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This past weekend, I met with farm workers affected by mass deportations. Many women shared heartbreaking stories of their husbands being taken during traffic stops and deported without understanding the forms they signed, leaving families shattered. I spoke to two 11-year-old boys, one who had spoken to his father in Mexico and was heartbroken, and another who hadn’t yet communicated with his dad and was in tears. These workers, who have toiled for decades, often without any criminal records, are now living in fear. This situation not only devastates families but also impacts farmers and food prices. Mass deportations mean real suffering—families are torn apart, and children are left without their parents. It’s a tragic reality.

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In 1932, over 10,000 unemployed World War I veterans marched on Washington demanding their promised bonuses. President Hoover ordered their evacuation, leading to a violent clash with troops. The veterans' camp was set on fire, causing public outrage against Hoover. The Bonus Expeditionary Force disbanded, leaving veterans destitute. The incident highlighted the need for a new American system.

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In 1932, over 10,000 World War I veterans marched to Washington, demanding immediate cash bonuses promised to them. As tensions rose, President Hoover ordered their evacuation. General MacArthur led troops, including cavalry and infantry, into the capital, using tear gas and bayonets against the veterans. The situation escalated, with troops setting fire to the veterans' camps, creating chaos and panic. Many veterans felt betrayed by their country, believing they would not face military force. The violent eviction led to a shift in public sentiment against Hoover, particularly highlighted by the story of Joe Angelo, a veteran who had previously saved General Patton. The Bonus Army was ultimately dispersed, leaving many veterans in despair, highlighting the need for systemic change in America.

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In 1932, over 10,000 unemployed World War I veterans gathered in Washington demanding their promised cash bonus. President Hoover ordered their evacuation, leading to a violent clash with troops. The veterans' camp was burned, sparking public outrage against Hoover. The Bonus Army disbanded, leaving many destitute and highlighting the need for a new American system.

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Mexico struggles to handle a sudden influx of millions of people, despite the desire to welcome them. Many have lived in the U.S. for decades, building lives and families there. The idea of deporting them back to Mexico, where they may find nothing left and face violence, is unrealistic. This situation could lead to a significant crisis, as these individuals cannot simply return to a life of lower wages and instability.

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Yelitza Martina is devastated after her father, Andres Martina, was arrested by ICE agents at their Waukegan home. He immigrated from Mexico nearly 30 years ago. Yelitza, a U.S. citizen, is among many seeking legal assistance at Pastor Julie Contreras' church. Parents are worried about their children's fear of deportation, highlighting the emotional toll of these actions. In the Chicago area, ICE operations have caused panic, with immigrants sharing their experiences of agents surrounding buildings and knocking on doors. There is a growing emphasis on educating individuals about their rights to prepare for potential immigration enforcement.

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On my first day back in the White House, I will end all of Biden's open border policies and put a stop to the influx of people entering our country illegally. We recently experienced the highest number of illegal border crossings ever recorded in a single day, with 12,000 individuals, including those released from prisons and mental institutions worldwide. In Staten Island, two elderly World War 2 heroes and a Korean war veteran were forced to leave their nursing home to accommodate these undocumented migrants. This is why, upon my inauguration, we will initiate the largest deportation operation in American history.

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In 1932, thousands of unemployed World War I veterans gathered in Washington, D.C., demanding their promised cash bonus. President Hoover ordered their evacuation, and General MacArthur led troops to forcefully remove them. Gas grenades were thrown, tents were burned, and chaos ensued. The incident caused public sentiment to turn against Hoover, and the veterans were left without support, highlighting the need for a new American system.

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Illegal immigration hit record lows under border patrol services. However, after a change in leadership, around 20 million people entered the country. The data shown is a few months old, but the impact is clear.

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People are scared because they suddenly lost their financial security. Just weeks ago, they knew how to cover childcare and medical bills, but now everything's gone. Christina Drey and Adam Dubard were fired this month during the shutdown of foreign aid distributed by USAID. The administration sent over 8,000 USAID employees home, seemingly based on loyalty rather than competence. These dedicated public servants, with decades of experience across multiple administrations, were abruptly dismissed. They were reportedly emailed and then escorted out of the building, without any clear explanation. They couldn't even return. There was no process or explanation given to them.

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People are really scared because overnight, many lost their next paycheck and ability to pay for childcare and medical bills. Christina Drey and Adam Dubard were fired this month amidst the chaotic shutdown of foreign aid distributed by USAID. Over 8,000 USAID employees were sent home, not based on competency but on loyalty tests. These are people with decades of public service across administrations, and they had to leave the building immediately. As far as I know, they received an email, and if they didn't leave, they were escorted out. There was no process or explanation given to them.

