Horowitz: The Texas Rangers have come full-circle in defense of state and national sovereignty



Our nation did not have a Border Patrol until 1924. There obviously was no mass migration in the 1800s, but who secured our border against hostile forces or dangerous infiltrations? The Texas Rangers.

A report from the Texas adjutant general to then-Texas Governor John Ireland in September 1884 illuminates the dangers of Mexican raids into Texas and the extensive nature of Texas’ “lone star” approach to dealing with it. The adjutant general paints a picture very similar to the one today, in which the state felt abandoned by the federal government. “For some reason Texas, like many other border States and Territories, was left by the general government without adequate protection against these constantly recurring invasions and raids, and, as a matter of absolute and overpowering necessity, the State had to make some regular and systematic provision for affording protection and giving security, if possible, to her people.”

The document shows the tension between the Texas delegation and federal officials in their quest spanning decades to try to secure adequate reimbursement from the federal government for doing what should have been a federal job. Indeed, as late as 1911, Texas Senator Charles Culberson was demanding reimbursement for Texas Ranger border operations 60 years before!

History doesn’t only repeat itself; it rhymes. But back then our government was still growing in its job. Today, it has regressed to the point of breaking its social compact with the states.

As illegal aliens gathered at our border en masse, daily infiltrations were reaching an unfathomable 12,000 a day. Yet with Texas Rangers, specialized Texas DPS units, and Texas National Guardsmen plugging the gaps in Brownsville, and Gov. Greg Abbott finally agreeing to allow them to return the infiltrators to the other side of the river, the numbers actually shrank.

\u201cI am being told that because of these Texas soldiers at all the previously chaotic Matamoros crossings, immigrants are moving to Piedras Negras to cross at Eagle Pass as an alternative. Worth watching that as, for the first time since I\u2019ve been in town, the river here is placid.\u201d
— Todd Bensman (@Todd Bensman) 1683917902
\u201cAll quiet on the Matamoros front from the Texas vantage point of this new state tactic that shut down a mass migration onslaught through this sector - using brawn at to enforce a Thou Shalt Not Pass edict from \u2066@GregAbbott_TX\u2069\nhow it went down: https://t.co/VOAnqvl3ZZ\u201d
— Todd Bensman (@Todd Bensman) 1684011825
\u201cSources tell me there were only about 6,000 apprehensions within CBP at the southwest border yesterday\u2014 4,300+ by Border Patrol and roughly 1,700 by Office of Field Operations (OFO).\n\nAbout 22,500 migrants were in CBP custody at last check this morning.\u201d
— Ali Bradley (@Ali Bradley) 1684104823

These are still shockingly high numbers, but it shows that in the areas where we actually repatriate the illegal aliens, it makes a huge dent in the invasion. What this demonstrates is that if Texas only had the resources to do this at all of the critical crossings along its 1,200-mile international border, we’d go a long way toward stemming the tide and won’t need to suffer until a possible Republican president takes over in 2025.

In order to fill in the gaps, Gov. Abbott should call upon other Republican governors to send their Guardsmen and other law enforcement assets to help bolster the numbers of Texas law enforcement in repelling the invasion. Gov. Ron DeSantis has already offered such assistance. Idaho has also sent a contingent of state troopers to Texas this week. An effort from at least 20 states would allow us to bypass the feds and to solve a major issue right now without putting all of our hopes into the results of a federal election a long time from now.

State enforcement is the only way to ensure we are blocking the invasion rather than rolling out the red carpet to the cartel boatmen, which is unfortunately what Border Patrol has done. So many in Border Patrol are suffering from low morale because they are now forced to operate in a way that undermines their core mission. If Governor Abbott is now serious about making Texas law enforcement the new Border Patrol, he should offer incentives for current Border Patrol agents operating in Texas to switch teams and join the Texas law enforcement at the border.

