Written by Daniel Horowitz
Our military was not built for urban renewal projects in Kabul or to referee Sunni versus Shia conflicts in Baghdad. Its primary purpose is to protect our country from foreign invaders. If the military cannot be deployed to address the millions of people strategically funneled into the country by ruthless drug cartels — cartels that are killing hundreds of thousands of Americans with fentanyl — then what purpose does it serve? The fact that these individuals do not remain near the border does not transform mass removals into a domestic law enforcement issue; it remains a matter of national defense.… Continue Reading
Tags: 1878 Posse Comitatus Act, Caleb Cushing, Daniel Horowitz, Drug Cartels, Dwight Eisenhower, fentanyl, Fong Yue Ting v. United States, Operation Wetback, Rand Paul, Tren de Aragua, U.S. Military, U.S. Supreme Court, Ulysses S. Grant
Federal Issues, Immigration | David E. Smith | December 5, 2024 6:00 AM | Comments Off on Trump’s Border Strategy Exposes Myths About Posse Comitatus
Written by Robert Knight
What part of a judge being soft on child pornography offenders don’t they understand?
Having embraced every perversion under the sun and proclaimed it all good, Democrats in the U.S. Senate predictably voted 50-0 on Thursday to affirm Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s appointment to the U.S. Supreme Court.
That would include Joe Manchin. The senator from West Virginia has stood in the gap against some of the Democrats’ worst schemes like “Build Back Better.”… Continue Reading
Tags: Barack Obama, Biden Administration, Big Tech, Black Lives Matter, Build Back Better, Donald Trump, Dwight Eisenhower, FBI, Joe Biden, Joe Manchin, John F. Kennedy, John McCain, Josh Hawley, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Lisa Murkowski, Mike Lee, Mitt Romney, New York Post, Peggy Noonan, Richard Nixon, Susan Collins, The Wall Street Journal, Tom Cotton, U.S. Sentencing Commission, U.S. Supreme Court
Federal Issues, Judicial Branch | David E. Smith | April 11, 2022 6:00 AM | Comments Off on Romney, Murkowski and Collins: Weak-kneed Republicans