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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Two things can be true at once. 1. It was wrong to deport Mr. Abrego and very alarming and terrifying Trump was openingly disregarding judicial orders. How can we function as a country if judicial decisions aren’t respected and followed? 2. Mr. Abrego is not an upstanding member of society. In May 2021, his wife filed a protective order against Abrego Garcia, claiming he “punched” her, scratched her left eye, threw her laptop on the floor, hit her with a work boot, and left her bruised and bloodied, according to court documents. He is on video being questioned by police with 7 men in a van in Tennesee. He admits he is transporting them for a construction job in Maryland yet there are no tools, the men have no id or luggage. This is strong evidence of human smuggling. For all those people who think it isn’t a big deal and he is just acting like an uber driver, human smuggling is exploitative and often violent. Immigrants being smuggled are forced to pay smugglers who take control over borders area. Migrants are transported in unsafe conditions (50 people recently died in a jammed trailer being transported), sometimes held for ransom and not released until paying more money, are often abused, and/or forced to work in horrendous conditions in the US to okay off their debt. Human smuggling is usually controlled by transnational gangs. [/quote] Back before the GOP decided deportation was the new boogey man, this would not have seemed so nefarious. In my city, there was a street where Latino men would hang out waiting for work. My BIL was flipping houses at the time. He would go pick some of these guys up, they would do the work , and he paid them. I’m sure many did not have ID, and they didn’t have tools since he had them at the job site. If he did this today, he could be arrested for human smuggling. At the time, it seemed fine and never occurred to me that it could be unlawful. In other words, in the pre-illegal-aliens-are-so-scary era, a guy driving a van load of guys to a work site would not have raised a lot of eyebrows. [/quote] I just don't understand how so many people are so gullible. What is happening with Trump ignoring/ actively defining the judiciary is terrifying. But what is also terrifying is how people are so entrenched in a side and can't see both sides. If you have never heard of human smuggling, read up on it and realize picking up day laborers has nothing to do with what Abrego was doing. If your brother in law traveled 21 hours to pick up laborers across several states and took their cell phones so they couldn't contact anyone then there would be an issue. [/quote] You don't know what you are talking about. Day laborers travel to other states for jobs every single day, all the time. This is NOT HUMAN TRAFFICKING. [/quote] Texast to St Louis to Maryland is one heck of a day trip. Especially if you factor in a day of work. And to do that every single day LOL... you are so gullible that I actually pity you. [/quote] These people aren't the most critical thinkers. They will twist themselves into pretzels to defend wife-beating, human traffkciking, MS-13 gang members. [/quote] Lmao…did he have the MS13 on his knuckles? Was he eating the cats and the dogs?[/quote]
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