This idea, of course, will require more authorities and appropriations. With precious few days left in the legislative session, Abbott needs to lean in on Speaker Dade Phelan to pass HB 20. This bill would create a permanent “Border Protection Unit” and also make it a felony for illegal aliens to trespass into Texas. Unfortunately, that bill was killed in committee last week. House leaders instead performed a bait-and-switch and placed the Border Protection Unit into another bill, but then subjected its authority to the approval of county governments. The problem is that most of the border county governments are run by Democrats, and frankly, some have a history of being in with the cartels.

There is a need for Abbott and Lt. Gov Dan Patrick to step up and demand that this session not end before the creation of a border unit with full authority to repel the invasion. They should also incentivize county governments to deploy resources to repel the invasion as well. Current Texas Code allows the sheriff, county judge, or mayor to “call into service the portion of the reserve militia needed for the period required in case of war, insurrection, invasion or prevention of invasion, suppression of riot, tumult, or breach of peace or to aid civil officers to execute law or serve process.” In other words, we need an all-hands-on-deck approach. The legislature will not meet again until 2025.

This will not be the first time Texas leads the way in defense of the border. This past week demonstrates that Texas personnel are highly effective if given enough resources to repel the invasion. It’s time to make the old adage “don’t mess with Texas” meaningful again.

US asylum system a 'jewel': DHS Sec. Mayorkas claims 50% reduction in border crossings since Title 42's end



Department of Homeland Security's Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas claimed border crossings are down 50% since Title 42 ended.

"Over the past two days, the United States Border Patrol has experienced a 50% drop in the number of encounters versus what we were experiencing earlier in the week before Title 42 ended at midnight on Thursday," Mayorkas said Sunday morning on CNN's "State of the Union."

Mayorkas said it is too early to determine if the anticipated surge has peaked. He said the figures from the United States Border Patrol were 6,300 on Friday and about 4,200 Saturday. He added that the figure was around 10,000 earlier in the week.

The Biden appointee made remarks on ABC's "This Week" with anchor Jonathan Karl Sunday morning, as well.

Mayorkas told Karl he "respectfully disagrees" with a judge's ruling earlier this week taking aim at a DHS policy that allowed some migrants to be released without a court date due to overcrowding.

Mayorkas attributed the surprising figures he gave to both outlets to "months and months" of advanced planning in preparation for the ending Title 42. He also said that communications efforts emphasizing "consequences" like possible deportation and a five-year ban on returning had helped stem the tide.

Over the past several days, from its Twitter account, DHS has posted short videos warning incoming migrants that the border is closed. Several of the tweets were posted in Haitian Creole and Spanish.

\u201cKontr\u00e8man ak Tit 42, lwa Tit 8 la yo enpoze konsekans imigrasyon ak krimin\u00e8l pou moun ki trav\u00e8se fwonty\u00e8 a ilegalman: sa gen ladan \u00f2donans final pou ekspilsyon, dep\u00f2tasyon, e yon ent\u00e8diksyon pou pa ka reyantre pandan senk lane. \u2b07\ufe0f \nhttps://t.co/ilo733Gfqd\u201d
— Homeland Security (@Homeland Security) 1683981905

Title 42 is a Trump-era policy that allowed incoming migrants to be denied entry based on the COVID pandemic. Title 42 ended Thursday. In the days leading up to its end, social media was awash in videos showing Texas officials behind concertina wire. Migrants, some with young children in tow, are seen scrambling up the riverbank on the opposite side of the makeshift barriers.

"The asylum system has been and continues to be a jewel of the United States," Mayorkas said on CNN when asked about the debate within the Democratic Party on how restrictive the United States should be when it comes to asylum claims.

"The cartels, the smuggling organizations, control the land. And so we have not only a security imperative, but a humanitarian responsibility to cut those smugglers out. And that's precisely what we, as an administration, [have] done," he also said, adding that more than 10,000 smugglers have already been arrested.

Throughout the week, Todd Bensman, a fellow at the Center for Immigration Studies, shared multiple videos on Twitter of migrants making their way across the water between Matamoros, Mexico and the Brownsville, Texas area on the opposite side.

Bensman described what he witnessed as a "human flood" and "terrible for the American public Wednesday, the day before Title 42 ended.

