Society's Child
In research conducted by the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), analysts concluded that annual refugee resettlement costs American taxpayers about $1.8 billion a year, and over five years, about $8.8 billion.
FAIR's research found that of the $1.8 billion annual cost of resettling refugees in the U.S., about $867 million was spent on welfare.
Hernandez, 46, said he had no idea which law enforcement agency had just arrested him - or why - until he arrived at a downtown L.A. processing facility and saw the word "immigration" written on a wall.
On that late September afternoon, at least six agents with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrived with a warrant for the owner of the shop, who had an outstanding deportation order based on multiple DUI convictions.
They didn't identify themselves or ask questions about the men's immigration status as they arrested every employee on the property. "In the moment, I just had the worry and anguish about what would happen with my wife and child," Hernandez said.
The Trump administration calls immigrants who are not the original targets but are swept up during enforcement actions "collateral arrests." While some do have criminal records, some have none. Immigrant rights advocates say the practice is a return to the George W. Bush presidency, a period when large-scale workplace raids were common.
Comment: When laws change and protocol is revised, mindsets remain more/less the same. There are those who have the capacity to understand the big picture and those who can only complain.
Most of the al-Qaeda/HTS aligned Takfiris are thought to have fled the now enclosed area before it was encircled by the Syrian government forces. A few hundred ISIS fighters who had earlier slipped into there then claimed to have occupied dozens of empty local villages. But these forces are in fact too small to hold onto anything. They will now be sought out and destroyed. In just one day some 20 hamlets were liberated. It will take a week or two to bring the total area under control.
Mazariegos greets fellow students as they return from their holiday break to the Dominguez Hills campus of the California State University in Los Angeles, one of 23 state-university campuses in the sprawling state.
Across California, students have begun the formidable task of collecting over 585,407 signatures from registered voters to put their "College for All Act" on the ballot for this November. Inspired by Bernie Sanders's presidential campaign proposal to institute free higher education, these young activists are moving forward at the state level to make Bernie's vision a reality.
"All of the revenue raised will go to making public community colleges and universities in California tuition-free and reducing the barriers to young people attending college," said Mazariegos, who grew up in South Central Los Angeles, but now lives in the Crenshaw neighborhood.
Comment: It is one thing to reduce student costs or eliminate student loans and have a fair and acceptable plan - whether this one or something else. It is another to do so as bait in order to register this pool of potential voters (Bernie's idea/Democratic) with a compelling and personal issue in order to pad the voting booths at election time to capitalize party support. As was mentioned: "One lesson from the 2016 campaign is you can only go so far saying our opponent is a monster," said Bhalla. "You need to have a compelling progressive vision."
Why on earth are at least 2,000 US troops mixed up in this fracas in darkest Syria? Because the pro-Israel neocons in Washington, who pretty much run US foreign policy these days, are determined to have revenge for the defeat of US-backed rebel forces in Syria. So it's once more into the breach near Afrin and the town Manbij though America has zero national interests in Syria. The US first tried to overthrow Syria's governments in Damascus in 1948 because it was too independent and flirting with the Soviets. Today's intervention is part of Israel's plan to fragment Syria and gobble up its water and fertile land resources.
Comment: No one wants to fight over a one-donkey farm town. It is about dominance and foothold.
Comment: Margolis is not a war strategist, nor an unbiased commentator regarding 'who did what and why'. His perspective is movie-script colorful. See also:
- Agent of chaos: Washington provokes Turkey, widens war in Syria
- US refuses to budge as Turkey extends military ops into US-occupied Manbij
- Erdogan vows to attack 'wherever there are terrorists', may widen Syria offensive
Carlson tweeted Tuesday: "For the first time in generations Americans have reason to believe that our intelligence and law enforcement agencies gravely misuse the powers we have given them."
While the US government's inclination to spy on its citizens may have come as a surprise to Carlson, former NSA contractor Edward Snowden - who leaked documents showing the agency's mass surveillance of Americans in 2013 - begged to differ.
Tucker's 'revelation' was ignited by a declassified intelligence memo, released Friday which claims the FBI and DOJ secured a warrant to spy on Trump adviser Carter Page using the 'Steele dossier' paid for by the Hillary Clinton campaign. The dossier played a key part in the order obtained by the FBI from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. The DOJ and FBI objected to the release.
Comment: Snowden is right to point out that what the public is finding out is nothing new:
- Surveillance State: How the NSA breaks the law - and lies about it
- Warrantless spying: NSA's secret social network collects all your online data
- A list of known NSA spying techniques
- Ex-NSA analyst describes the depths of NSA surveillance as "Stasi on steroids"
- NSA whistleblower: 'Everyone in U.S. under virtual surveillance'
- NSA whistleblowers Adrienne Kinne and Brian Faulk: Our job was to spy on US citizens and soldiers
People who could be classified as 'vulnerable' comprise more than half of the 1,028 cases identified by Reuters in which people died after being shocked by Tasers. Out of these, 245 people had a heart condition and 643 people were drunk or high on drugs.
Nearly a third of the US population can be considered a 'vulnerable' group and are at greater risk of death or injury from Taser shocks, the Reuters report found. Stun guns are used by police to immobilize targets by delivering a painful electric shock.
Axon Enterprise Inc, the Arizona-based company which produces Taser guns, warns against using them on "higher risk populations." These people should be targeted "only if the situation justifies an increased risk" of injury or death, the company said.
The deal eliminates the civilian and military sequester for two years, increasing the Pentagon funding by $80 billion and domestic spending by $63 billion for the fiscal year 2018, NPR reported citing congressional sources.
"This budget deal is a genuine breakthrough," said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-New York), adding that it consigns the "arbitrary... sequester caps to the ash heap of history."
"No one would suggest it's perfect but we worked hard to find common ground," said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky), introducing the deal on the floor. He added the bill will have an amendment process that's "fair to all sides."

Bassem and Ahed Tamimi support the campaign to free Georges Abdallah at the September 2017 conference on Palestinian women and resistance.
Palestinians and solidarity organizers around the world held demonstrations, celebrations and gatherings demanding Ahed's freedom as well as that of her fellow Palestinian prisoners - and Palestine itself. Further events and actions are planned in the coming days.
Bassem Tamimi himself has spent years in prison - including as an Amnesty International recognized prisoner of conscience - for his role in the indigenous land defense movement in the Palestinian village of Nabi Saleh, targeted for repression and land and water confiscation by occupation forces and settler colonial Zionism.
Prosecutors said Latarsha Sanders, 43, of Brockton, has admitted stabbing her 8-year-old son, Edson "Marlon" Brito, and Lason Brito, 5, whose bodies were found in beds in separate rooms in the family's third-floor apartment after the crazed mom asked a neighbor to call an ambulance, the Boston Herald reported.
"It came out 'wrong' with the first one and for that reason she had to move on to the second child," Assistant Plymouth District Attorney Jessica Kenny said, adding that Sanders has admitted attacking her older son in the kitchen. Sanders was unable to recall how many times she stabbed the younger boy, Kenny said.
"She said she stabbed him because she had 'failed' in the ritual with Marlon," Kenny said. "She responded to police that she felt bad about what she had done. She told police she mopped up the blood on the floor. She indicated she used a kitchen knife to stab both of them and left it in the sink. She also indicated she cleaned up both of the children and placed them in separate beds."














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