"Not your job" or you can't because they don't exist? Don't believe lies just because you hate the people targeted. The next target might be someone you don't hate.
"Not your job" or you can't because they don't exist? Don't believe lies just because you hate the people targeted. The next target might be someone you don't hate.
I don't hate anybody. If they come in legally and assimilate as the law requires. they will be welcomed by me.
All the people sent to the El Salvador prison came legally and assimilated, many have American citizen spouses and children.
The El Salvador prison is for gang members. And they did come in legally.
They haven’t proven that any of them are gang members. Just accusations. Do you understand how it’s a problem that someone can be sent to a foreign prison with no hope of ever seeing their family again, with no trial or anything?
But he had a trial in 2019, and was found to be a gang member.
For the love of God, no, he wasn't. Where are you getting your information??? 4chan? Just stop, everything you're saying is factually incorrect. apnews.com/article/trum...
U.S. immigration judge ultimately granted him protection from being deported back to El Salvador in 2019. And that was the mistake, he should have been deported somewhere else.
Assuming he immigrated without proper documentation, the immigration judge who ordered that he not be deported to El Salvador should be listened to. Also, SCOTUS ordered that the US government return him to the US. They have the final say.
It's abundantly clear they have blinders on and won't listen to facts. I had hoped they were just misinformated, but this is willful hate and/or ignorance.
Or maybe law abiding.
No. As much as I respect the SCOTUS, El Salvador has the final say. It is their country, their laws, and their citizen.
The US sent him to El Salvador and paid them money to imprison him. If SCOTUS said Trump has to facilitate bringing him home, then he has to at least try.
He was granted asylum and a work visa in 2019.
Abrego Garcia illegally immigrated to the U.S. in 2011 at the age of 16, he had lived and worked in the country legally since 2019, when an immigration judge granted him "withholding of removal" status, a rare alternative to asylum, over the threat to his life from gangs in El Salvador if deported.