\u201cTexas DPS blocking migrants from entering - rare footage\u201d
— Todd Bensman (@Todd Bensman) 1683727707

Watch a segment below of DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas's interview with CNN's Dana Bash on "State of the Union" Sunday morning.

\u201c"The numbers that we have experienced over the past two days are markedly down"\n\nHomeland Security Secy Alejandro Mayorkas tells CNN's Dana Bash that the Biden administration has recorded a decrease in border crossings since Title 42 ended. @CNNSotu #CNNSOTU\u201d
— CNN (@CNN) 1684070887

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Twitter troll tricks Democrats into being outraged over Maxine Waters' 'dangerous' quote against Trump administration



Democrats are completely outraged over a fake quote from Democratic California Rep. Maxine Waters. A Twitter troll replaced Waters' original tweet that targeted Trump administration staffers with Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo. Democrats took the bait and called Waters' words "dangerous" and many said it was "inciting violence."

In June 2018, Waters delivered a fiery speech where she called for members of the "Resistance" to harass staffers of the Trump administration.

"History will record while he tried to step on all of us, we kicked him in his rear and step on him," Waters bellowed. "If you think we're rallying now, you ain't seen nothin' yet!"

"Already, you have members of your Cabinet that are being booed out of restaurants...who have protesters taking up at their house, who say, 'No peace, no sleep! No peace, no sleep!" Waters said, referencing Trump's former Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen being intimidated by socialists at a Mexican restaurant.

"God is on our side," Waters proclaimed. "Let's stay the course!"

"Let's make sure we show up wherever we have to show up and if you see anybody from that Cabinet in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station, you get out and you create a crowd and you push back on them, and you tell them they're not welcome anymore, anywhere," she yelled to rile the crowd into a frenzy.

Waters then zeroed in on then-President Donald Trump, "Mr. President, we will see you every day, every hour of the day, everywhere that we are to let you know you cannot get away with this!"

Maxine Waters @ Keep Families Together: Protest Rally and Toy Drive www.youtube.com

Twitter user @CuomoWatch took a portion of the congresswoman's speech, but altered it slightly to target the Cuomo administration instead of Trump's Cabinet.

"If you see anybody from the Cuomo Administration in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station, you get out and you create a crowd. And you push back on them. And you tell them they're not welcome anymore, anywhere," the now-viral tweet said.

“If you see anybody from the Cuomo Administration in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station, yo… https://t.co/j1l0o9gzKX
— Cuomo Watch (@Cuomo Watch)1611875347.0

Democrats, who are obviously not familiar with Waters' tempestuous tirade, immediately condemned the threatening words, likely assuming the menacing comments were made by Republicans or Trump supporters.

New York Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) fell for the fake quote, "This is encouraging violence against public officials - plain & simple. Absolutely disgusting. No tolerance for this. Haven't we learned the lessons from Washington D.C. just weeks ago?"

Former Pete Buttigieg adviser Lis Smith wrote, "Way way way over the line. Especially in light of what happened at the Capitol on Jan 6."

Democratic New York City Councilwoman Debi Rose reacted by saying, "Really? Did we not learn anything from the Capitol insurrection? We must condemn violence and harassment in any form. #StopTheViolence #MobMentality."

Democratic City Council Member Keith Powers said, "There are plenty of strong opinions and online angst these days, but there is no place for inciting violence or threatening people. This tweet should be removed ASAP. Full stop."

Democratic Senator for the 36th District of the New York Senate Jamaal T. Bailey tweeted, "This is more than tonedeaf, especially considering what's happened in recent days. This is unacceptable and ridiculous. Read the room."

Democratic member of the New York State Assembly Daniel Rosenthal said, "This is dangerous and unacceptable, especially after what happened in DC. Encouraging this kind of violence is unacceptable."

Democratic County Executive of Suffolk County Steve Bellone declared, "Democrats and Republicans must denounce this threat of violence against our fellow New Yorkers. After the Capitol riots, I call on @Twitter to ban this account immediately."

Former Democratic Speaker of the New York City Council Christine Quinn exclaimed, "This is dangerous and outrageous!"

