>Release the pillows
Kekekek
DeSantis Proposes $8 Million in Budget to Relocate Illegal Immigrants to Delaware, Martha’s Vineyard
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis set $8 million in his 2022–23 budget to transport illegal immigrants out of The Sunshine State.
He proposed the spending in the Freedom First Budget (pdf) to protect against harms resulting from illegal immigration. The spending may include the transportation of unauthorized aliens located within Florida to other states or the District of Columbia.
“In yesterday’s budget, I put in $8 million for us to be able to transport people illegally [in the United States] out of the state of Florida,” he said during a press conference on Friday.
The Republican governor listed Delaware, President Joe Biden’s hometown state, and Martha’s Vineyard, where former President Barack Obama owns a mansion, as potential destinations to relocate the illegal immigrants.
“If you sent [illegal immigrants] to Delaware or Martha’s Vineyard or some of these places, that border would be secure the next day,” he said. …..
https://www.theepochtimes.com/mkt_morningbrief/desantis-proposes-8-million-in-budget-to-relocate-illegal-immigrants-to-delaware-marthas-vineyard_4152010.html
Kek
Fort Bragg soldier deported after faking marriage to get green card, feds say
A 35-year-old soldier stationed in North Carolina will be deported after she pleaded guilty to visa fraud involving a sham marriage to a U.S. citizen, federal prosecutors said.
Maryam Movsum Hasanova is accused of paying $15,000 for the fraudulent marriage. Prosecutors said she then applied for a green card and began receiving a housing allowance from the U.S. military while stationed at Fort Bragg outside Fayetteville, North Carolina.
https://americanmilitarynews.com/2021/12/fort-bragg-soldier-deported-after-faking-marriage-to-get-green-card-feds-say/
DISGUSTING: California Rep. Adam Swalwell Takes Opportunity After More Than 70 Dead in Friday's Tornado to Slam Kentucky Senator Rand Paul
https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2021/12/passing-gas-california-rep-adam-swalwell-takes-opportunity-70-dead-fridays-tornado-slam-kentucky-senator-rand-paul/
Bomb explodes in U.S. Capitol, Nov. 7, 1983
At two minutes before 11 o’clock in the evening on this day in 1983, a thunderous explosion tore through the second floor of the U.S. Capitol’s Senate wing. Since the area was virtually deserted at the time, there were no casualties.
Minutes before the bomb went off, a caller claiming to represent the “Armed Resistance Unit” warned a Capitol switchboard operator that a bomb had been placed near the chamber — purportedly in retaliation for the recent U.S. military actions in Grenada and Lebanon.
The force of the device, hidden under a bench outside the Senate chamber, blew the hinges off the door to the office of Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.), the minority leader. It also damaged five paintings, particularly a stately portrait of Massachusetts Sen. Daniel Webster. (The blast tore away Webster's face and left it scattered across the floor tiles in one-inch canvas shards. Senate officials recovered the fragments from debris-filled trash bins. Over the coming months, a conservator painstakingly restored the painting to a credible, if somewhat diminished, version of the original.)
The blast also punched a hole in a partition that sent a shower of pulverized brick, plaster and glass into the Republican cloakroom behind the chamber. Although the explosion caused no structural damage to the Capitol, it shattered mirrors, chandeliers and furniture. Officials placed the damage at $250,000.
After a five-year investigation, in May 1988 FBI agents arrested seven members of the “Resistance Conspiracy”: Marilyn Jean Buck, Linda Sue Evans, Susan Rosenberg, Timothy Blunk, Alan Berkman, Laura Whitehorn and Elizabeth Ann Duke. They were charged with executing the Capitol bombing as well as triggering similar blasts at Fort McNair and the Washington Navy Yard.
On Dec. 7, 1990, U.S. District Court Judge Harold H. Greene sentenced Whitehorn and Evans to lengthy prison terms for conspiracy and malicious destruction of government property. Greene dropped charges against three co-defendants because they were already serving extended prison sentences for related terrorist crimes.
