay the publication of his book, which the suit alleges contains classified information that could compromise national security.
The lawsuit, filed by the Justice Department and the U.S. attorney's office in Washington, accuses Mr. Bolton of breaching the contract he signed as a condition of his employment and to access classified information. The suit marked the latest effort by the Trump administration to block the publication of "The Room Where It Happened" — set for June 23 — which is expected to be harshly critical of President Trump.
"We are reviewing the Government's complaint and will respond in due course," said Mr. Bolton's lawyer, Charles Cooper.
The book's publisher, Simon & Schuster, said in a statement Tuesday that the lawsuit is "nothing more than the latest in a long running series of efforts by the Administration to quash publication of a book it deems unflattering to the President."
The press is framing the issue as one of transparency, and Trump being a dictator.  Bolton is using the controversy to gin up sales — everyone is now supposed to think there must be something really juicy inside, so buy the book.
The reality is, book publishing by people with high classified security clearances has always been a matter of contentious disputes.  In most cases, the argument is about over-classification of material, but it's often about claims of suppressing whistleblowers, too.  The Frank Snepp Decent Interval book case of 1977, the 1974 Victor Marchetti and John D. Marks book The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence case, and a couple of others were all in these categories.  There also was the repulsive case of apparent CIA double agent, or traitor agent  Philip Agee, who got his jollies from publishing the names of CIA officers for the benefit of his communist masters, actually getting one of them killed.  His 1975 CIA memoir was called Inside the Company: A CIA Diary, which was effectively aid to the enemy disguised as whistleblowing.  Agee spent his last years in Caracas and died a miserable death in Havana in 2008, like his buddy Hugo Chávez, a victim of Castrocare.
With Bolton, it's simply about taking out the president.  The Trumpsters can see this, which is why they are hurling the "classified" weapon.  In the Journal article, Trump officials marveled at how quickly Bolton got the book done — almost as if he had been writing "dear diary" every night after work.  And Trump said he gave Bolton "a break" in hiring him, which has got to make them mad.  We never saw this sort of thing with those last CIA memoir disputes.
Vindictive or not, protective of secrets or not, the bottom line to the rest of us is that presidential appointments to some are now seen as money-making opportunities, not chances to serve the country.  Book publishing has long been a conduit to launder such "earnings" — the money the Obamas have raked in since leaving the presidency is a recent example.  It seems to have gotten off the ground from the example of Russian "reform" premier Anatoli Chubais, an old Clinton ally, whose $450,000 book deal pretty well killed off popular support for free-market reforms in Russia.
It's an established swamp game, and anyone who lands a White House appointment now gets a publishing kickback if he wants one.
How exactly does this setup serve the country?  How does it serve the president who appoints these people, only to see them hold those profits for themselves as a primary aim and the blackmail potential to the president as another?  Do as I say or read my tell-all book? 
Trump's fight against these ungrateful officials seems feeble, indeed, with the use of the too-much-classified-information argument.  The problem is one of character and a system that seems set up to reward this kind of mercenary behavior.  It doesn't serve Trump, but more importantly, it doesn't serve us, to see the person we elected always fighting for his political life.  There probably ought to be a law out that public service needs to be public service, and any of this service as a means of memoir-profiteering needs to end.  In any case, the country is ill served by self-serving swamp things whose first priority is to use their public office as a means to undercut leaders they don't like and, worse still, feed at the trough.
Caricature by DonkeyHotey via Flickr.

“Our entire crony capitalist system, Democrat and Republican alike, has become a kleptocracy approaching par with third-world hell-holes.  This is the way a great country is raided by its elite.” ---- Karen McQuillan  AMERICAN THINKER.com



 

#1 New York Times Bestseller!
Peter Schweizer has been fighting corruption―and winning―for years. In Throw Them All Out, he exposed insider trading by members of Congress, leading to the passage of the STOCK Act. In Extortion, he uncovered how politicians use mafia-like tactics to enrich themselves. And in Clinton Cash, he revealed the Clintons’ massive money machine and sparked an FBI investigation.
Now he explains how a new corruption has taken hold, involving larger sums of money than ever before. Stuffing tens of thousands of dollars into a freezer has morphed into multibillion-dollar equity deals done in the dark corners of the world.
An American bank opening in China would be prohibited by US law from hiring a slew of family members of top Chinese politicians. However, a Chinese bank opening in America can hire anyone it wants. It can even invite the friends and families of American politicians to invest in can’t-lose deals.
President Donald Trump’s children have made front pages across the world for their dicey transactions. However, the media has barely looked into questionable deals made by those close to Barack Obama, Joe Biden, John Kerry, Mitch McConnell, and lesser-known politicians who have been in the game longer.
In many parts of the world, the children of powerful political figures go into business and profit handsomely, not necessarily because they are good at it, but because people want to curry favor with their influential parents. This is a relatively new phenomenon in the United States. But for relatives of some prominent political families, we may already be talking about hundreds of millions of dollars.
Deeply researched and packed with shocking revelations, Secret Empires identifies public servants who cannot be trusted and provides a path toward a more accountable government.

