“YOU PICKED THE WRONG CAJUN TO MESS WITH” – Kennedy’s 9-Word Nuke Silences Pete Buttigieg & Entire CNN Panel
Deportation on the Table? Most significantly, Trump’s call for her to be “forced to leave” signals a dramatic escalation. It suggests that his administration is exploring the revocation of citizenship—a process known as denaturalization—which can be applied if citizenship was obtained through fraud or if the individual engages in serious criminal acts against the state (such as the RICO charges Attorney General Pam Bondi recently hinted at).
The Aftermath Critics of the President are calling the rhetoric dangerous and unprecedented. However, supporters argue that if Omar is indeed tied to the “ghost daycare” money laundering operations, her status as a Congresswoman should offer no protection.
Americans Last: FEMA Cries ‘Poverty’ for Disaster Victims While Funneling $1 Billion to Illegal Migrants
WASHINGTON — In what critics are calling the ultimate betrayal of the American taxpayer, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) has found itself at the center of a scandal that encapsulates the priorities of the Biden-Harris era: Billions for those who break our laws, and excuses for those who follow them.
While DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas publicly lamented that FEMA was “running out of money” to assist American citizens struck by catastrophic natural disasters, agency records reveal a different story. Over the past two years, FEMA has successfully funneled more than
$1 billion in taxpayer funds to facilitate the housing, feeding, and transportation of illegal migrants.
The disparity has enraged lawmakers and survivors alike, painting a stark picture of an administration that puts “America Last.”
The “Shelter and Services” Slush Fund
At the heart of the controversy is FEMA’s “Shelter and Services Program” (SSP). While disaster relief funds were reportedly drying up, this program saw massive injections of cash to manage the historic border crisis created by the administration’s own policies.
2024: $640 million allocated.
That brings the total to over $1 billion in just two years. These funds have been directed to NGOs and sanctuary cities like New York and Los Angeles to provide illegal entrants with food, housing, cash stipends, and healthcare. Meanwhile, the disaster relief fund meant for U.S. citizens faces a projected shortfall of over $10 billion.
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