Saturday, April 27, 2024

Drag Queen Makes Tiny Kids Chant "Free Palestine"

 by Steve Watson   26th April 2024

The event was titled "Queer Storytime for Palestine"

Video has emerged of a drag queen leading children barely older than toddler age in chanting “Free Palestine” during a so called “Queer Storytime for Palestine” event in Massachusetts.

The event, featuring a drag queen going by the name of ‘Lil Miss Hot Mess’, took place earlier this month at the Northampton Center for the Arts.

The event was advertised by the organisers as “dancing, celebrating Palestine culture, learning about queer heroes and doing arts and crafts.”

According to the hosts, Valley Families for Palestine, profits from the event were donated to alQaws, a Palestinian organisation that is “working for queer liberation.”

Video captured at the event shows ‘Hot Mess’ reading her book titled “If You’re a Drag Queen and You Know It,” and ordering the kids “If you’re a drag queen and you know it shout ‘Free Palestine.'”

Video has emerged of a drag queen leading children barely older than toddler age in chanting “Free Palestine” during a so called “Queer Storytime for Palestine” event in Massachusetts. Full report here: https://t.co/RLzl7S1ZC2 pic.twitter.com/cbcnVkQh6I— m o d e r n i t y (@ModernityNews) April 26, 2024

First off, gay people are at best severely disrespected, and at worst murdered in Gaza and other Palestinian areas. In terms of how gay-friendly it is, The LGBT Equality Index ranks Palestine as 192 out of 197 countries. Syria, Somalia and Yemen are ranked as more open to homosexuality.

It’s safe to say that a drag queen encouraging American kindergarteners to say ‘free Palestine’ is not really going to shift the needle as far as that situation is concerned.

Amherst, MA – Valley Families for Palestine puts on ‘Queer Storytime for Palestine’ in which toddlers are recorded chanting “Free Palestine”.

The harsh reality? Members of the LGBTQ+ community are often murdered in Gaza and other Palestinian areas such as Ramallah. pic.twitter.com/b8qwU4ycR3— StopAntisemitism (@StopAntisemites) April 24, 2024

Secondly, these children are clearly being subjected to a double dose of ideological and political indoctrination.

What’s next? Queer Palestine vaccine furry Ukraine drag queen story time?

Who in their right minds are taking their kids to this kind of thing? What do they expect will come of it?

Some people don't deserve to be parents: pic.twitter.com/ALAGhKXHdw— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) April 25, 2024

Friday, April 26, 2024

It's Cartoon/Meme Time! #373



















BREAKING: ANOTHER BANK FAILURE: Regulators Seize Philadelphia-Based Republic First Bancorp

Another one!

Regulators seized Philadelphia-based Republic First Bancorp on Friday.

“Republic First operated branches in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York under the name Republic Bank. It had around $6 billion in total assets at the end of 2023.” – The Wall Street Journal reported.

This is the fourth bank failure since last March on Joe Biden’s watch.

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) was appointed as receiver by Pennsylvania state regulators and immediately entered into an agreement with Fulton Bank to assume assets and deposits of Republic First Bancorp.

“Philadelphia-based Republic Bank was closed late today by Pennsylvania bank regulators, which appointed the FDIC as receiver. To protect depositors, we entered into an agreement with Fulton Bank to assume substantially all deposits and assets of Republic,” the FDIC said in a statement on Friday.

“Republic Bank’s 32 branches in New Jersey, Pennsylvania and New York will reopen as branches of Fulton Bank on Saturday (for branches with normal Saturday hours) or on Monday during normal business hours. This evening and over the weekend, depositors of Republic Bank can access their money by writing checks or using ATM or debit cards. Checks drawn on Republic Bank will continue to be processed and loan customers should continue to make their payments as usual,” the FDIC said.

“Depositors of Republic Bank will become depositors of Fulton Bank so customers do not need to change their banking relationship in order to retain their deposit insurance coverage. Customers of Republic Bank should continue to use their existing branches until they receive notice from Fulton Bank that it has completed systems changes that will allow its branch offices to process their accounts as well,” the FDIC said.

Last month trading of Long Island lender New York Community Bancorp halted on the New York Stock Exchange after its shares tumbled more than 40%.

The regional bank announced a $1 billion capital raise later that day.

Last March Moody’s Investors Service cut its outlook for the entire US banking sector to negative and put six banks on ‘downgrade’ watch.