Kushner, Inc.: Greed. Ambition. Corruption. The Extraordinary Story of Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump Hardcover – March 19, 2019

·         Hardcover: 304 pages
·         Publisher: St. Martin's Press (March 19, 2019)
·         Language: English
·         ISBN-10: 1250185947
·         ISBN-13: 978-1250185945

 

Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump are the self-styled Prince and Princess of America. Their swift, gilded rise to extraordinary power in Donald Trump’s White House is unprecedented and dangerous. In Kushner, Inc., investigative journalist Vicky Ward digs beneath the myth the couple has created, depicting themselves as the voices of reason in an otherwise crazy presidency, and reveals that Jared and Ivanka are not just the President’s chief enablers: they, like him, appear disdainful of rules, of laws, and of ethics. They are entitled inheritors of the worst kind; their combination of ignorance, arrogance, and an insatiable lust for power has caused havoc all over the world, and may threaten the democracy of the United States.
Ward follows their trajectory from New Jersey and New York City to the White House, where the couple’s many forays into policy-making and national security have mocked long-standing U.S. policy and protocol. They have pursued an agenda that could increase their wealth while their actions have mostly gone unchecked. In Kushner, Inc., Ward holds Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump accountable: she unveils the couple’s self-serving transactional motivations and how those have propelled them into the highest levels of the US government where no one, the President included, has been able to stop them.

ANN COULTER - SWAMP KEEPER DONALD TRUMP AND HIS PARASITIC FAMILY

One cautionary example is President Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, whose ticket into Harvard, according to the 2006 book The Price of Admission: How America’s Ruling Class Buys Its Way into Elite Colleges, was his father’s $2.5 million dollar gift to the university. Jared got his Harvard degree, but he has been the butt of social-media taunts precisely because his daddy had to pay a fortune to get the school to admit him. The cost of a brag-worthy degree? Millions. The cost of the right- and left-brain stuff? Priceless.

THE TRUMP FAMILY FOUNDATION SLUSH FUND…. Will they see jail?
VISUALIZE REVOLUTION!.... We know where they live!

“Underwood is a Democrat and is seeking millions of dollars in penalties. She wants Trump and his eldest children barred from running other charities.”



Coulter: All Hail President Javanka!



ANN COULTER
 10 Apr 2019111
2:52

While other reporters waste their time examining Donald Trump’s public statements, interviewing his high school classmates and poring over legal filings, investigative reporter Vicky Ward has produced the definitive book on our current president.

For example, did you know our president got breast implants in high school (Ivanka claimed she was just “curvy”), bought his way into Harvard (Jared is even dumber than you thought), and together have no books in their New York apartment? (Some dispute that there are no books, citing “a few art books” or “decorator-curated books.”)

Ward’s recently released blockbuster, 
Kushner, Inc.: Greed. Ambition. Corruption. The Extraordinary Story of Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump, tells you all this and more about our actual commander in chief: President Javanka.

On the bright side, Jared has stopped rolling his eyes so much about his father-in-law now that Trump is president, er, “president.” Until Trump’s nomination was a virtual lock, Jared was back in New York pretending not to be related to him.

Only after Trump had racked up a slew of primary wins did a lightbulb go on in Jared’s head: Hey! This presidential campaign could be great for business! According to a close associate, Jared viewed the campaign as a terrific “networking opportunity.”

In short order, Jared moved himself in, and moved campaign manager Corey Lewandowski out.

