Featured Posts
Governors Enforcing Restrictions at State Borders to Stop the Wuhan Virus
By Andrew R. Arthur
In the not-so-distant past, there was a strong reluctance from individuals in certain quarters to enforce our national borders. That was then. Now, several states are insisting on enforcing their own borders, to prevent the spread of the Wuhan virus. Those state restrictions provide a lesson for immigration debates in the future.
With 10,000 Summary Deportations in Two Weeks, CBP Down to 100 in Custody
By Andrew R. Arthur
On Thursday, the Washington Post reported that more than 10,000 aliens have been summarily deported since March 21, the day after the president issued his travel restrictions along the Southwest border to stem the tide of the Wuhan virus. As a consequence, U.S. Customs and Border Protection has fewer than 100 detainees in its custody, "down from nearly 20,000 at this time last year during the border crisis."
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Members of Congress Urge White House Not to Send Those $1,200 Checks to Illegal Aliens
By David North
Reps. Ken Buck (R-CO), Andy Biggs (R-AZ.), and 38 other members of Congress sent a letter to the White House on Monday encouraging the government not to send those $1,200 checks to illegal aliens. As we have written from time to time, just insisting on a Social Security number as a key to these checks is not a guarantee that the payments will not go to illegal aliens.
Hundreds of Central American Migrants Left at Guatemala Border by Mexican Authorities
By Jason Peña
Mexico's National Migration Institute left over 480 Honduran, Guatemalan, and Salvadoran migrants on the Mexico-Guatemala border. The nearly 500 Central Americans had boarded buses from several migration detention facilities throughout southern Mexico to be sent back to their countries of origin. But Guatemalan immigration agents refused to accept the migrants over fear of contracting COVID-19.
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