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June 4, 2026, 7:13 pm
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Who is "you"? Truesee, while sometimes <snip>izing the original headline, is merely linking to a post on HuffPo...which is, I might add, taking what was said completely out of context.
"...these are the children that were brought here to the U.S. by their parents."
Yes, parents who were here illegally, therefore making their children here illegally and nothing has changed. Obama didn't do a thing for the dreamers, only gave them temporary and false hope; at least Trump is trying to return the power and responsibility to the branch of govt. it belongs with - Congress.
"What a lot of people forget is that the native Americans were here way before the Pilgrims set foot on this country."
What does that have to do with anything, esp. this argument? What does your family serving in the military or building the railroads have to do with it? I understand what you're trying to do, however, and that's to give some weight to your poor argument by saying the accomplishments of your family makes your argument more valid. Sorry, but that won't fly.
"And I am proud to be Mexican American."
Why? I'm ashamed that you, an American citizen, feels the need to quantify your citizenship description with "Mexican" in front of it. You weren't born there, so you're an American, plain and simple. (A whiny one, but still an American.) It's the same with African-Americans; unless they were born in Africa and immigrated here and became citizens, it's simply wrong. Of course, they or you can call yourself whatever you like, but I don't have to cater to your whims. I'd prefer to refer to you as "clueless" or even "wrong-thinking".
"...I love all people no matter what color your skin is." seems to be negated by "... you prejudice no good poor excuse of a human being". "Judge ye not..."
One of your problems (and just one, b/c you obviously have several) is that you didn't read the original article; here's a snippet:
"I, I, I. Me, me, me. My bills. My ego. My education. My job. My anxiety.
Since when did DACA become the Depression and Anxiety Cure for Amnesty-seekers?
It’s this insatiable appetite for collective entitlement that demonstrates the perils of blanket amnesty. Give a privileged political class an inch and they’ll take, take, take until feckless public servants give away their country.
The proper response to illegal alien activists demanding that Washington act “NOW!†to preserve their comfort, allay their anxieties and extend their unconstitutional protections indefinitely is this:
Why?
Americans in uniform who’ve dedicated their lives to defending our nation are struggling to gain access to quality health care they’ve earned by action, not by accident or circumstance. Imagine their stress.
Five million American young people between 16-34 were unemployed last year and 50 million more are not even in the labor force. Imagine their anxiety.
Hundreds of thousands of law-abiding people from around the world are waiting patiently for their backlogged visa and green card applications to be reviewed. Imagine their frustration.
Why don’t their dreams come first?
The left-wing DREAM racket is a self-perpetuating political marketing machine. Its primary contribution to American society? Lashing out at how cruel, racist, ignorant and ungrateful the rest of us are for not bowing down before the hallowed angel children of the Obama administration’s amnesty program. It’s no coincidence that the publicity-hungry leaders of the DREAMer movement are full-time fulminators in government-funded academia, community organizing outfits, immigration law foundations and the grievance-nursing media.
A deserving DREAMer would respect the sovereign right of an independent nation to determine who stays and who goes based on its national interest and constitutional obligations to put its citizenry first.
The deserving DREAMer, in other words, would admit he or she is owed nothing and deserves nothing.
There is no such thing as a “deserving DREAMer.â€
http://michellemalkin.com/2017/09/06/there-is-no-such-thing-as-a-deserving-dreamer/
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