Democratic County Executive of Nassau County Laura Curran was also fooled by the fake quote, "No matter your political party or beliefs, this is completely unacceptable. Nassau County has zero tolerance for hatred and inciting violence."

Democratic Speaker of the New York State Assembly Carl E. Heastie wrote, "This is appalling and dangerous. Encouraging violence must never be tolerated. Shame on whoever is behind this kind of garbage."

Democratic Assembly Member for the 42nd District of the New York State Assembly Rodneyse Bichotte was duped, "Threatening government officials & their staff is a crime for which there is a ZERO tolerance policy in Brooklyn & anywhere else. I condemn this tweet & the violence it incites, especially following the insurrection we just experienced at the capitol."

Democratic Ulster County Executive Pat Ryan wrote on Twitter, "This kind of dangerous rhetoric must be called out and condemned by all. Or else we risk repeating the horrendous events of Jan 6th. As leaders, especially in a time of such great challenge, it's incumbent on all of us to appeal to the 'better angels of our nature."

Democratic member of the New York State Senate Todd Kaminsky said, "Completely unacceptable. Haven't we learned the hard lesson that incitements to violence like this actually result in violence? There is no room for this in our discourse. None."

Luis A. Miranda, Jr. said, "You don't like the Governor, you vote him out. After the terrorist attack on our Capitol, threats, of any kind, especially as the right is targeting state capitals, are dangerous. And to target staff? Not cool."

Democratic Speaker of the New York City Council Corey Johnson stated, "The terrifying events of the last month have shown us more clearly than ever that words have consequences. This sort of targeting and incitement is simply wrong, and totally unacceptable."

Democrats finally condemn Maxine Waters' dangerous rhetoric, two years later, and only after they thought it was a Republican saying it.

This is encouraging violence against public officials - plain & simple. Absolutely disgusting. No tolerance for thi… https://t.co/eVBI26AHZQ
— Kathy Hochul (@Kathy Hochul)1611888134.0


Way way way over the line. Especially in light of what happened at the Capitol on Jan 6. https://t.co/bsYpq2tFYK
— Lis Smith (@Lis Smith)1611881727.0


Really? Did we not learn anything from the Capitol insurrection?We must condemn violence and harassment in any… https://t.co/lgfFRJAuxq
— Debi Rose (@Debi Rose)1611888906.0


There are plenty of strong opinions and online angst these days, but there is no place for inciting violence or thr… https://t.co/Iz1MWekVPq
— Keith Powers (@Keith Powers)1611884903.0


This is more than tonedeaf, especially considering what’s happened in recent days. This is unacceptable and ridicul… https://t.co/74qtb6MDj8
— Jamaal T. Bailey (@Jamaal T. Bailey)1611888591.0


This is dangerous and unacceptable, especially after what happened in DC. Encouraging this kind of violence is unac… https://t.co/TZGKg2bsYf
— Daniel Rosenthal (@Daniel Rosenthal)1611888419.0


Democrats and Republicans must denounce this threat of violence against our fellow New Yorkers.After the Capitol… https://t.co/KBBVH4hTP0
— Steve Bellone (@Steve Bellone)1611887868.0


This is dangerous and outrageous! https://t.co/ZnBLqYZLzt
— Christine Quinn (@Christine Quinn)1611887483.0


No matter your political party or beliefs, this is completely unacceptable.Nassau County has zero tolerance for h… https://t.co/0WgM05ngOv
— Laura Curran (@Laura Curran)1611887393.0


This is appalling and dangerous. Encouraging violence must never be tolerated. Shame on whoever is behind this kind… https://t.co/PETZ4fGeZM
— Carl E. Heastie (@Carl E. Heastie)1611886933.0


Threatening government officials & their staff is a crime for which there is a ZERO tolerance policy in Brooklyn &… https://t.co/wLy9bA6Us4
— Rodneyse Bichotte (@Rodneyse Bichotte)1611886755.0


This kind of dangerous rhetoric must be called out and condemned by all. Or else we risk repeating the horrendous e… https://t.co/GDYLjQiOmt
— Pat Ryan 🇺🇸 (@Pat Ryan 🇺🇸)1611891172.0