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Lawn maintenance costs are set to rise significantly because 90% of workers in this industry are from Mexico. Stephen Miller, appointed by Trump for mass deportations, plans to target these workers, including naturalized citizens. American families are reluctant to let their young adults take on lawn maintenance jobs, leading to a shortage of available labor. As a result, finding lawn care services will become more difficult, and prices may double or triple. This labor shortage will also impact other sectors, including food supply and construction, as there aren't many Americans willing to take on physically demanding jobs like hauling cement.

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This past weekend, I met with farm workers affected by mass deportations. Many women shared heartbreaking stories of their husbands being taken during traffic stops and deported without understanding what they signed. I spoke to two 11-year-old boys, one who had spoken to his father in Mexico and was heartbroken, and another who hadn’t been able to reach his dad and was in tears. These families, who have worked tirelessly in the fields for years, often without any criminal records, are now torn apart. This situation not only devastates families but also impacts farmers and food prices. Mass deportations mean real suffering—children without parents and wives without husbands. It’s a tragic reality.

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FBI agents arrested my husband in Coachella. This nightmare unfolded as we were simply trying to run errands. I want everyone to know that my family has been separated. According to my account, eight FBI agents surrounded us and stated that they had a deportation order for my husband, but they didn't show it to us. We have been married for 20 years, and he has lived in the United States for 30 years. He has lived in this country longer than his own. He wasn't perfect, but he paid for whatever he did.

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A recent ABC News poll shows a strong majority of Americans support deporting all immigrants here illegally, with figures around 55% to 64% across various polls. This reflects a significant shift in public sentiment since 2015, when only 42% supported deportation. By the end of last year, that number rose to 56%, indicating a more hawkish stance on immigration. Additionally, 55% of respondents want to decrease overall immigration levels, the highest since post-9/11, marking a 14-point increase from 2023 and a 17-point rise since 2016. This trend suggests growing support for stricter immigration policies, giving political figures like Donald Trump leverage with the American public.

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Immigration advocates say mass deportations are causing stress for those seeking to settle here. Many families are afraid to attend court appearances, fearing deportation before the process even begins. One family from Waukegan expressed terror at coming to court in Chicago. Church members accompanied them to pray for their safety and ease their fears. Despite being granted entry and given steps to remain in the US after seeking asylum at the border in 2023, the family is anxious about deportation due to immigration raids. Immigration attorney Martin Perez says that failure to appear in court can lead to serious consequences, like being ordered for removal, making it easier for enforcement to get them out of the country. Experts cite language barriers and changes to immigration laws as reasons asylum seekers may not understand the importance of attending court.

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Venezuela has been emptying its prisons and rehabilitation centers, sending people to the US. DHS confirmed this, with millions arriving in the US. Officially, 10-11 million have come, but estimates suggest 15-18 million.

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Two new studies suggest self-deportations are five to ten times higher than formal deportations, potentially exceeding one million. While Trump's administration has deported about 140,000 illegals in four months, around 1,500 a day, this is less than hoped due to legal challenges and a focus on hardened criminals. Trend Macro estimates 773,000 illegals have left since Trump took office, while The Washington Post estimates 1,000,000 workers have self-deported, implying 1,600,000 people. The administration is encouraging self-deportation, using a deportation app and offering incentives like free travel, a $1,000 bonus, and forgiveness of fines. The biggest driver of self-deportations is cutting off money by targeting employers who hire illegals and reducing government benefits, estimated at $182 billion annually. Trump is addressing these benefits through executive orders, while the left is expected to litigate every step.

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A recent ABC News poll shows a strong consensus among Americans for deporting all undocumented immigrants, with results from various polls indicating around 55-64% support. This marks a significant increase in hawkish sentiments towards immigration since 2015, when support was only 36%. The latest figures suggest a 20-point rise since Trump’s initial presidency. Additionally, 55% of respondents want to decrease overall immigration levels, the highest since post-9/11, reflecting a 14-point increase from 2023 and a 17-point rise since 2016. Overall, public opinion has shifted towards a more stringent stance on immigration and deportation.