Trump’s loyal campaign manager had been with him through the “Mexican rapists” speech, Macy’s dumping Trump’s ties, the “McCain isn’t a war hero” controversy, the Muslim ban, the “hand size” embarrassment, and on and on and on. But when all was said and done and Trump was still cruising to victory, Jared and Ivanka walked in and delivered an ultimatum to Trump: “It’s Corey or us.” 
Jared would later shyly cop to being “[The Man Who] Won Trump the White House,” as a Forbes magazine cover story put it. 
And who understood the beating heart of the Trump voter like Jared and Ivanka? With Javanka in charge, the campaign schedule was soon bristling with such items as “women’s empowerment week,” “education week” and “entrepreneur week.” 
In no time, Trump was 16 points down and sinking fast. Steve Bannon was brought in, whereupon he promptly threw out all the Working Women’s Intersectional Global Warming weeks and got back to Trump’s issues. 
Jared assured Bannon that the campaign had $25 million on hand. That’s when Bannon had to explain “debits” to Kushner. The campaign had $25 million — provided you didn’t count all the unpaid expenses. When those were included, it turned out the campaign was in debt. 
As the SAT board had discovered, math wasn’t Jared’s strong suit. 
Although it has been well reported that Jared’s Harvard admission was purchased for him by his father, Ward produces a shocking new detail. Of the five tracks at Jared’s high school, he wasn’t at the bottom of track one, perhaps suitable for a lesser Ivy League with solid SAT scores. He wasn’t even in track two. Jared was in track three. But now he has co-opted the Make America Great Again movement for his own personal advancement. I guess that makes him smarter than Trump. 
Apart from staging photo-ops, including her “princess moment” at the inaugural ball (her words), Ivanka’s first order of business upon winning the presidency was assigning White House office space. Her map showed a big office for her, a big office for Jared — and also a nice corner office, which was designated “Trump family office.” 
Transition officials, Ward reports, “were surprised that the first lady did not appear to have an office. So, too, was Melania Trump, who quickly put an end to Ivanka’s scheming.” 
Jared’s BFF, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS), and the crown prince of Abu Dhabi, Muhammad bin Zayed (MBZ), refer to Jared as “the clown prince.” Bone-cutter MBS assured those around him that he had Jared “in my pocket.” 
MBS and MBZ derided Jared’s Middle East peace plan as infantile, while using him to achieve their objective: war with Qatar. According to an American businessman’s leaked emails, their attitude was, “Nobody would even waste a cup of coffee on him if it wasn’t for who he is married to.” 
As one former top White House official explained: “Jared never understands the details of anything. He’s just impressed by names.” 
Following meetings at the White House and also with the Kushners over their 666 Fifth Avenue property, former Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim reported back to the emir that “the people atop the new administration were heavily motivated by personal financial interest.” 
After Ivanka’s speech introducing her father at the Republican National Convention — rivaled only by Billy Carter’s introduction of his brother, Jimmy! — she tweeted from her personal account: “Shop Ivanka’s look from her #RNC speech.” 
After the Trump family was interviewed on CBS’s “60 Minutes,” Ivanka’s company emailed out a “style alert” advertising the $10,800 diamond bracelet she’d worn on the show — “available from Ivanka Trump Fine Jewelry.” 
Ivanka has managed to win a slew of trademarks in China since her father became the Figurehead President, with several approvals being fast-tracked at about the same time Trump was hosting Chinese President Xi Jinping at Mar-a-Lago. 
Instead of “Make America Great Again,” the motto of the Trump presidency is, as one of Trump’s legal spokesmen put it: “The advance team for Jared and Ivanka.” 
This is not what anyone voted for. 

One cautionary example is President Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, whose ticket into Harvard, according to the 2006 book The Price of Admission: How America’s Ruling Class Buys Its Way into Elite Colleges, was his father’s $2.5 million dollar gift to the university. Jared got his Harvard degree, but he has been the butt of social-media taunts precisely because his daddy had to pay a fortune to get the school to admit him. The cost of a brag-worthy degree? Millions. The cost of the right- and left-brain stuff? Priceless.

A VERY STABLE GENIUS


“This taut and terrifying book is among the most closely observed accounts of Donald J. Trump’s shambolic tenure in office to date.” - Dwight Garner, The New York Times

THE BOOK

Washington Post national investigative reporter Carol Leonnig and White House bureau chief Philip Rucker, both Pulitzer Prize winners, provide the definitive insider narrative of Donald Trump’s unique presidency with shocking new reporting and insight into its implications.
“I alone can fix it.” So went Donald J. Trump’s march to the presidency on July 21, 2016, when he accepted the Republican presidential nomination in Cleveland, promising to restore what he described as a fallen nation. Yet over the subsequent years, as he has undertaken the actual work of the commander in chief, it has been hard to see beyond the daily chaos of scandal, investigation, and constant bluster. It would be all too easy to mistake Trump’s first term for one of pure and uninhibited chaos, but there were patterns to his behavior and that of his associates. The universal value of the Trump administration is loyalty - not to the country, but to the president himself - and Trump’s North Star has been the perpetuation of his own power, even when it meant imperiling our shaky and mistrustful democracy.
Leonnig and Rucker, with deep and unmatched sources throughout Washington, D.C., tell of rages and frenzies but also moments of courage and perseverance. Relying on scores of exclusive new interviews with some of the most senior members of the Trump administration and other firsthand witnesses, the authors reveal the forty-fifth president up close, taking readers inside Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation as well as the president’s own haphazard but ultimately successful legal defense. Here for the first time certain officials who have felt honor-bound not to publicly criticize a sitting president or to divulge what they witnessed in a position of trust tell the truth for the benefit of history.
This peerless and gripping narrative reveals President Trump at his most unvarnished and exposes how decision making in his administration has been driven by a reflexive logic of self-preservation and self-aggrandizement - but a logic nonetheless. This is the story of how an unparalleled president has scrambled to survive and tested the strength of America’s democracy and its common heart as a nation.