Silicon Valley Bank, First Republic Bank and Signature Bank failed last year after depositors withdrew billions of dollars from the lending institutions.

Tucker Carlson: How do we know the 2020 election was stolen?

 People who committed the fraud have admitted it in a new poll

Notes From Princeton Activists Show Coordination Between Campus Radicals and Outside Groups Aimed at Outfoxing University Administrators

Columbia University protesters are training and coordinating with their peers around the country, notes show!

Organizers of the Columbia University encampment advised activists at Princeton on how to take over their own campus, giving them tips on disrupting university operations and stressing that there is "safety in numbers," according to documents obtained by the Washington Free Beacon.

The tips were dispensed last week during a meeting between Aditi Rao, a Ph.D. student at Princeton who has defended calls for intifada, and members of Columbia's encampment. Rao relayed the advice to her fellow Princeton activists in a strategy session last Saturday, notes from which were obtained by the Free Beacon.

The Columbia organizers had spent weeks hashing out a plan to kneecap the university's core functions and put administrators in an impossible position. If activists at Princeton wanted to pull off a similar coup, there were some things they should know.

Pick a site "that is public and that [the] University needs," Columbia's organizers advised, noting that they had targeted the quad where commencement takes place. "Don't pick the site of historic occupations," such as libraries or the president's office, since the university will simply move its operations to a "different building."

Finding the right target could take time, the organizers said. At Columbia, they were "planning for over a month."

The meeting notes, which have not been previously reported, are part of a tranche of documents that detail how a highly organized group of activists—including dozens of faculty—planned to paralyze Princeton by copying the Columbia playbook. Key to their strategy was the anticipated fecklessness of administrators, who at Columbia have refused to enforce their own deadlines to clear the encampment and, in past protests, would reinstate students within days of suspending them.

"Columbia thinks they will get suspensions cleared," notes from the meeting read.

As anti-Israel encampments consume campuses across the country—the latest was set up at George Washington University on Thursday—some activists have portrayed the chaos as a spontaneous response to a six-month-old war, triggered by organic horror at its mounting humanitarian toll. The materials from Princeton undercut that narrative, offering a rare look at the planning and coordination that have shaped these protests and made them so hard for universities to navigate.

Part of the playbook involves leveraging outside activists, including activist attorneys, to overwhelm campuses while shielding students from legal blowback. The group at Princeton "already has contacts with local Pro-Palestine orgs who are ready to mobilize," notes from a Sunday planning session state, and will "turn to local civil rights groups" if "students of color" get arrested.

Led largely by graduate students, the group also retained Palestine Legal, which represents students who "stand for justice in Palestine," for advice on protest tactics, according to audio from a Wednesday Zoom call obtained by the Free Beacon. Rao and Palestine Legal did not respond to requests for comment.

Columbia's encampment has been especially controversial because many protesters—including some who appear to be affiliated with the university—have hurled anti-Semitic insults at Jewish students and even called for their execution. Those optics seem to be top of mind for the Princeton organizers, who on Monday received media training from the Institute for Middle East Understanding, a nonprofit that offers "digital resources about Palestine."

Led by the institute's communications manager, Amber Von Schassen, who declined to comment on the record, the training advised organizers to "be wary of academic jargon" and to "emphasize free speech" as an "American value," according to notes from the training first reported by National Review.

There are "lots of free speech ppl at Princeton," notes from the Saturday meeting read. Some professors "won't rally around Pro-Palestine but will organize around free speech and for student rights."

To that end, the group conducted outreach to faculty and assembled a spreadsheet of those supportive of the planned protest. Some—including Nancy Coffin, the director of Princeton's Arabic language program—even agreed to hold courses inside the encampment once it was set up, according to the spreadsheet, which indicates that over 20 professors expressed some level of support. Coffin did not respond to a request for comment.

The students seem to be banking on their faculty allies to bail them out in the event they are suspended. "Expulsion is highly unlikely," an onboarding document for potential protesters claims, because "we know that at least 2 faculty members" on the academic discipline committee "are in the Faculty for Justice in Palestine." The Free Beacon was unable to verify the identities of those faculty members.

Princeton's activists are also receiving help from the National Lawyers Guild, according to notes from a Tuesday meeting, and have "secured a criminal defense attorney to be on call" for any arrests.

