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How the Border Crisis is Funded by US Taxes

Also, What motivates conservatives to emulate Richard Nixon

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  • 🚔 Channeling Richard Nixon,

  • 💸 Funding the Border Crisis with US Taxes,

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TRENDING IN AMERICA

How the Border Crisis is Funded by US Taxes

Here is what is going on: Recent funding for nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) that offer "temporary shelter and other eligible costs" for undocumented immigrants totaling $77 million has been revealed by the Department of Homeland Security. Since President Joe Biden's omnibus budget bill was passed last year, the DHS has donated more than $770 million to these organizations.

Why it is important: NGOs encourage illegal immigration by providing free resources to border crossers, assisting them in settling in the United States while their immigration cases drag on for years. Republicans have called for the defunding of the organizations because they are a crucial component of the Biden administration's inadequate border management.

How it's done: These organizations, which receive funding from the taxpayer, give illegal immigrants maps with the locations of border crossings, collaborate with the government to process them, and offer them food, lodging, and transportation around the nation in addition to legal aid to prevent deportation.

  • Agenda: Even Biden's own DHS discovered NGOs giving money and services to "gotaway" illegal aliens who had managed to elude capture and were so ineligible for assistance. The harsher border policies of former President Donald Trump were also opposed by activist NGOs.

Zooming out: Americans largely disapprove of Biden's immigration response before the 2024 election. GOP investigations are linking cartel crime and other issues to the border strategy of the Biden administration, opening the door for the possibility of impeaching Biden's secretary of homeland security.

  • Additionally: the administration has attempted to salvage face by fabricating figures to show that border crossings have decreased significantly, which the legacy media present as fact.

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TRENDING HEADLINES

Brief News

📜 House Republican legislation to outlaw CRT and give parents more power has been introduced. Three education measures sponsored by Rep. Bob Good (R-VA) would declare critical racial theory (CRT) to be "illegal discrimination," provide parents the ability to hold schools accountable for teaching gender ideology, and shield schools from being compelled to teach CRT. A split Congress makes it unlikely that the legislation would succeed, but they might allow national Republicans to run on parental rights in 2024, a platform that has helped them gain support in red states like Virginia and California.

⚙️ The American steel industry may be sold to another country. The largest steel producer in the United States, U.S. Steel, is at risk of being sold off to a foreign power, according to Sen. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio). Vance pointed out that a 1986 court decision compelled stockholders to sell the firm to the highest bidder, even if the buyer is foreign, and that U.S. Steel is currently up for auction. This implies that, for example, a Chinese business could acquire U.S. Steel and gain control of a significant portion of the country's steel industry, posing a risk to the country's security.

📊 Biden's support among the minority falls. President Joe Biden's popularity among black and Hispanic voters has plummeted, putting the race between him and GOP front-runner Donald Trump essentially deadlocked. In addition to the radical abortion and gender policies supported by the Democratic Party, the poor economy under Biden is blamed for this move. Additionally, the working class has turned its back on Biden. These changes can show up in 2024 as a decline in Democratic voting turnout.

📈 According to recent polls, Nikki Haley is the only GOP candidate who will easily defeat Biden in the 2024 election. In a 2024 survey, former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley defeated President Joe Biden by 6 percentage points, outpacing every other Republican contender, including outgoing President Donald Trump. The surge in moderate white voters who were attracted to Haley's outstanding debate performance and sensible policy ideas is credited with giving her a boost. Even with her post-debate surge, Haley still has a long shot at winning the GOP primary and polls much worse than Trump.

📈 The DeSantis campaign lost support. Gov. Ron DeSantis' campaign has stumbled while he took a break from it to deal with two crises in Florida. Numerous significant contributors, including former Illinois governor Bruce Rauner, have abandoned the DeSantis campaign in favor of Nikki Haley, whose momentum is gaining quickly. While DeSantis barely polls above the rest of the GOP candidates, former President Donald Trump's margin over DeSantis has increased by more than a half since April to 46%.

🇺🇸 Pence favors a comeback to traditional conservatism. Mike Pence, a former vice president, disapproved of Vivek Ramaswamy and Donald Trump's foreign policy ideas. Pence criticized Ramaswamy's plans to decrease funds for Taiwan and Israel as part of a "populist strain" and a "pulling back from American leadership on the global stage," as well as Trump's assertion that he would put an end to the Ukraine War in a single day. Pence supported a more traditional policy of persistent interventionism. Pence continues to poll in the single digits and isn't creating any ripples in the GOP primary despite his positions.

🔎 Biden believes the Republican impeachment investigation will harm the GOP. Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.) stated that according to his estimation, the House GOP has the necessary number of votes to launch an impeachment investigation investigating President Joe Biden's financial transactions. Although Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) made hints about pushing forward in August, the White House and Senate Republicans believe an impeachment investigation will harm Republicans as we approach a deadline to prevent a government shutdown.

TRENDING IN AMERICA

What motivates conservatives to emulate Richard Nixon

What is going on: The policies of former President Richard Nixon are increasingly being cited by conservatives as a template for the next Republican administration. They draw comparisons between today's domestic and international problems and those of the 1960s.

Domestic policy: Chris Rufo, a well-known activist, claims that Nixon's presidency served as the "blueprint" for the current right "counterrevolution." Nixon actively pursued law and order, most notably by disarming left-wing organizations engaged in mob violence and revolutionary actions.

  • Deep state: Nixon characterized the federal bureaucracy as a left-leaning organization in need of change, anticipating contemporary issues. He desired greater presidential oversight over these organizations and increased political accountability.

    Right now: Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and former President Donald Trump, the GOP's front-runners for 2024, both seek to rein down the administrative state. Each of them has a comprehensive strategy for how to accomplish this, which includes firing many officials and cleansing organizations like the FBI. Like Nixon, Trump was particularly opposed by the FBI and other organizations.

    Movement toward revolution: They are also preparing to utilize federal power to combat left-wing radicalism, particularly through the promotion of diversity, equity, and inclusion in government, business, and education.

Regarding geopolitics: GOP candidate Vivek Ramaswamy openly references the Nixon administration. Similar to Nixon's Vietnam plan, he wanted the U.S. to have a small global footprint and to put an end to the crisis in Ukraine. He also sought to encircle China by bringing Washington and Moscow closer together, emulating Nixon's own geopolitical chess moves in which he allied with China to isolate the Soviet Union.

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