Whitehorn was sentenced to 20 years; Evans, to five years, to be served concurrently with 35 years for having illegally bought guns. On Aug. 6, 1999, Whitehorn was released on parole after serving just over 14 years.
''On Jan. 20, 2001, his final day in office, President Bill Clinton commuted Evans' sentence to time served.''
The bombing marked the start of tighter security measures throughout the Capitol complex. The area immediately beside the Senate chamber, previously open to the public, was closed. Officials also adopted color-coded staff and press identification cards that were required to be displayed at all times, and added metal detectors to building entrances to supplement those placed at chamber gallery doors following a 1971 bombing of the Capitol.
https://www.politico.com/story/2017/11/07/bomb-explodes-in-us-capitol-nov-7-1983-244578
Article 11/07/2017
I had to check this because it seemed too wild– but it's TRUE. A Left-wing terrorist who bombed the Capitol Building was pardoned by Clinton and now fundraises for BLM.
https://mobile.twitter.com/JoelWBerry/status/1349447473593524226
Replying to
@JoelWBerry
According to Snopes, the definition of terrorist is ‘subjective’, ie: leftists cannot be classified as terrorists.
https://mobile.twitter.com/genuinedavid/status/1398029695984181248
Looking for grounds the J6 prisoners can stand on.
Date Published 1988
Report on the High Security Unit for Women, Federal Correctional Institution, Lexington, Kentucky
A tour of the women's high security unit at the Federal correctional institution in Lexington, Ky., by a National Prison Project team, along with interviews with inmates and staff, produced an overriding recommendation that the unit be discontinued.
Abstract
Reasons for this recommendation are insufficient justification for assignment to the unit, lack of administrative procedures for assignment, the manner in which the unit environment and procedures are manipulated by staff, and failure to provide a meaningful mechanism for moving out of the unit. If the Bureau of Prisons persists in maintaining the unit, administrative hearings should be instituted to determine the appropriateness of each assignment to the unit. There should also be some mechanism for working out of the unit. Unit procedures and staff conduct should not be cruel. Adequate space for contact visitation for more than one prisoner at a time should be provided. The severe restrictions on visitation and staff inattention to scheduling conflicts are apparently deliberate cruelty, as is the policy of strip searches after outdoor exercise. Inattention to medical complaints is not only cruel but life threatening. Inmates should be allowed to wear their own clothing except for items that pose a serious security threat.
https://www.ojp.gov/ncjrs/virtual-library/abstracts/report-high-security-unit-women-federal-correctional-institution
Where is the ACLU, the J-6 prisoners remain largely abandoned.
Are American Civil Liberties only for black people now?
"A LIVING TOMB!"*
A report on the High Security Unit for Women, at the Federal Correctional Institution, Lexington, Kentucky, and the new political prison planned for Marianna, Florida.
http://freedomarchives.org/Documents/Finder/DOC510_scans/Lexington/510.living.tomb.nation.3.26.1988.pdf
J-6 prisoners are subject to the same treatment and conditions that got the Lexington prison shut down.
This article centers on Baraldini v. Meese, 691 F.Supp. 432 (D.D.C. 1988), a case that arose as a result of Congressional and public inquiry into the conditions at the Federal Correctional Institution at Lexington, Kentucky, Female High Security Unit ("Lexington HSU" or "the HSU"), a subterranean unit housing a small population of political and social prisoners in a segregated and highly restricted setting of small group isolation. The combination of public pressure and Con gressional inquiry produced only minor changes in the conditions. A team of lawyers' filed suit on behalf of three women, Silvia Baraldini, Susan Rosenberg, and Sylvia Brown, seeking immediately to enjoin continued placement in the HSU. The suit asserted that placement in the unit violated the prisoners' First Amendment rights of expression and association, that placement without prior hearing violated Fifth Amendment due process rights, and that the conditions violated the women's Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment.
A correctional psychologist concluded after evaluating the Female High Security Unit at Lexington HSU:
https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1004&context=yjll
PDF ^^^^^^
Not a lawfag but think I'm on to something.