That attorney, who is not named in the notes, "expects that everyone arrested will be released quickly," the meeting minutes say. Like New York State, New Jersey "has no cash bail."

All of the planning went up in flames Thursday morning when 50 students tried to set up an encampment outside Princeton's Firestone Library. Five minutes and two arrests later, the protest transitioned to a tentless sit-in as Princeton security arrived on the scene, according to National Review. The activists, who had initially planned to shut down a major campus thoroughfare, only managed to occupy a small corner of a large quad.

Though the sit-in swelled by the afternoon, the university has so far kept it on a tight leash, reportedly removing an attendee—former New York Times Middle East bureau chief Chris Hedges—for using a megaphone. The crackdown came after Princeton president Christopher Eisgruber warned that the university would not tolerate encampments, writing in an op-ed Thursday morning that they violate school policy and "can create health and safety risks."

The forceful response appears to have caught the organizers off guard: In meeting notes from Tuesday, they wrote that they were "not expecting [the] same push back as at NYU, Columbia."



https://freebeacon.com/campus/exclusive-notes-from-princeton-activists-show-coordination-between-campus-radicals-and-outside-groups-aimed-at-outfoxing-university-administrators/

These States Are Making It Illegal for Illegal Immigrants to Enter

 

Thousands of miles from the border, red states are taking matters into their own hands as the border crisis persists.


Conservative states across the country—Florida, Iowa, Louisiana, Tennessee, Georgia, and Oklahoma—are taking border security matters into their own hands, proposing or passing legislation targeting illegal immigration.

The Oklahoma legislature just passed a bill designed to prohibit illegal immigrants from entering or living in the state.

HB 4156 states: “A person commits an impermissible occupation if the person is an alien and willfully and without permission enters and remains in the State of Oklahoma without having first obtained legal authorization to enter the United States.”

The bill passed the state House and Senate by wide margins and Gov. Kevin Stitt, a Republican, is expected to sign it into law.

The legislature declared the issue a crisis in the state and stated in the bill: “Throughout the state, law enforcement comes into daily and increasingly frequent contact with foreign nationals who entered the country illegally or who remain here illegally.

“Often, these persons are involved with organized crime such as drug cartels, they have no regard for Oklahoma’s laws or public safety, and they produce or are involved with fentanyl distribution, sex trafficking, and labor trafficking.”

Under the new law, a conviction related to “impermissible occupation” would be considered a misdemeanor, punishable by up to one year in a county jail, a fine of up to $500, or both.

Subsequent offenses are felonies, punishable by up to two years in prison, a fine of up to $1,000, or both.

Illegal immigrants who are barred from the country or have been issued a removal order by an immigration judge, and then enter Oklahoma will face a felony charge carrying a possible sentence of up to two years in prison, a fine of up to $1,000, or both.

In all instances, those found guilty must leave Oklahoma within 72 hours of being convicted or released from custody.

A prison cell block at the El Reno Federal Correctional Institution in El Reno, Okla., on July 16, 2015.

The law requires police to collect fingerprints, photographs, and biometric data, which will be cross-checked with Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation databases.

“The failure of the federal government to address this issue … has turned every state into a border state,” said bill sponsor state Rep. Charles Mr. McCall said in a statement.

“Those who want to work through the process of coming to our country legally are more than welcome to come to Oklahoma; we would love to have them here. We will not reward [illegal immigration] in Oklahoma, and we will protect our state borders.”

U.S. border authorities have apprehended more than 9 million illegal immigrants nationwide under President Joe Biden, according to Customs and Border Protection (CBP) data.

Under the administration’s catch-and-release policy, many have been released into the United States and have taken up residence all over the country.

Texas’ law, Senate Bill 4, makes it a state crime to enter Texas outside legal ports of entry.

The new law was set to go into effect in March, but has been blocked and is currently tied up in the courts.

New Iowa, Tennessee, and Georgia Laws

Earlier this month, Iowa’s Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds signed Senate File 2340 into law.

The new law, which goes into effect July 1, makes it a misdemeanor to be in the state or attempt to enter the state after being deported, denied admission to the United States, or if an individual has an outstanding deportation order.

Being in the state illegally becomes a felony under certain circumstances such as the accused having two or more misdemeanor convictions involving drugs or crimes against a person.

As with the Texas law, it gives judges the discretion to drop the charges if the illegal immigrant agrees to return to the country from which he or she entered the United States.

