Councilman
DP Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 25, 2009
- Messages
- 4,454
- Reaction score
- 1,657
- Location
- Riverside, County, CA.
- Gender
- Male
- Political Leaning
- Conservative
It's real safe down on the Border, isn't it. I saw a program on National Geographic about the Border Patrol in the Nogles area of Arizona and that program flies in the face of Obama and Napolitano's lies about how safe it is.
On top of this Several members of Congress from California on Friday urged Governor Jerry Brown to opt out of the federal government's "Secure Communities" program which targets illegal immigrants.
I think there needs to be a law that jails people who refuse to obey Federal law like the Mayor & Board of Supervisors of San Francisco, the Mayors and Councils in L.A. and San Diego all are sanctuary Cities and it cost us billions every year, and the costs in California in part are picked up by the Feds.
There are illegals in every State, and the crime they bring costs even more than just the Social programs.
This is crazy and it's not about race because there are illegals from all over the World here taking jobs and costing us real money.
On top of this Several members of Congress from California on Friday urged Governor Jerry Brown to opt out of the federal government's "Secure Communities" program which targets illegal immigrants.
I think there needs to be a law that jails people who refuse to obey Federal law like the Mayor & Board of Supervisors of San Francisco, the Mayors and Councils in L.A. and San Diego all are sanctuary Cities and it cost us billions every year, and the costs in California in part are picked up by the Feds.
There are illegals in every State, and the crime they bring costs even more than just the Social programs.
This is crazy and it's not about race because there are illegals from all over the World here taking jobs and costing us real money.
300 rounds exchanged during Texas border shootout
SAN ANTONIO - U.S. law enforcement officials exchanged about 300 rounds of gunfire with suspected drug runners during a pre-dawn shootout across the Rio Grande, but only about six came from the suspects, authorities said Friday.
The Texas Department of Public Safety, whose Rangers were involved in the shootout, said such an overwhelming response was standard given the United States' zero tolerance policy when guns are pointed at its authorities. Department officials previously said the Americans were under "heavy fire," but they've since backed away from that.
The incident began about 6:30 a.m. Thursday, when U.S. Border Patrol agents spotted a Dodge Durango near the lightly populated border town of Abram, Texas, said Steve McCraw, director of the Department of Public Safety Director. He joined officials from Border Patrol and Texas Fish and Wildlife for a news conference Friday in Weslaco, roughly 250 miles south of San Antonio and just north of the river separating Mexico and the U.S.
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