Completely unacceptable. Haven’t we learned the hard lesson that incitements to violence like this actually result… https://t.co/OqBHv2k9sB
— Todd Kaminsky (@Todd Kaminsky)1611886447.0


You don’t like the Governor, you vote him out. After the terrorist attack on our Capitol, threats, of any kind, esp… https://t.co/zenufFQ70J
— Luis A. Miranda, Jr. (@Luis A. Miranda, Jr.)1611886288.0


The terrifying events of the last month have shown us more clearly than ever that words have consequences. This sor… https://t.co/Pss10jhdZE
— NYC Council Speaker Corey Johnson (@NYC Council Speaker Corey Johnson)1611885188.0

Horowitz: States should block caravan invaders if Biden regime refuses to do its job



What if our own federal government openly encourages caravans to flood the border states and saddles them with violent drug cartels, crime, social ills, hospitalizations, and the public cost of mass migration from across the border? Are the states completely at the mercy of the federal government's refusal to defend the sovereignty of the whole union and that of the individual states, particularly those like Arizona and Texas at the border?

Shouting "Biden, Biden, go Biden!" migrants of various nationalities celebrated the inauguration of the new preside… https://t.co/f66VZKTCOf
— Todd Bensman (@Todd Bensman)1611326948.0

This is essentially the question Justice Antonin Scalia asked Obama's solicitor general during oral arguments in Arizona v. U.S., when the Obama administration began illegally granting amnesty to illegal aliens and preventing Arizona from enforcing the laws on the books. "What does sovereignty mean if it does not include the ability to defend your borders?" Scalia asked, referring to Arizona's right as an individual state to defend its own borders. "The Constitution recognizes that there is such a thing as State borders and the States can police their borders, even to the point of inspecting incoming shipments to exclude diseased material," said Scalia during litigation between the Obama administration and the state of Arizona.

This discussion is even more relevant today, as the Biden regime has de facto invited caravans to come for amnesty by suspending Trump's asylum reforms and has now asked ICE to release some of the worst criminal aliens imaginable.

The Constitution is clear as to the responsibilities of the federal government and why we have one in the first place. The federal government exists not to impose more mask mandates and lockdowns on the people, but to protect their rights and security where states are inherently less capable of doing so effectively — namely, in repelling an invasion. Ironically, it is the one act of war a president can pursue without the consent of Congress, yet the invasion at our border is the only one we refuse to address. So where does that leave the states?

Scalia answered this question in his partial dissent in the 2012 Arizona case:

But there has come to pass, and is with us today, the specter that Arizona and the States that support it predicted: A Federal Government that does not want to enforce the immigration laws as written, and leaves the States' borders unprotected against immigrants whom those laws would exclude. So the issue is a stark one. Are the sovereign States at the mercy of the Federal Executive's refusal to enforce the Nation's immigration laws?

Scalia rhetorically asked:

Now, imagine a provision—perhaps inserted right after Art. I, §8, cl. 4, the Naturalization Clause—which included among the enumerated powers of Congress "To establish Limitations upon Immigration that will be exclusive and that will be enforced only to the extent the President deems appropriate." The delegates to the Grand Convention would have rushed to the exits.

He ended his dissent discussing Obama's amnesty and Arizona's response to it:

As is often the case, discussion of the dry legalities that are the proper object of our attention suppresses the very human realities that gave rise to the suit. Arizona bears the brunt of the country's illegal immigration problem. Its citizens feel themselves under siege by large numbers of illegal immigrants who invade their property, strain their social services, and even place their lives in jeopardy. Federal officials have been unable to remedy the problem, and indeed have recently shown that they are unwilling to do so. Thousands of Arizona's estimated 400,000 illegal immigrants—including not just children but men and women under 30—are now assured immunity from enforcement, and will be able to compete openly with Arizona citizens for employment.

Scalia concluded, "If securing its territory in this fashion is not within the power of Arizona, we should cease referring to it as a sovereign State."

