Monday, September 24, 2018

Trump news on Youtube Sep 24 2018

Trump Just Denied Green Cards And Freebies To Those Who Don't Deserve It – All Hell

About To Unleash

The Department of Homeland Security recently released a draft of the regulation to stop

legal immigration of those are likely to need taxpayer assisted aid program.

These include medical care, anti-poverty aid as well as pension aid.

This regulation is based on a long-standing law that is already in place and could start

as early as potentially next year.

The regulation is meant to sharply decrease the cost to taxpayers of supporting the nearly

1.1 million migrants that come to American legally and are given green cards annually.

Over the next few years, it can decrease the influx of unskilled labor.

This is meant to potentially help nudge the employee wages for unskilled Americans.

The regulation utilizes existing law that has already been in place for some time.

Thus, various migration advocates will find difficulty when they attempt their lawsuits.

It is expected that business groups will lobby Congressional members to override and get

rid of the regulation.

Breitbart reported,

"The regulation uses existing law, so migration advocates may not be able to stop it via lawsuits

unless President Donald Trump loses the 2020 election.

However, business groups likely will lobby Congress to override the regulation.

The rule likely will trim the fast-growing inflow of elderly migrants, such as the retired

parents of recent immigrants.

It could also block the arrival of many ailing or poor chain-migrants, such as the siblings

of unskilled immigrants, but it is not likely to reduce the overall chain-migration inflow

because the chain-migration waiting-line of 4 million people includes many people who

are not poor, ill or unskilled.

The proposed regulation does not cover immigrants who already have green cards or citizenship.

But the regulation will cover many illegals, overstays, and visa-workers who are in the

United States and hope to file an "Adjustment of Status" that would get them green cards

and also allow them to import their relatives via the chain-migration rules that Congress

has refused to reform.

The agency's statement says:

the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced a proposed rule that will clearly

define long-standing law to ensure that those seeking to enter and remain in the United

States either temporarily or permanently can support themselves financially and will not

be reliant on public benefits … [or] likely to become burdens on American taxpayers.

DHS is proposing to consider current and past receipt of designated public benefits above

certain thresholds as a heavily weighed negative factor.

The rule would also make nonimmigrants who receive or are likely to receive designated

public benefits above the designated threshold generally ineligible for change of status

and extension of stay.

The public benefits proposed to be designated in this rule are federal, state, local, or

tribal cash assistance for income maintenance, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF),

Supplemental Security Income (SSI), Medicaid (with limited exceptions for Medicaid benefits

paid for an "emergency medical condition," and for certain disability services related

to education), Medicare Part D Low Income Subsidy, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance

Program (SNAP, or food stamps), institutionalization for long-term care at government expense,

Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Program, Section 8 Project-Based Rental Assistance,

and Public Housing.

The first three benefits listed above are cash benefits that are covered under current

policy.

The phrase "heavily weighed negative factor" implies that most — but not all — poor,

sick and unskilled applicants will not be given residency.

The regulation does not count taxpayer aid related to the Affordable Care Act or the

Children's Health Insurance Program, and it excludes taxpayers' rebates under the

Earned Income Tax Credit.

The rule also allows would-be immigrants to receive a small amount of aid, or roughly

$3,765 for a family of four, or a $1,821 for a single person.

The rules only apply once the regulation is established, so it does not cover potential

migrants' current use of aid programs.

The DHS statement and DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen noted that the regulation implements

a long-ignored law excluding migrants who may impose a "public charge" on Americans:

The term "public charge" as applied to admission of aliens to the United States has

a long history in U.S. immigration law, appearing at least as far back as the Immigration Act

of 1882.

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries public charge was the most common ground for

refusing admission at U.S. ports of entry.

"Under long-standing federal law, those seeking to immigrate to the United States

must show they can support themselves financially," said Secretary Nielsen.

"The Department takes seriously its responsibility to be transparent in its rulemaking and is

welcoming public comment on the proposed rule.

This proposed rule will implement a law passed by Congress intended to promote immigrant

self-sufficiency and protect finite resources by ensuring that they are not likely to become

burdens on American taxpayers."

The new policy was slammed by advocates for mass migration and imposed diversity, and

it was praised by pro-American groups who support lower immigration rates.