“Those who come into our country illegally have broken the law, yet Biden refuses to deport them,” Ms. Reynolds stated in a news release.

“This bill gives Iowa law enforcement the power to do what he is unwilling to do: enforce immigration laws already on the books.”

Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee signed a new law this month that requires law enforcement agencies to communicate with federal immigration authorities if they discover people are in the country illegally, requiring in most cases cooperation in the process of identifying, catching, detaining, and deporting them.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott holds a press conference at Shelby Park in Eagle Pass, Texas, on Feb. 4, 2024.

The law takes effect July 1.

“When there is an interaction with law enforcement, it’s important that the appropriate authorities are notified of the status of that individual,” Mr. Lee, a Republican, told reporters after signing the bill into law. “I think that makes sense. So, I’m in support of that legislation.”



Members of the Tennessee House blamed President Biden’s lack of border enforcement for the necessity of the law.

“President Biden’s administration has delivered this pain to our doorsteps,” Tennessee state Rep. Chris Todd said on the House floor.

In Georgia, lawmakers passed House Bill 1105 that would require jailers to check the immigration status of inmates.

The bill is part of an ongoing political response to the February slaying of nursing student Laken Riley on the University of Georgia campus, allegedly by an illegal immigrant from Venezuela.

The man, Jose Antonio Ibarra, was arrested in February on murder and assault charges in the death of the 22-year-old.

Immigration officials say Mr. Ibarra, 26, crossed into the United States illegally in 2022. The Department of Homeland Security confirmed to Sen. Lindsey Graham(R-S.C.)  that Mr. Ibarra was paroled into the country illegally due to “capacity problems” at border detention facilities

The Georgia bill was sent to Republican Gov. Brian Kemp’s desk on April 3 and awaits his signature, at which time most measures would take effect immediately.

Louisiana, Arizona, New Hampshire

Texas’ neighbor, Louisiana, is considering the passage of SB 388, a GOP-led bill that would allow state police to arrest suspected illegal immigrants within the state.

The law passed the chamber on April 8 along party lines and headed to the House, also controlled by Republicans.

“Louisiana is one step closer to securing our border and addressing our illegal immigration crisis,” Republican state Sen. Valarie Hodges, the bill’s sponsor, posted on X.

A National Guard soldier looks across the Rio Grande to Mexico on the border in Eagle Pass, Texas, on May 23, 2022.

The battleground state of Arizona passed a law similar to Texas’ HB 4, but its Democratic Gov. Katy Hobbs vetoed it.

That inspired the Legislature to draft a ballot measure to be put to voters in November that would require businesses to use E-verify. E-verify is a voluntary federal online service for employers to check an employee’s eligibility to work in the United States against Department of Homeland Security and Social Security records.
New Hampshire, which is Republican-led, passed SB 504 allowing police to bring criminal trespassing charges against people suspected of illegally entering the United States from Canada. The measure must be approved by the House to advance.

Cities and Counties

Cities and counties in red and blue states are also pushing back in creative ways to stop illegal immigrants from coming into their jurisdictions.

“They’re basically dumped on their doorstep,” said Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies at the Center for Immigration Studies, a “pro-immigrant, low-immigration” think tank.

In June 2023, New York City under Democratic Mayor Eric Adams sued more than 30 New York local governments alleging they issued unlawful executive orders prohibiting temporary housing for illegal immigrants in their jurisdictions.

Counties such as Orange and Rockland in upstate New York were successful in using local zoning laws to stop the mayor from busing illegal immigrants to live in their hotels.

The state Supreme Court granted Rockland a temporary restraining order against the mayor’s plan after the county argued that local zoning laws bar hotels from operating as shelters.

Orange County was granted a similar ruling.

Likewise, zoning was used by the city of Taunton, Massachusetts, to stop illegal immigrants from living in hotels, Ms. Vaughan said.

In May 2023, the state was paying millions of dollars to house some 120 homeless and migrant families at a local hotel long-term.


(Top) A bus carrying illegal immigrants from Texas arrives at Port Authority Bus Terminal in New York City on Aug. 10, 2022. (Bottom) Illegal immigrants camp outside a hotel where they had previously been housed, as they resist efforts by the city to relocate them, in New York City on Jan. 31, 2023.

Taunton city leaders filed a lawsuit against the hotel, claiming it violated its occupancy limit for nearly four months. The city aims to collect $114,600 in fines.