The Constitution is not a suicide pact for the states, as Americans are treated like criminals and criminal aliens are treated like pristine citizens. If courts were able to rule in favor of states abrogating and criminalizing the enforcement of immigration law under Trump, it's for states to enforce them while Biden is seeking to unilaterally nullify them.

As Scalia observed in the Arizona case, "The naturalization power was given to Con­gress not to abrogate States' power to exclude those they did not want, but to vindicate it."

What Scalia meant is that states can't be more liberal than the federal government on immigration because that would violate the national sovereignty and the choice of the union of states to deny entry. This is exactly why our Founders assigned control over immigration policy to the federal government. They didn't want states to artificially inflate their representation by flooding the entire federal union with undesirable aliens. Commenting on the power of Congress (as opposed to states) over immigration, Justice Joseph Story explained, "If aliens might be admitted indiscriminately to enjoy all the rights of citizens at the will of a single state, the Union might itself be endangered by an influx of foreigners, hostile to its institutions, ignorant of its powers, and incapable of a due estimate of its privileges."

While this was written in 1833, every word is speaking to liberals today in states like California that want to increase their representation at the expense of other states. Let's not forget that once an alien is admitted to the union by one state, he is free to move around anywhere in the country. Thanks to California's sanctuary policies, Americans all over the country must suffer.

Roger Sherman, among the greatest of all the Founders, noted during the House debate on the Naturalization Act of 1790 that "it was intended by the Convention, who framed the Constitution, that Congress should have the power of naturalization, in order to prevent particular States receiving citizens, and forcing them upon others who would not have received them in any other manner" (emphasis added). Sherman was emphatic that federal control was designed to "guard against an improper mode of naturalization" and prevent individual states from flooding the country with immigrants based on "easier terms."

James Madison, in a 1782 letter to Edmund Randolph, noted that a uniform rule of naturalization from a future federal government would cure the existing problem under the Confederation of "the intrusion of obnoxious aliens through other States." Writing in Federalist #42, Madison elaborated that the federalized power over naturalization solved "a very serious embarrassment" and "defect" of the Articles of Confederation, whereby "certain descriptions of aliens, who had rendered themselves obnoxious" can force themselves on several states had they "acquired the character of citizens under the laws of another State."

Thus, both the Constitution and the inherent right to sovereignty rooted in social compact theory dictates that federal control over immigration should primarily be in one direction: more restrictive than states would want, not less restrictive. Now, obviously, once the feds were given final say over immigration, the letter of the law dictates that states cannot prevent immigrants from settling within their borders where statute otherwise authorizes it. However, as Scalia noted, a state "has the sovereign power to protect its borders more rigorously if it wishes, absent any valid federal prohibition," and in this case, "Arizona is entitled to have 'its own immigration policy'—including a more rigorous enforcement policy—so long as that does not conflict with federal law."

To that end, patriots would be wise to pressure every red state to institute a mandatory E-Verify law like the one Florida just implemented. These states must clamp down on tax fraud and identity theft and refuse to accept unaccompanied alien minors being resettled in their states.

In addition, the border states, which have their sovereignty literally violated by the caravans, smugglers, and cartels, have the right to deploy their own National Guard units to push back any invasion. Are Texas and Arizona at the mercy of Biden's criminal disregard for the violent hordes of predominantly young males attempting to crash their borders like we saw in Guatemala last week?

Article I, § 10, cl. 3 (the Compact Clause) states:

No State shall, without the Consent of Congress, lay any Duty of Tonnage, keep Troops, or Ships of War in time of Peace, enter into any Agreement or Compact with another State, or with a foreign Power, or engage in War, unless actually invaded, or in such imminent Danger as will not admit of delay.

The Constitution is clear that, all things equal, states shouldn't engage in warfare with other countries. But all things are not equal in this case, and the Constitution made an exception for those times when states are invaded and in imminent danger.

Joseph Story in his commentary on the Compact Clause writes that while the prohibition on states making war is obviously necessary, it was "wisely guarded by exceptions sufficient for the safety of the states, and not justly open to the objection of being dangerous to the Union."

