ICE

A little math about that prison camp in Florida. 450 million per year for 3,000 people is $150,000/person per year. The cost for one person receiving SNAP for one year is $2256, yet they're telling us that's too expensive.

How in the world did that cost almost a half a billion?
 
At a doctor’s office — with no warrants, masked, no ID 😳

What are we doing?

MAGA and the GOP have been convincing their base that these people are less than human, so therefore don't deserve humane treatment. All so people like Rob and JT can not give two craps about it / defend it.

"They are in the country illegally, so they deserve whatever they get".

If we were sending dogs to live in these kind of conditions, the entire world would be in an uproar. Good thing it's just those dirty latinos instead!
 
Since the ICE cowards want to hide their faces instead of standing behind their abhorrent actions, is there any way to find out who they all are?

Like a FOIA request or something of the like? Perhaps doxxing these nazi gestapo wannabes would slow them up a little bit...
 

'It's miserable:' ICE 'morale in crapper' as agents forced to 'arrest gardeners'​


As Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents embark on countless deportation raids in an effort to meet the White House’s daily arrest quota of 3,000, many officers are becoming completely demoralized, several agents told Nick Miroff with The Atlantic.

“Morale is in the crapper,” a former ICE agent told Miroff on the condition of anonymity out of fear of repercussions. “Even those that are gung ho about the mission aren’t happy with how they are asking to execute it – the quotas and the shift to the low-hanging fruit to make the numbers.”


President Donald Trump, along with nearly all Republican members of Congress, recently gave ICE a staggering bump in its budget in the budget reconciliation package known as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The bill increased annual spending for the agency to $37.5 billion, making ICE’s budget higher than the military budgets of all but 15 countries, including the United States.


Yet despite the increase in funding and constant praise and support from the White House, many agents are becoming disillusioned with daily pre-dawn raids, excessive overtime work, and the moral dilemma of routinely targeting migrants with no criminal histories.

“No drug cases, no human trafficking, no child exploitation; it’s infuriating,” another ICE agent told Miroff, who added that he was leaning towards quitting the agency rather than continue “arresting gardeners.”


While ICE had largely targeted high-risk migrants under the previous administration, Miller’s 3,000-arrests-a-day quota has lead to a significant increase in arrests of migrants with no criminal history, which have increased by 807% since Trump took office, with 65% of all those arrested having no criminal convictions.

Some ICE staff had already jumped ship over Trump’s mass deportation policy, including 33-year-old Adam Boyd, a form ICE attorney who left the agency in June. Boyd told Miroff he ultimately made a “moral decision” in deciding to leave the agency.

“It became a contest of how many deportations could be reported to Stephen Miller by December,” he said. “...We are now focusing on numbers over all else.”
 

Canadian Trump supporter with green card who was in US since age 3 denied reentry​


Chris Landry, a Canadian national with a green card who has been living in New Hampshire since he was a toddler, was stopped at the Canadian border by immigration officials and denied reentry to the U.S. on Sunday.

New Hampshire's Democratic Senator Maggie Hassan's office told Newsweek their constituents services' team was in touch with Landry about the issue. "Helping constituents navigate federal agencies and processes is a core function of Senator Hassan's office," a spokesperson said.


Newsweek has reached out to U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and both of New Hampshire's senators for comment via email on Thursday.

Why It Matters

Landry's denied reentry comes amid the Trump administration's immigration crackdown. President Donald Trump has pledged to launch the largest mass deportation operation in U.S. history. Much of his campaign rested on his immigration platform,

Immigrants residing in the country illegally and legally, with valid documentation such as green cards and visas, have been detained. Newsweek has reported dozens of cases involving green-card holders and applicants who were swept up in the immigration raids and various arrests.

A recent CBP warning, published July 9, 2025, said that "possessing a green card is a privilege, not a right" and that legal residents arriving at a port of entry with prior criminal convictions may be detained in advance of removal proceeding.


What To Know

Landry, who is 46, has lived in New Hampshire for more than 40 years. He annually visits Canada and says he has never had a problem going back and forth, until Sunday.

"I'm a legal resident, green-card holder, I have been since 1981," the Peterborough, New Hampshire, resident told NBC 10 Boston.