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The speaker addresses the mass deportations, calling them inhumane and surprising due to their un-American nature. While acknowledging that nobody wants criminals, rapists, or drug dealers in the country, the speaker states that the roundups are happening in places like birthday parties and Home Depot, targeting hardworking people, not criminals. The speaker emphasizes that industries depend on immigrant labor, and these individuals feed and care for communities. The speaker refutes the idea of a straightforward legal line for immigration, citing people waiting for citizenship for decades. The speaker highlights the separation of parents from children and minors in detention centers with adults, decrying the lack of due process for law-abiding, tax-paying immigrants. The speaker shares organizations to donate to, including Endalong, the National Day Labors Network, MALDEF, IMDEF, and the National Immigrant Justice Center, which provide legal services. The speaker thanks allies for their support and urges protesters to be safe and respectful.

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The Social Security Administration (SSA) has added thousands of migrants authorized to work in the U.S. to a list of people who have been declared dead, making them ineligible for work authorization or government benefits. The SSA renamed its "death master file" to the "ineligible master file," now used for anyone the SSA deems ineligible. This move by the Trump administration aims to motivate people to self-deport by eliminating their ability to live and work in the U.S. Over 6,000 immigrants who entered the country through a Biden-era parole program and were flagged for criminal or security concerns are having their access to jobs, banks, and federal programs revoked. Critics argue that stripping migrants of their Social Security numbers sets them up for financial hardship and violates privacy laws. They warn that targeting immigrants could impact the broader public, including American citizens who have had their identity stolen or who have been neutralized.

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Since May, over 300,000 undocumented migrants have been either returned, sent away, or sent back.

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The transcript presents an extensive compilation of claims from a group of speakers arguing that the established Holocaust narrative is false or exaggerated and that many historical incidents have been misrepresented or fabricated by Allied propaganda, Soviet influence, and Jewish-led organizations. The speakers frame Holocaust revisionism as a legitimate scholarly effort rather than denial, asserting that revisionists do not dispute that Jews and others suffered and died in the war, but dispute the scale, methods, and specifics of extermination. Key asserted points and claims - Holocaust definition and revisionism - The Holocaust is described as a belief that 6,000,000 Jews were murdered primarily by gassing in “shower rooms,” a narrative the speakers say is amplified by Hollywood, media, and schools. A growing movement of scientists, historians, engineers, journalists, and free-speech activists is portrayed as revisionist, though often branded as “Holocaust deniers” to discourage discourse. Revisionists are said not to deny persecution, deprivation of civil rights, deportation, internment, forced labor, or deaths in camps and ghettos, including deaths from disease; they also say that many victims died in ways other than genocide and that many victims’ dignity is not denied. - Internment and civilian camps in the United States - After Pearl Harbor, over 100,000 people of Japanese descent on the Pacific Coast were interned by Executive Order 9066; the text claims this restricted freedoms, required identity cards, and denied compensation or war reparations. The narrative includes accounts of interned individuals describing camp life, guard presence, and harsh conditions. - General wartime devastation and context - The war is described as a conflict that would not have occurred if “international jury” had not declared war on Germany in 1933, with emphasis on typhus, subversion, and crowded camps as drivers of disease and death. The speakers stress that millions died across battlefields, ships, and cities, and that propaganda surrounding German crimes obscures Allied or Soviet misdeeds. - Claims about typhus, gas chambers, and cremation - Typhus epidemics are said to explain many deaths in camps; Cyclone B (hydrogen cyanide) is claimed to have been used for delousing and pest control rather than execution, with several speakers arguing that gas chambers as homicidal devices did not exist or were technically infeasible. They assert there is no scientific proof of gassing, no German documents proving extermination plans, and that cremation and delousing procedures served health purposes rather than execution purposes. - Expert testimonies and forensics are cited (e.g., Leuchter, Rudolf, Lift, Lindsay) to support the claim that the gas chambers could not have functioned as execution facilities, noting technical impossibilities such as lack of explosion-proof features, gasketed doors, or proper gas delivery systems. - Specific camp narratives and testimonies - The camps are described as having been centers of labor, medical care, and even cultural activity, with accounts of weddings, births, nurseries, orchestras, libraries, theater performances, and recreational activities. Some testimonies describe attempts to maintain humanity and morale under harsh conditions, including a piano in Block 1, children’s art, and soccer games. - Several testimonies challenge the image of mass exterminations, claiming instead that most deaths resulted from disease, starvation, and Allied bombing, and that Red Cross and Vatican inquiries found no evidence of homicidal gas chambers. - A number of survivor testimonials are presented as quotations or paraphrases challenging the notion of mass murder in gas chambers, with some individuals denying personal knowledge of gas chambers or mass killings. - Documentary, legal, and scholarly disputes - The Institute for Historical Review (IHR) and other revisionist scholars are described as measuring and challenging the established narrative, sometimes facing legal or financial pressure. The transcript cites various researchers and forensics teams (e.g., Leuchter, Krakov, Farison, Groff, Farison, Larsson) as having concluded that homicidal gassings were not technically feasible in the cited facilities. - It is claimed that many postwar figures and witnesses provided testimonies or stories later recognized as unreliable or fabricated, including famous Holocaust survivors whose accounts are presented as inconsistent or false. Names and cases (e.g., Herman Rosenblatt, Anne Frank, Elie Wiesel) are invoked to illustrate alleged fraud or manipulation, though these claims contradict well-established historical records. - Propaganda, media, and the so-called “Holocaust industry” - The text asserts that the Holocaust narrative is used as a tool to enforce globalist policy, promote multiculturalism, and suppress nationalist sentiments among white Europeans. It claims that ongoing denazification efforts, legal penalties for questioning the Holocaust, and control over media and online platforms are designed to suppress dissent and promote a one-sided portrayal. - There is a claim that “atrocity propaganda” and black propaganda have been used to shape public perception, with references to Sefton Delmer and Allied psychological warfare, and accusations that postwar trials and media representations were heavily biased or manipulated. - Population counts, mortality figures, and documentary evidence - Several sections contest the veracity of the commonly cited death tolls, the reliability of Red Cross and other international communications, and the authenticity of diaries and eyewitness testimonies. The transcript asserts that the Nuremberg trials did not use physical or technical evidence to establish gas chamber existence and that some documents used as proof were mistranslated or contextualized wrongly. - The piece repeatedly emphasizes that millions of Jews did not die in the camps, that the “6,000,000” figure is a symbolic or religious number, and that high-profile Holocaust narratives are part of a constructed orthodoxy. - Final framing - The speakers position Holocaust revisionism as a defense of free speech and historical inquiry, arguing that questioning the official narrative is essential to truth. They claim laws against denial suppress inquiry and that truth should stand on its own merits without legal protection. They also suggest that conflicting accounts, forged documents, and political agendas have shaped the popular memory of World War II. Note on structure and tone - The transcript interweaves personal testimonials, expert opinions, documentary references, and polemical assertions. It repeatedly contrasts “revisionists” with conventional accounts, often asserting that mainstream portrayals are driven by propaganda, financial interests, or political goals. The overall thrust is to challenge the conventional understanding of the Holocaust, question the evidentiary basis for extermination claims, and highlight alleged inconsistencies in survivor narratives and official records.

