Art Arthur
š¤ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
They can't go into the, until Tom Oman showed up into the Minnesota prison system, we're limited in doing so.
And for that reason, they had to take the aliens that they could find, which drove down the numbers.
Now, again, if you're going to make a big splashy claim about, you know, only 14% are violent criminals, which by the way, I don't know if you saw this, but Katie Couric repeated it
And got slammed down by Rand Paul the other day.
But if you're going to make a splashy claim like that, you have to tell the whole story.
You have to talk about the Sag Suarez and you have to talk about the Lake and Riley Act.
That didn't happen.
I would expect that CBS News, after Bari Weiss arrived, would be a little bit more objective than they are.
And, you know, again, this is a reporter who has covered this issue and actually did a great job of covering this issue throughout the Biden administration.
You know that he missed a stitch or two in covering this article is, you know, unacceptable.
Maybe he just missed it.
But, you know, maybe there's something more in there.
Mike, it's always a pleasure.
I look forward to the next time we could talk about these important issues.
So generally, when aliens are deported from the United States, they're deported under the Immigration and Nationality Act, the INA, or Title VIII, as the Biden administration would refer to it. And that's the baseline of laws that we use to determine who can come in, who should be sent away, and who should be allowed to stay.
So generally, when aliens are deported from the United States, they're deported under the Immigration and Nationality Act, the INA, or Title VIII, as the Biden administration would refer to it. And that's the baseline of laws that we use to determine who can come in, who should be sent away, and who should be allowed to stay.
So generally, when aliens are deported from the United States, they're deported under the Immigration and Nationality Act, the INA, or Title VIII, as the Biden administration would refer to it. And that's the baseline of laws that we use to determine who can come in, who should be sent away, and who should be allowed to stay.
But with respect to the Tren de Aragwa members who were sent by the Trump administration to El Salvador, those individuals were actually expelled under a different authority, the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, a law that was passed during a period of time when France was in the throes of a revolution and the United States was afraid that it was going to get dragged into that war.
But with respect to the Tren de Aragwa members who were sent by the Trump administration to El Salvador, those individuals were actually expelled under a different authority, the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, a law that was passed during a period of time when France was in the throes of a revolution and the United States was afraid that it was going to get dragged into that war.
But with respect to the Tren de Aragwa members who were sent by the Trump administration to El Salvador, those individuals were actually expelled under a different authority, the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, a law that was passed during a period of time when France was in the throes of a revolution and the United States was afraid that it was going to get dragged into that war.