Residents in these small communities often struggle with housing and obtaining services that illegal immigrants get for free, Ms. Vaughan noted.

“Now paying taxes, essentially, to support these illegal migrants in their town. The schools have to accommodate them. And that’s a huge cost on the local taxpayers,” she said.

In Colorado’s Mesa County, commissioners passed a resolution in February declaring the county a “non-sanctuary county,” and denying shelter and services to illegal aliens sent there by the state or federal government, she said.

Commissioners also passed a resolution to send a letter to Denver Mayor Mike Johnston informing him the county doesn’t plan to help the city deal with its illegal immigrant surge.

Ms. Vaughan said that she believes other states are waiting to see what happens with some of Texas’ laws, such as SB 4, which are aimed at deterring illegal immigration.

“I think the feeling among most state and local officials that I’ve talked to about it is that they are watching and waiting and hoping that the court will draw some boundaries for them on what they can and cannot do,” she said.

Florida’s Laws

When it comes to making life more difficult for illegal immigrants through legislation, Florida has proven as aggressive as Texas.

Besides beefing up law enforcement to help the U.S. Coast Guard spot migrants and sending the Florida National Guard to Texas, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has approved laws to deter illegal aliens from staying in the Sunshine State.

The Republican governor signed SB 1718 in 2023, which was criticized by the left as one of the most anti-illegal immigrant pieces of legislation in the country.

The law mandates that private businesses with 25 or more employees use E-verify, penalizes employers for hiring illegal aliens, and enhances penalties for human smuggling.

Additionally, the bill prohibits issuing a driver’s license to anyone who cannot prove they are lawfully in the United States, and it invalidates ID cards issued to illegal aliens in other states.

Local governments are barred from issuing IDs to illegal aliens, and hospitals must collect and submit data on the costs of providing health care to illegal aliens.

Leftwing groups quickly sued to block portions of the law.

This year, Florida doubled down on legislation..

HB 1451 prohibits counties from funding groups to issue IDs for illegal aliens or accepting IDs of those known to be in the country illegally.
SB 1036 enhances penalties for illegal aliens who are deported and then return to commit a crime in Florida. HB 1589 increases penalties for the offense of driving without a valid driver’s license.

In Florida, Monroe County Sheriff Rick Ramsay, whose jurisdiction covers the Florida Keys, has firsthand knowledge of the drain illegal immigrants have on a community.


(Top) Monroe County Sheriff Rick Ramsay in Marathon, Fla., on March 29, 2024. A Monroe County Sheriff’s Office helicopter in Marathon, Fla., on March 29, 2024. A boat that was used by illegal immigrants to reach the United States, in Marathon, Fla., on March 28, 2024.

Mr. Ramsay cheered the efforts of both Florida and Texas to stop the “invasion” of foreigners.

“Without question, deterrents work,” he told The Epoch Times.

In his county stretching across the Florida Keys, that’s important because local law enforcement often has to pick up the slack when there aren’t enough Border Patrol agents to deal with boatloads of illegal immigrants, he said.

Last year, when hundreds of Haitian and Cuban immigrants came ashore, Mr. Ramsay said his resources were diverted to deal with them that would typically be used to help citizens of Monroe County.

“So it left the locals to have to deal with all these migrants who were coming in who had medical attention, food, sheltering issues, transportation because there was no real [federal] system here,” he said.

If an illegal immigrant has a medical emergency and must be flown to a hospital, that takes away from serving resident taxpayers, he said.

The veteran law enforcement officer of 37 years says the experience has taught him it’s all about messaging.

Illegal aliens talk to each other about which states are friendly and give the best benefits, which cities are sanctuary cities, and which states are more likely to take action against them, he said.

“Thus, we see Florida with a lower amount of migrants coming here,” he said.

But that message has fallen on deaf ears in some places in Florida.

In March, the city of Hialeah in southern Florida voted to admonish the Biden administration for its open border policy because of an influx of illegal immigrants that have drained their resources.

Hialeah’s mayor and city council got creative. It passed an ordinance restricting the rental of RVs, which they believed were being used as housing by illegal aliens from Cuba and Haiti.

The Biden administration came up with an under-the-radar approach to illegal immigration using parole authority.

The parole policy was created years ago to allow presidents to let people in on a case-by-case basis for “urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit.”

The Biden administration, which has been using it on a mass scale, has been criticized for its unprecedented use of the authority.

