Anonymous ID: 9b2630 April 28, 2023, 7:40 p.m. No.18769658   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18768704 (p/b)

 

Sorry guys, can't sauce it - this is a first hand report. Well I could drive to that airport tomorrow and take my own photo.

 

Maybe I'll buy a newspaper and hold it up in front of the photo for you, so you can see the date? Oh wait in that town they don't publish a daily newspaper LOL. Will have to find out if they have a Friday edition.

Anonymous ID: 9b2630 April 28, 2023, 7:56 p.m. No.18769747   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9753

Posse Comitatus?

 

Trump asked for the National Guard. They were on the border helping w/ various duties related to drug trafficking.

 

Biden called the military reserves back to active duty to "combat drug trafficking".

 

After 9/11 - the military reserves were called back to active duty, and shipped off to M/E - and then Bush's are you with us or them war. One of my employees who was still in the Army reserves, was called back for that, lost a good employee.

 

What's happening now?

 

A million people staging on the US-MX border? Threatening to overrun.

Biden declares 2024 candidacy.

Biden calls up the reserves allegedly to help against drugs.

Convenient timing for Title 42 to expire.

 

These are NOW ACTIVE MILITARY going to the border - as needed by the DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE and Homeland Security.

 

Are we about to be invaded for real by fighting age on the border, plus in the cities where the others that have been coming across the border were sent to?

 

Would a "war" on our southern border and cities give a big reason for the 2024 election to be called off?

 

And/or make Biden look like a great president for deploying the troops there ahead of time? Under the guise of fighting drug trafficking so as not to worry Americans……..

 

Can the Firefighting Helicopter be used to deploy something else, like tear gas against mobs of people storming the wall?

 

Deploying the military reserves made me think —- posse comitatus. He can deploy troops if there is a real invasion, right?

Anonymous ID: 9b2630 April 28, 2023, 8:01 p.m. No.18769773   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9785

>>18769753

 

Yeah, they are both federal agencies.

US border is federal.

US military troops - federal.

 

(Although it can be debated that an individual state can use the 10th to defend the border of that single state.)

Anonymous ID: 9b2630 April 28, 2023, 9:10 p.m. No.18770028   🗄️.is 🔗kun

NM St Rep Jenifer Jones asks Governor to put National Guard on NM/MX border.

 

https://www.demingheadlight.com/2023/04/26/deming-state-rep-jones-calls-guard-border-deployment/

 

Deming state Rep. Jones calls for Guard border deployment

Article by Algernon D'Ammassa, Deming Headlight

Deming’s freshman state Representative, Republican Jenifer Jones, called on Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham last week to deploy the New Mexico Army National Guard and Air National Guard to back up law enforcement efforts at the border.

 

The request echoes similar calls made in 2022 election campaigns by Republican gubernatorial candidate Mark Ronchetti and former U.S. Rep. Yvette Herrell.

 

Jones cited the impending expiration of Title 42, a policy instituted under President Donald Trump and continued under Joe Biden’s administration, allowing for rapid expulsion of migrants entering the United States, including those lawfully applying for political asylum. The policy, which invoked the COVID-19 pandemic as a basis for removing migrants, will expire on May 11, and U.S. officials have said they expected migrant encounters at the border to increase once that happens.

 

At the end of the last fiscal year, ending in September, border agencies reported a record-high number of encounters, reaching almost 2.4 million. Of those, 2.2 million were encountered by U.S. Border Patrol. Those figures include individuals crossing multiple times.

 

Since October, the beginning of this fiscal year, agencies report a total of 1.2 million encounters including over a million by the Border Patrol. Per data from U.S. Customs and Border Protection, that number is lower than at this point last year, but ahead of the same point in 2021.

 

Jones called on the governor to “use every resource available,” including the National Guard, “to help stem the flow of illegal activity that will likely increase substantially” with the sunset of Title 42. Among these, she named fentanyl trafficking as an area of concern.

 

Jones argued: “While the federal government may be responsible for controlling and protecting our national borders, the current crisis situation demands that all levels of government play an active role in protecting the safety of our state’s population and limiting societal damage caused by the Federal government’s failure to secure our southern border.”

 

She also asked for an update on previous discussions about federal assistance with the cost of such deployments to the state.

 

Lujan Grisham’s Republican predecessor, Gov. Susana Martinez, deployed the National Guard to the southern border in 2018 following an order by President Trump. Shortly after taking office in 2019, Lujan Grisham, a Democrat, ended that deployment, stating at the time she did not wish to militarize the border and was not convinced the Guard’s presence “assisted (Border Patrol) in any meaningful way at dealing with any nefarious activity along the border” or justified the expense.

Maddy Hayden, a spokesperson for Lujan Grisham, said the governor agreed with Jones that “public safety in every New Mexico community – including those on the southern border – is paramount and she is committed to dedicating whatever resources are needed to keep New Mexicans safe.”

 

Hayden continued: “Congress ultimately bears responsibility for finding a solution on federal immigration policy, but until Republicans recognize that border security and humanitarian aid are not mutually exclusive, this fundamentally federal issue will continue to fester without a solution in sight.”

 

Lujan Grisham has, instead, promoted increased funding for local law enforcement agencies, including pay increases and additional personnel, and requested federal resources to address narcotics trafficking and related criminal activity.

 

Hayden pointed to a federal sting operation in Albuquerque last September, which the FBI reported seized over a million fentanyl pills, 142 pounds of methamphetamine and $1.8 million in cash, as a model for such efforts. The operation involved numerous federal offices, the New Mexico State Police and local police departments.

 

Jones said she had hoped for movement from the governor’s office after meeting with Lujan Grisham during this winter’s legislative session.

 

“I realize the breakdown is with federal enforcement,” Jones told the Headlight, “but I was encouraged by my conversations with the governor on how the state may be able to use some of its resources to help.

 

“The point of my letter is to elevate this issue, as the lifting of Title 42 is only weeks away. Now is the time to secure federal resources to use our national guard.”