Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the US paying to keep him there now? He is Salvadoran and Trump requested him back (half heartedly) so are we paying?
And yes, the US is paying to keep him there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, I'm a Hispanic male that waited my turn and did it legally!
I hope for your sake you look white/Anglo and don't have a Hispanic name.
Anonymous wrote:The average person is more likely to be wrongly accused of a crime like murder than to be accidentally deported to a Salvadoran supermax prison. This tendency to overstate the prevalence of problems is what got the left into its current position, and it doesn't seem to be backing off that tendency anytime soon.
Anonymous wrote:The average person is more likely to be wrongly accused of a crime like murder than to be accidentally deported to a Salvadoran supermax prison. This tendency to overstate the prevalence of problems is what got the left into its current position, and it doesn't seem to be backing off that tendency anytime soon.
Anonymous wrote:No, I'm a Hispanic male that waited my turn and did it legally!
Anonymous wrote:No, I'm a Hispanic male that waited my turn and did it legally!
Anonymous wrote:No, I'm a Hispanic male that waited my turn and did it legally!
Anonymous wrote:Is the US paying to keep him there now? He is Salvadoran and Trump requested him back (half heartedly) so are we paying?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would expect the President to protect US citizens.
However, if a judge is ordering diplomacy, the President is right to reject it, even if it is a US citizen wrongly deported.
Wrong on both counts. The US government has a right to get its citizens back home. This dude is not a US citizen, but a Salvadoran citizen who is now back in his home country.