Behind the scenes, 326,000 illegal immigrants who have been shepherded in under the parole system have landed in Miami, with thousands more arriving at other locations such as Houston, according to the Center for Immigration Studies.

This month, Mr. DeSantis called the program “illegal” and vowed to fight it.

Illegal immigrants wait to be processed by Border Patrol agents after crossing from Mexico, with the U.S.–Mexico border barrier in the background, in Yuma, Ariz., on May 23, 2022.

Texas Efforts

The Texas border with Mexico, snaking some 1,254 miles along the Rio Grande, is the epicenter of America’s border crisis.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s perpetual battle with the Biden administration’s open border policies thrust Texas into the limelight, with other red-state governors lending support.

The Lone Star State has focused on deterrents and enforcement, spending more than $4.5 billion on Operation Lone Star since 2021, with lawmakers allocating another $5.1 billion in 2023.

The program pays for a state-built border wall, more police officers and Texas National Guard members at the border, as well as resources to prosecute and jail illegal immigrants on state charges such as trespassing and evading arrest.

SB 4 was scheduled to go into effect on March 5 but was put on hold after the Biden administration and left-wing nonprofit organizations sued.

Illegal immigrants who enter Texas outside legal ports of entry can be arrested on Class B misdemeanor charges and sentenced to up to six months in jail under SB 4. However, repeat offenders could face second-degree felony charges and sentences of up to 20 years in prison.

Judges are granted leeway under the new Texas law to drop the charges if the illegal immigrants agree to return to Mexico.

The U.S. Supreme Court briefly allowed the law to go into effect after sending it back to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.

The appeals court then halted enforcement while it considers the latest appeal.

Texas has also built several more miles of border wall, and used shipping containers and razor wire to block easy access for illegal immigrants who cross the river from Mexico. The state has added buoys in the middle of the Rio Grande to deter entry as well.

Mr. Abbott has arguably pushed the problem of illegal immigration to the forefront of American politics through Operation Lone Star by busing more than 100,000 illegal immigrants to sanctuary cities such as New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Denver, and Los Angeles, as well as the District of Columbia since 2022. Sanctuary jurisdictions have laws that shield illegal immigrants from federal immigration authorities.
A member of the New York City mayor's immigration office speaks with illegal immigrants who are camping out in front of the Watson Hotel after being evicted, in New York City on Jan. 30, 2023.

With illegal immigrants also being transported to those cities by the Biden administration, the cities quickly became overwhelmed, putting a strain on budgets and wreaking havoc on community resources to provide food, shelter, and medical care.

In New York City, illegal immigrants are housed in hotels and even tents. A plan to use local school gyms as temporary shelters was scrapped after sparking outrage from parents.

New York City’s Democratic Mayor Eric Adams has been a fierce critic of the Texas Republican governor for exporting illegal immigrants, calling him a “bully.”

In January, Mr. Adams signed an executive order stipulating that buses with illegal immigrants must arrive between 8:30 a.m. and noon and give a 32-hour notice to the city.

New York City also filed a lawsuit targeting 17 bus companies for transporting illegal immigrants to the city that same month.
The mayor asked state leaders for help in resettling 68,000 illegal immigrants in the city’s care as of December 2023.

Last summer, New York City faced a multi-billion budget gap due to the growing crisis and initiated cuts to police and fire departments, according to a New York City press release.

During a December 2023 press conference, Mr. Adams acknowledged that “residents are angry” and tired of the crisis.

“It is clear that for the time being, this crisis is going to be carried by the cities,” he said.

Meanwhile, Mr. Abbott’s tactics have become increasingly defiant.

In a dramatic showdown this January, the Texas National Guard seized Shelby Park, which sits on the border, and placed a wire gate at the entrance, blocking U.S. Border Patrol agents from entering unless it was to use the boat ramp for river patrols.

The 47-acre park, owned by the city of Eagle Pass, was being used as a staging area for Border Patrol agents under the direction of the Biden administration to process a wave of thousands of illegal immigrants crossing the Rio Grande in December 2023.

Now, the drainage area inside the park, once teeming with thousands of illegal immigrants, is empty; the Rio Grande flows quietly, primarily undisturbed by unlawful crossings.

Texas National guardsman stand on shipping containers acting as a border barrier next to the U.S.–Mexico border in Eagle Pass, Texas, on Jan. 3, 2024.

