Day No. 1 of Shutdown No. 3
Who's accountable for the results?
(Bill Glahn) Day 1 of the latest government shutdown has already claimed its first victims. From The Hill newspaper,
Johnson’s delegation cancellation upends lawmakers’ travel to critical global summit
Following “shutdown” protocols, U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson cancelled the official Congressional delegation to the Munich Security Conference.
I can’t recall of hearing of this “critical” conference before today. But, maybe that’s just me.
As for the ongoing shutdown, The Hill tells us that Democrats “have been demanding sweeping reforms to the White House’s immigration tactics, including an overhaul of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.”
What sort of reforms? No. 1 on the Democrats’ wish list for ICE is a requirement for “judicial warrants.”
From Fox News,
Over 1.5 million illegal aliens with deportation orders in US, ICE director reveals:
Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons said, ‘There’s 16,840 final orders at large in the state of Minnesota’
Let’s start with the Minnesota figure. Keep in mind that “final orders” mean that each alien has already received their full measure of due process. They have been ordered deported from America but have not complied. Judical warrants begin an entire new due process system beginning at square 1.
Let’s assume that it would require one hour of a federal district judge’s time to obtain a warrant, or a least a decision on a warrant application. Assume an 8-hour workday per judge and 250 workdays a year (excepting weekends, federal holidays, vacations). If he did nothing else, a judge could process 2,000 warrants per year. It would take more than 8 judge-years to process just the current number of aliens with final orders in Minnesota.
Ignoring judges on “senior status,” there are only seven sitting federal judges in all of the district of Minnesota. And that’s all they would do, for a full year: no civil or criminal cases, no other court business, just arrest warrants for illegal aliens already slated for deportation.
Likewise, processing 1.5 million warrants nationwide would require 750 judge-years. There are only 677 district judge seats across America. The requirement for judicial warrants is a demand to end enforcement of immigration laws and a requirement to open the borders.
Math is relentless.
Who's accountable for the results?
(Bill Glahn) Day 1 of the latest government shutdown has already claimed its first victims. From The Hill newspaper,
Johnson’s delegation cancellation upends lawmakers’ travel to critical global summit
Following “shutdown” protocols, U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson cancelled the official Congressional delegation to the Munich Security Conference.
I can’t recall of hearing of this “critical” conference before today. But, maybe that’s just me.
As for the ongoing shutdown, The Hill tells us that Democrats “have been demanding sweeping reforms to the White House’s immigration tactics, including an overhaul of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.”
What sort of reforms? No. 1 on the Democrats’ wish list for ICE is a requirement for “judicial warrants.”
From Fox News,
Over 1.5 million illegal aliens with deportation orders in US, ICE director reveals:
Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons said, ‘There’s 16,840 final orders at large in the state of Minnesota’
Let’s start with the Minnesota figure. Keep in mind that “final orders” mean that each alien has already received their full measure of due process. They have been ordered deported from America but have not complied. Judical warrants begin an entire new due process system beginning at square 1.
Let’s assume that it would require one hour of a federal district judge’s time to obtain a warrant, or a least a decision on a warrant application. Assume an 8-hour workday per judge and 250 workdays a year (excepting weekends, federal holidays, vacations). If he did nothing else, a judge could process 2,000 warrants per year. It would take more than 8 judge-years to process just the current number of aliens with final orders in Minnesota.
Ignoring judges on “senior status,” there are only seven sitting federal judges in all of the district of Minnesota. And that’s all they would do, for a full year: no civil or criminal cases, no other court business, just arrest warrants for illegal aliens already slated for deportation.
Likewise, processing 1.5 million warrants nationwide would require 750 judge-years. There are only 677 district judge seats across America. The requirement for judicial warrants is a demand to end enforcement of immigration laws and a requirement to open the borders.
Math is relentless.
Day No. 1 of Shutdown No. 3
Who's accountable for the results?
(Bill Glahn) Day 1 of the latest government shutdown has already claimed its first victims. From The Hill newspaper,
Johnson’s delegation cancellation upends lawmakers’ travel to critical global summit
Following “shutdown” protocols, U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson cancelled the official Congressional delegation to the Munich Security Conference.
I can’t recall of hearing of this “critical” conference before today. But, maybe that’s just me.
As for the ongoing shutdown, The Hill tells us that Democrats “have been demanding sweeping reforms to the White House’s immigration tactics, including an overhaul of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.”
What sort of reforms? No. 1 on the Democrats’ wish list for ICE is a requirement for “judicial warrants.”
From Fox News,
Over 1.5 million illegal aliens with deportation orders in US, ICE director reveals:
Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons said, ‘There’s 16,840 final orders at large in the state of Minnesota’
Let’s start with the Minnesota figure. Keep in mind that “final orders” mean that each alien has already received their full measure of due process. They have been ordered deported from America but have not complied. Judical warrants begin an entire new due process system beginning at square 1.
Let’s assume that it would require one hour of a federal district judge’s time to obtain a warrant, or a least a decision on a warrant application. Assume an 8-hour workday per judge and 250 workdays a year (excepting weekends, federal holidays, vacations). If he did nothing else, a judge could process 2,000 warrants per year. It would take more than 8 judge-years to process just the current number of aliens with final orders in Minnesota.
Ignoring judges on “senior status,” there are only seven sitting federal judges in all of the district of Minnesota. And that’s all they would do, for a full year: no civil or criminal cases, no other court business, just arrest warrants for illegal aliens already slated for deportation.
Likewise, processing 1.5 million warrants nationwide would require 750 judge-years. There are only 677 district judge seats across America. The requirement for judicial warrants is a demand to end enforcement of immigration laws and a requirement to open the borders.
Math is relentless.
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