Still, a state may be so situated, that it may become indispensable to possess military forces, to resist an expected invasion, or insurrection. The danger may be too imminent for delay; and under such circumstances, a state will have a right to raise troops for its own safety, even without the consent of Congress.

Haven't the border states (the ones that still care) waited long enough, with too much delay?

Some might suggest that caravans coming north are obviously not part of a declared war. But if you look at the original language of Article IV's guarantee clause protecting states from invasion, Madison originally drafted its language to be read as protecting against "foreign violence." It's clear that this was not necessarily referring to formal warfare with a nation-state, but repelling violent incursions from Indian tribes. If a state can't protect against foreign violence, then what can a state do?

This past year, we have learned that states are evidently so powerful they can call an emergency and suspend our lives, liberty, and property under the guise of protecting hospitals. Perforce, those same states should be able to declare an emergency of illegal immigration (especially as they come over to use our hospitals) and do the job the federal government refuses to do.

Horowitz: Caravans of young men head toward our border, as military is dispatched … against the American people



We owe the Guatemalan government gratitude for caring about our border security more than our own government does. Guatemala's effort to halt the coming caravan invasion aimed at our border will give us at least a few weeks to ponder and plan for our future.

James Madison explained in Federalist #45 that the powers of the federal government are "few and defined," applied "principally on external objects, as war, peace, negotiation, and foreign commerce." He warned: "The more adequate, indeed, the federal powers may be rendered to the national defense, the less frequent will be those scenes of danger which might favor their ascendancy over the governments of the particular States."

Well, because we now have a government that not only fails to block external invasion but actively invites it, it is no surprise that that government is using the military domestically rather than to repel an invasion. In the same way, it is using a border wall around the Capitol to keep out Americans while opposing a wall to keep drug cartels and previously deported sex offenders from returning. In other words, per Madison's warning, a government that fails to protect our border controls our life, liberty, property, and free speech.

Even before the formation of the latest caravan, individual illegal aliens have been increasing their presence at our border. In December, Customs and Border Protection apprehended 73,513 individuals, the highest number in 17 months. The border flow for the first three months of this fiscal year is 69% greater than over the same period in FY 2020. The Biden/Harris welcome mat is not lost on the world.

A caravan formed in Honduras consisting of at least 6,000 individuals who appear to be mainly young males was stopped at the Guatemalan border on Sunday, thanks to a multi-layered security apparatus. There are reportedly still about 2,000 of them camped out near the border of Honduras, El Salvador, and Guatemala. In the long run, there is no way those countries have the ability to stave off the stampede of people coming for the promise of amnesty.

Google translate: "Thousands of migrants traveling to the United States moved through Guatemala on Saturday, as the… https://t.co/2i0BysOCgK
— Todd Bensman (@Todd Bensman)1610895206.0


Honduran migrant: President-elect Biden is "going to help all of us." https://t.co/LkrVCsXcSb
— The Hill (@The Hill)1610987328.0

They know that the only security our government cares about is building a wall and using the military against its own people. In August, Joe Biden promised, "There will not be another foot of wall constructed on my administration." Now with an East Berlin-style wall erected around the Capitol, perhaps we can see they were saving resources for a different type of wall. One Democrat Congressman even has a bill to direct the architect of the Capitol to build a permanent security fence around the entire complex.

Imagine if the wall and the military were deployed in full at our border as the caravans came up. Our border would look as quiet as D.C is this week. During the border crisis of 2018-19, when Trump deployed the military to the border, we heard endless cries of Trump violating posse comitatus. Even the Trump administration refused to use the military for anything beyond a humanitarian mission and for observation. Mexican soldiers even snuck up on our military on our own soil and jumped two of our soldiers because they weren't deployed for combat. A Marine was attacked in El Centro, California, in May while sitting unarmed in one of these blacked-out Mobile Surveillance Camera vehicles.

So even the Trump administration felt that somehow our military couldn't be used for the quintessential purpose of repelling an invasion on our soil. Yet now that 30,000 troops are being paraded all over D.C. with no violence in sight, we are to believe this doesn't run afoul of the law against using the military to enforce domestic laws.