Most recently, there have been calls for Mr. Abbott to call a special session to create the Texas Division of Homeland Security to coordinate efforts to deter and stop illegal immigration.

Kinney County Sheriff Brad Coe, whose Texas county borders Mexico, was one of those calling for the new Homeland Security Division.

He believes that SB 4 and Operation Lone Star are contributing to the recent slowdown of illegal crossings in Texas, shifting them to Arizona and California.

CBP data show that border encounters across Texas during fiscal year 2024 through February are down substantially compared to the same period in 2023.

Meanwhile, encounters in Arizona and California have risen significantly during the same period.

“I think it’s a combination of things,” Mr. Coe told The Epoch Times.

Texas’ governor “finally had enough” and stood his ground at Shelby Park by blocking the Biden administration from using the location as an illegal migrant processing center, he said.

Another significant deterrent is the state program to help county sheriffs increase arrests of illegal aliens on misdemeanor trespassing charges.

“That has helped a lot,” Mr. Coe said.

His county has prosecuted the highest number of illegal immigrants for trespass and related misdemeanors under Operation Lone Star.

In 2019 and 2020, Kinney County dealt with 254 and 132 misdemeanor cases, respectively, mostly involving U.S. citizens. While the U.S. citizen caseload has remained somewhat constant, because of illegal immigration, the total number of misdemeanor cases shot up to 6,799 in 2022 and 5,826 in 2023, according to numbers obtained from the county attorney’s office.

While Mr. Abbott attributes Texas’ aggressive stance on illegal immigration as the reason for the drop in border crossings, the state doesn’t deter businesses from hiring those entering the country unlawfully.

“That’s one thing Texas does not have,” Ms. Vaughan said, adding that more than a dozen other states require employers to use E-verify to check for employment eligibility in the United States.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott speaks during a border security briefing with sheriffs from border communities at the Texas State Capitol in Austin on July 10, 2021.

The Biden Effect

But as hard as states are working to deter illegal migration, detractors say the Biden administration has been equally diligent in working to allow them into the country.

On taking office, President Biden immediately revoked policies established under the Trump administration that curtailed illegal immigration, such as “Remain in Mexico,” which forced asylum-seekers to wait in Mexico while their cases were pending.

Since then, illegal immigration into the United States has skyrocketed, overwhelming Border Patrol.

“The Biden administration has let in millions of people in the last four years, and they’re spreading out all over the country,” said Ms. Vaughan.

Conservatives contend President Biden and his allies are incentivizing illegal immigration and the massive wave of illegal immigrants constitutes “weaponized migration,” a form of unconventional warfare meant to destabilize and weaken America—and provide future Democratic voters.

Those on the left view migration as a global human right in a world where borders shouldn’t exist. They contend that illegal immigrants, or “newcomers” as the city of Denver calls them, fleeing poverty and political turmoil help America’s economy.

Liberal states aligned with the president, such as California, offer free health care to illegal immigrants, while blue cities, such as New York City, provide free housing plus $1,500 per month stipends for illegal aliens.

President Joe Biden listens to a Customs and Border Protection officer during a presentation about immigration and border security at the Brownsville Station in Olmito, Texas, on Feb. 29, 2024.
A study by the Federation for American Immigration Reform, a conservative group, examined Venezuelan migration under President Biden.

The report concluded that Venezuelans were encouraged to illegally enter the United States through various policies such as catch-and-release, parole, and temporary protected status.

It stated that Biden administration policy has driven illegal immigration just as much as economic conditions under Venezuela’s authoritarian regime.

The report cited mass release into the United States as a motivator for illegal migration and detention as a deterrent.

The report showed several instances where illegal immigration dropped or climbed in reaction to policies that were more strict or more lenient.

One example was a dramatic drop in encounters with Venezuelans in February of 2022, following the Biden administration’s announcement that Venezuelans who entered the U.S. illegally would be returned to Mexico.

“When the Biden administration announces tougher enforcement policies, the number of encounters drops,” the report stated.

https://www.theepochtimes.com/article/these-states-are-making-it-illegal-for-illegal-immigrants-to-enter-5625344?src_src=partner&src_cmp=ZeroHedge

Drag Queen Makes Tiny Kids Chant "Free Palestine"

 by  Steve Watson    26th April 2024 The event was titled "Queer Storytime for Palestine" Video has emerged of a drag queen leadin...