Smugglers’ Boat Disintegrates; Four Dead, 27 Injured

An overloaded smugglers' boat came apart in rough seas off the coast of San Diego, California, on Sunday, killing four (some reports say three)...

Nearly Half Want More Enforcement

A new Rasmussen Reports survey found that nearly half of likely voters (48 percent) believe that the government is not doing enough to stop illegal immigration. Twenty-eight said the government is doing too much to stop it, and 17 percent said that the government's present efforts are adequate. Read more at rasmussenreports.com   

Biden to Announce Amnesty Bill This Week

NBC News is reporting that this week Joe Biden will unveil what his administration is calling the "U.S. Citizenship Act of 2021," a bill...

Lawsuit Exposes Obama Plot to Cripple Enforcement of Immigration Law

Last week Patricia Vroom, a civil servant with an exemplary 26-year as a federal immigration attorney filed a lawsuit depicting how her superiors bullied...

Abbott Writes Biden

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott hand-delivered a letter to President Biden. Below is an excerpt from that letter. "Your visit to our southern border with Mexico...

SCOTUS on MPP: Does It Matter?

The Migrant Protection Protocols (MPP), otherwise known as Remain in Mexico, has been dealt a blow by the U.S. Supreme Court, which yesterday sided...

Deterring Illegals Isn’t DHS Objective

Fox News host Bret Baier asked DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas if it is “the objective of the Biden administration to reduce, sharply reduce the...

Sanders Evades Question

At a townhall meeting in New Hampshire a woman asked Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders the following question: "So one issue that you have not...

Poll: Majority Wants Troops on Border

Fifty-five percent of voters believe that the federal government should deploy troops on the border to stop drug smuggling, according to an NBC News...

Media Hide Khan Background

Khir Khan drew great attention at the Democratic convention by speaking against proposals to limit Muslim immigration to the U.S. He stirred great emotion by referencing the death of his serviceman son in Iraq. In reporting on Khan, the media generally failed to reveal that Khan is an immigration lawyer who makes money helping Muslim immigrants come to the U.S. In what appeared to be an effort to conceal this association, he deleted his firm's website from the Internet.