Breaking Points

NOT JUST EL SALVADOR: Rubio Plots Global Gulags
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Marco Rubio announced efforts to find countries outside of El Salvador for deporting individuals, stating, "We want to send you some of the most despicable human beings." This follows a New York Times investigation revealing a deal between the Trump administration and El Salvador's President Belli, involving payments to house deported Venezuelans, many of whom lacked criminal records. Belli agreed to accept violent criminals for a fee but resisted becoming a dumping ground for noncriminal migrants. The Trump administration's mass deportations invoked the Alien Enemies Act, which critics argue lacks a solid legal basis, as it was designed to bypass due process. Reports indicate that many deportees were misclassified as gang members without proper trials. The administration's strategy appears to prioritize spectacle and cruelty to deter immigration, with Stephen Miller leading the charge. A recent court ruling favored Mosen Madawi, who argued against deportation based on political speech, highlighting constitutional concerns over using anti-Semitism as grounds for deportation. The ruling suggests that deportation cannot be justified solely on political views, raising questions about the administration's broader immigration policies and their legality.

Breaking Points

Rogan and Dillon SHOCKED By Alligator Alcatraz, ICE Raids
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Concerns are emerging from pro-Trump circles regarding the administration's aggressive immigration policies, particularly mass deportations. Tim Dylan criticized the inhumane tactics of targeting law-abiding immigrants, suggesting that proposals like housing detainees in an "alligator swamp" highlight the absurdity of the policies. The Trump administration, led by Stephen Miller, is focused on undoing the Biden era's immigration changes, which included a more lenient asylum process. The GOP base's support for mass deportation contrasts with broader public sentiment, which is less favorable when specifics are revealed. Joe Rogan echoed these concerns, particularly regarding the targeting of migrant workers and students. The administration's approach risks alienating moderate voters, while the Trump base remains largely supportive. The increase in ICE's budget and resources raises fears of a mass surveillance state that could impact all citizens, not just immigrants. The scale of deportations proposed poses significant political and logistical challenges.
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