In November 2019, Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.) accused Trump of "using the military as his own private militia" simply for securing our border against foreign invaders during the worst border crisis ever. Where is she now that Biden is holding a Stalin-style inauguration backed by more troops than are still in our last three war theaters combined? It sure looks like a private military junta to me.

Sadly, anything and everything is being justified under the guise of protecting Biden's inauguration, just like everything was justified to combat a virus. Which is perhaps why they won't justify using the military at the border, for that would block the entry of Biden's most prominent inaugural parade.

More sex scandal evidence surfaces, damaging Democrat Cal Cunningham's Senate bid

Democratic candidate for the Senate Cal Cunningham's campaign against incumbent Senator Thom Tillis in North Carolina has found itself on the rocks due to a recent sex scandal.

VIDEO: New migrant caravan of thousands, bound for the US, illegally floods into Guatemala



A massive migrant caravan charged into Guatemala, the first since the coronavirus pandemic hit Central America in March. Videos show thousands of Honduran migrants pour across the Guatemala border as they march toward their final destination of the United States.

More than 3,000 migrants illegally crossed from Honduras and into Guatemala by midday on Thursday, The Guardian reported. New York Times correspondent Brent McDonald said, "Guatemala border officials expect another 3,000 migrants to enter from Honduras" on Friday. "That makes 6,000 so far en route to Mexico and the U.S. Just in time for the U.S. election."

Guatemalan authorities had planned to register the migrants and offer assistance to anyone willing to turn around and go back to Honduras. However, the caravan stampeded through the border and past the massively outnumbered armed guards in the Guatemalan city of El Corinto.


Here comes the latest caravan, gleefully smashing through Honduran police on their way to the US southern border. V… https://t.co/GDD9cLV03u
— Todd Bensman (@Todd Bensman)1601639087.0

One Honduran man died during the chaotic scene.

"The Guatemalan Institute of Migration said the man, who was not identified, was traveling aboard a tractor-trailer in the border town of Entre Ríos when he fell to the ground and was subsequently run over by the truck," the Daily Mail reported.

"The migrants who arrived at the Guatemala border on Thursday had set out walking the previous night from San Pedro Sula, and many wore masks," according to The Guardian. "They appeared to be mostly young men, though there were the occasional small children being pushed in strollers."

"They're leaving in groups and what they're looking for are life alternatives outside Honduras because Honduras has nothing to offer," Scalabrinian Sister Nyzelle Juliana Donde, director of the Honduran bishops' migrant ministry, told the Catholic News Service. "What most migrants do is leave for basic needs. The pandemic exacerbated hunger, poverty, lack of opportunity. 'Maras' and gangs have also worked very hard during this time."

Guatemalan officials have concerns about a massive caravan traveling through the country.

"We're talking about a caravan in the middle of a pandemic," said Guatemala's migration director Guillermo Díaz. "The situation is complicated because they broke the health protocols and we don't know who has entered (the country)."

Guatemala has had over 3,200 COVID-19 deaths, and Honduras has had nearly 2,400 coronavirus deaths, according to Worldometers. Guatemala only opened its borders last week after being closed for six months to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

The Guatemalan government promised to detain and deport anyone caught illegally crossing its border.

In October 2018, President Donald Trump said he would be ending or "substantially reducing" foreign aid to Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador if they didn't do something about the caravans flowing into the United States.

In June 2019, Mexico and the U.S. reached a deal to curb migrants flooding across the border.

"Given the dramatic increase in migrants moving from Central America through Mexico to the United States, both countries recognize the vital importance of rapidly resolving the humanitarian emergency and security situation," the joint agreement states. "The Governments of the United States and Mexico will work together to immediately implement a durable solution."

On Friday, journalist Todd Bensman posted a video of Mexican federal troops at the Guatemalan border preparing to stop the migrant caravan from entering Mexico.

The last time Mexico marshaled federal troops like this for a migrant caravan (January 2020), every single migrant… https://t.co/eNhtv9VTj8
— Todd Bensman (@Todd Bensman)1601662026.0