The National Immigration Law Center portrayed the regulation as an insult to poor people:

"The proposal is reckless, deeply unfair, and inconsistent with core American values.

It is a massive backdoor change to decades of immigration law.

It places wealth over family, denying ordinary working families a place in America.

And it explicitly places a priority on well-off families and ignores families who have waited

years to be reunited" said Olivia Golden, executive director of the Center for Law and

Social Policy.

Pro-migration progressives also portrayed the reform as an attack on children, including

the U.S-born children of recent migrants.

In April, Washington state Gov. Jay Inslee complained about the pending regulation, writing:

The proposal is clearly intended to deny basic supports like food, health care, and housing

to lawfully present immigrants and their families — including millions of children and U.S.

citizens — who pay taxes, work, go to school and contribute to our country's economy.

But immigration reformers applauded the regulations needed to implement the existing law.

"This is long overdue," said Mark Krikorian, the executive director of the Center for Immigration

Studies, told the New York Times.

For years, "this country has defined public charge in a fictional way in order to facilitate

high levels of low-skilled immigration.

But this is simply a 21st-century definition of what public charge is."

He continued:

This isn't a moral issue …. A Honduran with a sixth-grade education level isn't

morally flawed, but he works three jobs and still can't feed his family.

Immigrants with low levels of skill are a mismatch for a modern society like ours."

For more infomation >> Trump Just Denied Green Cards And Freebies To Those Who Don't Deserve It – All Hell About To Unleash - Duration: 6:49.

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Trump Sounds Off on FISA Warrant Release: 'I Want Total Transparency' - Duration: 3:09.

For more infomation >> Trump Sounds Off on FISA Warrant Release: 'I Want Total Transparency' - Duration: 3:09.

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The Tea Party Paved The Way For Trump's Dumbed-Down Presidency - Duration: 3:16.

Our next question is from @poshpointy who asks, "The more and more I see what Donald

Trump is doing to America the more I think he's a Tea Party President, what do you think?"

I think he is 100%.

Listen, the Tea Party was formed by basically a group of people with a lot of funding, outside

shadow funding I guess you'd call it, from the Koch Brothers and Americas for Prosperity,

but it's really put together by people who had no idea what they wanted.

They just didn't like the President for some reason, maybe it had to do with the color

of his skin.

But they didn't know what they wanted.

They didn't know what they were doing.

They didn't know what their goal was, they just know that they've got a lot of hate in

their heart and no ideas in their heads so they're going to become their own new little

thing, which was the Tea Party.

And that is exactly the de-evolution of the United States Electorate that led to Donald

Trump.

Donald Trump is the Tea Party President.

Not just because he kind of has that same mentality of, "I don't know what I'm doing.

I don't know where we're going, but we're here and ah."

It's because the Tea Party dumbed down the Republican Party to the point that somebody

like Trump could actually excel.

The Tea Party is what help give us people like Michelle Bachmann, or Christine I forget

her last name, I'm not a witch woman.

Those are Tea Party people.

Sarah Palin rode the coattails of the Tea Party movement even though she came about

before them and then kind of faded into obscurity, but the Tea Party brought her right back into

the center-fold and she absolutely loved it.

But the Tea Party has been an absolute cancer on the Republican Party.

It used to be a difference of ideals, a difference of ideas.

Policy, that's what separated the two parties.

Do we want to do A or do we want to do B?

Republicans say A, Democrats say B, usually meet somewhere in the middle, but now, and

this is largely in part because of the Tea Party, we're having to have basic arguments

about right and wrong, like is it okay to punch a Nazi in the face?

Yeah, it's okay to punch a Nazi in the face.

Yes, Nazism is bad.

No, Black people are not horrible or worth less than White people.

That's where we're at as the difference between the two parties at this point.

And again, you can trace that all back and thank the Tea Party for it, because regardless

of what they say, they're biggest gripe, even if it was unspoken against Barack Obama, was

that he was a Black man who had a lot of power and it made these old White people at the

Tea Party rallies feel very, very weak.

That is why Donald Trump consistently and constantly talks about Obama.

Tries to trash him tries to tear down his legacy, because he, just like those Tea Party

rally folks cannot stand the fact that an African-American man came in, was successful

and did a better job than they could ever imagine.

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