Biden Proposes $35 Billion Handout For Big Pharma’s Lucrative Weight Loss Drugs
President Joe Biden has set the stage for an immediate showdown between Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and pharmaceutical companies.
A little-known federal group assembled by the Biden-Harris administration is preparing to issue dietary guidelines for Americans that will formally recommend beans, peas, and lentils take precedence over meats like chicken and beef.
The post Biden-Harris Committee Set To Push 'Plant Sources of Protein' Over Red Meat in New Dietary Guidelines—But Only After the Election appeared first on .
The Biden administration's Department of Health and Human Services does not request the criminal records of illegal immigrants under 18 years old, according to testimony provided by a senior HHS official, the New York Post recently reported.
Last June, Robin Dunn Marcos, an HHS official, told the House Judiciary Committee that the department does not request complete background check information for unaccompanied alien children. She testified that the HHS does contact the juvenile's home consulate or embassy to request some information.
'These policies have incentivized criminals.'
Marcos is the deputy assistant secretary for humanitarian services and the director of the Office of Refugee Resettlement in the Administration for Children and Families at HHS.
A House Judiciary Committee member told Marcos, "Earlier you mentioned that [the Office of Refugee Resettlement] contacts the UAC consulate and the UAC's home country to verify date of birth, birth certificate of the UAC, and whether the UAC is suspected of being an adult in those types of contexts."
"What else does ORR verify with consulates? What other type of information?" the committee member asked.
In testimony obtained by the Post, Marcos responded, "I believe that it is birth certificates and identity documents."
When asked whether HHS requests "the criminal record in the home country from the consulate," Marcos responded, "We do not."
Unaccompanied children, which includes those under the age of 18, are transferred to the ORR's custody. The department is responsible for providing the minor with food, shelter, and medical care. The ORR is also tasked with finding a sponsor to care for the child while they are in the U.S.
The department has been repeatedly criticized for its handling of the illegal immigration crisis, particularly regarding how it selects sponsors for minors. The HHS has been accused of having a "culture of speed over safety."
HHS whistleblower Tara Lee Rodas claimed that the department "lost immediate contact" with 85,000 unaccompanied alien children after placing them with sponsors. She stated that some of the so-called vetted sponsors are "criminals and traffickers and members of Transnational Criminal Organizations."
As of fiscal year 2023, of the lost children, 70% were age 15 or older, the Post reported. Most of the juveniles were boys, it noted.
The House Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on Immigration Integrity, Security, and Enforcement issued a report on Monday that accused HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra of creating a "toxic situation" that endangers Americans and UACs.
"As the Committee and Subcommittee's oversight has shown, these policies have incentivized criminals, such as the MS-13-affiliated illegal alien who murdered Kayla Hamilton, to come to the southwest border, knowing they very likely will be released into the interior of the country. Tragically, the Biden Administration has failed to engage in necessary diligence in the case of the UAC that murdered Kayla Hamilton, instead doubling down on the very policies that enabled her murderer to roam free," the report read.
Hamilton, 20, was raped and killed by a 17-year-old MS-13 gang member who was allowed into the U.S. by DHS and placed in the custody of a sponsor. The suspect was previously arrested in his home country of El Salvador for his association with the gang. This information was only verified after Hamilton's murder, the committee's report noted.
When unlawfully crossing the border, some adult illegal aliens pose as children.
Simon Hankinson, a senior research fellow with the Heritage Foundation's Border Security and Immigration Center, previously told Blaze News, "You'd be amazed how many are '17' when apprehended. With no verified ID, and with DHS having deliberately abandoned DNA testing and not doing bone-density or other methods, there is no way to be sure. This is a great way for transnational criminal organizations (gangs) like Tren de Aragua and MS-13 to bring in members."
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United States Representative Jim Banks (R-Indiana) recently confronted Biden's secretary of health and human services, Xavier Becerra, about non-governmental organizations raking in massive profits from human trafficking, including child smuggling, due to the administration's open border crisis.