Landry, who is currently in New Brunswick, Canada, works in manufacturing and has five children, several of whom he was traveling back to the U.S. with on July 6 when he was stopped by immigration officials in Houlton, Maine.

He told local news outlet WMUR that he was held for about five hours, adding: "I felt like I was being treated like a criminal," calling the experience "really a living nightmare."

Landry has two previous marks on his background, from 2004 and 2007 regarding a marijuana possession charge and driving on a suspended license. He has no criminal record since and says he received a suspended sentence and paid his fines.


"I never thought that would threaten my status as a resident of the United States," he told NBC 10 Boston.

Landry, who legally can't vote because of his Canadian citizenship, said he was supportive of Trump and his platform, telling NBC 10 Boston: "I was definitely all for 'Make America Great Again,' and having a strong, unified country and a bright future for my five American children, but now I feel a little differently. I've been torn from my family. My life has been disregarded completely."

There were 12.8 million lawful permanent residents, or green-card holders, living in the U.S. as of January 1, 2024, according to estimates by the Office of Homeland Security Statistics.
 

Canadian Trump supporter with green card who was in US since age 3 denied reentry​


Chris Landry, a Canadian national with a green card who has been living in New Hampshire since he was a toddler, was stopped at the Canadian border by immigration officials and denied reentry to the U.S. on Sunday.

New Hampshire's Democratic Senator Maggie Hassan's office told Newsweek their constituents services' team was in touch with Landry about the issue. "Helping constituents navigate federal agencies and processes is a core function of Senator Hassan's office," a spokesperson said.


Newsweek has reached out to U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and both of New Hampshire's senators for comment via email on Thursday.

Why It Matters

Landry's denied reentry comes amid the Trump administration's immigration crackdown. President Donald Trump has pledged to launch the largest mass deportation operation in U.S. history. Much of his campaign rested on his immigration platform,

Immigrants residing in the country illegally and legally, with valid documentation such as green cards and visas, have been detained. Newsweek has reported dozens of cases involving green-card holders and applicants who were swept up in the immigration raids and various arrests.

A recent CBP warning, published July 9, 2025, said that "possessing a green card is a privilege, not a right" and that legal residents arriving at a port of entry with prior criminal convictions may be detained in advance of removal proceeding.


What To Know

Landry, who is 46, has lived in New Hampshire for more than 40 years. He annually visits Canada and says he has never had a problem going back and forth, until Sunday.

"I'm a legal resident, green-card holder, I have been since 1981," the Peterborough, New Hampshire, resident told NBC 10 Boston.

Landry, who is currently in New Brunswick, Canada, works in manufacturing and has five children, several of whom he was traveling back to the U.S. with on July 6 when he was stopped by immigration officials in Houlton, Maine.

He told local news outlet WMUR that he was held for about five hours, adding: "I felt like I was being treated like a criminal," calling the experience "really a living nightmare."

Landry has two previous marks on his background, from 2004 and 2007 regarding a marijuana possession charge and driving on a suspended license. He has no criminal record since and says he received a suspended sentence and paid his fines.


"I never thought that would threaten my status as a resident of the United States," he told NBC 10 Boston.

Landry, who legally can't vote because of his Canadian citizenship, said he was supportive of Trump and his platform, telling NBC 10 Boston: "I was definitely all for 'Make America Great Again,' and having a strong, unified country and a bright future for my five American children, but now I feel a little differently. I've been torn from my family. My life has been disregarded completely."

There were 12.8 million lawful permanent residents, or green-card holders, living in the U.S. as of January 1, 2024, according to estimates by the Office of Homeland Security Statistics.
MAGA should become the IWFIUIHTM party.

I was for it until it happened to me.
 
via @ktla5news: Footage obtained by KTLA shows a young man crying, saying his mother had just been taken, and children and protesters running from tear gas that was deployed when a crowd gathered at an immigration raid at a Ventura County farm this afternoon

 
The standoff at the huge tomato farm in Camarillo is continuing into its 4th hour. At least thirty farm workers have been rounded up, separating them from their hysterically crying children.

 
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