In a statement to Blaze News, Banks said, "Illegal human traffickers are making billions in profits and Joe Biden is sending their NGO accomplices billions of your tax dollars every year. The Biden border crisis is a racket. Democrat activists and Mexican cartels get rich, American taxpayers get ripped off, and foreign children suffer."
'I think that's shameful, it's sickening.'
During the House Committee on Education and the Workforce hearing on Wednesday, Banks pressed Becerra for details regarding the department's policies concerning unaccompanied minors who have been illegally trafficked across the border.
Joe Biden\u2019s cronies and far-left NGOs are getting rich off of child trafficking and the Biden border crisis. It\u2019s sickening!— (@)
"Mr. Secretary, the number of children who have come across our southern border on your watch and Joe Biden's watch is estimated at 481,535," Banks told Becerra. "The New York Times says that your department has lost contact with 85,000 minors, and that statistic is over a year old, so undoubtedly it has risen in the past year."
In Banks' comments to Becerra, he referenced a report last year from the New York Times, which was based on testimony provided by HHS whistleblower Tara Lee Rodas, who stated that the department has "lost immediate contact with" hundreds of thousands of unaccompanied immigrant children who were smuggled into the country illegally.
"Congressional Research Service says that 75 to 80% of unaccompanied children are now traveling with smugglers, and those smugglers have reportedly sold migrants into situations of forced labor or prostitution — forms of human trafficking — in order to recover their costs," Banks continued. "The Coalition Against Trafficking and Women says that 60% of unaccompanied children caught by cartels and exploited are exploited through child pornography and drug trafficking."
Banks asked Becerra whether it was the Biden administration's policy to return unaccompanied minors to their families in their home country or to send them into the United States to so-called sponsors.
Becerra claimed that the administration is following the laws currently in place regarding asylum claims.
"Let me ask this a different way. If a 15-year-old girl came across the border from, say, Guatemala, would we send her back to her family in Guatemala, or would we keep her in the United States?" Banks questioned.
Becerra replied, "If she requested an asylum hearing, we would, by law, be required to offer her a hearing."
Banks further pressed the HHS secretary about how many unaccompanied minors the Biden administration has returned to their families.
"That would not be something I have information on," Becerra responded. "I'm not gonna speculate, but that's something that you can ask the Department of Homeland Security."
"You and I both know the answer to that's zero. Zero children that you've returned back to [their home] country," Banks remarked.
Becerra stated that the department has to "respect what the law says, and the law says you have to provide someone with an adjudication of their claim for asylum."
A recent report from the Free Press found that NGOs are making substantial profits from the administration's open border crisis, particularly from the trafficking of unaccompanied minors.
Three prominent NGOs, including Global Refuge, Southwest Key Programs, and Endeavors, Inc., have massively increased their combined revenue in recent years. In 2019, the three organizations received $597 million compared to $2 billion in 2022. The CEOs at each of the NGOs make over $500,000 per year.
NGOs received generous federal grants to provide services to unaccompanied minors such as pet therapy, music therapy, and "people-plant interaction" or "horticulture therapy."
Banks questioned Becerra about the administration using massive amounts of taxpayer funds to support the NGOs.
"I think the reason that you're doing this, Mr. Secretary, and your boss, Joe Biden, is because Democrats are getting rich off of it," Banks declared.
"The Global Refuge CEO and NGO that you funnel a lot of money to, her salary is $520,000, and it doubled over three years. The former CEO of an NGO called Southwest Key Programs made three and a half million dollars," Banks continued. "The new CEO makes a million. The CEO of Endeavors, who was an Obama administration aide, made $600,000 in 2022. A former Biden transition official who helped you vet political appointees helped Endeavor secure a $520 billion, no-bid contract. These groups are making hundreds of millions of dollars, and now you are asking us to give you $9.3 billion to funnel to more of these NGOs so that your Democrat friends and donors can get even more rich."
"I think that's shameful, it's sickening, and I'm going to do everything I can to fight against it," Banks told Becerra.
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Secretary of Health and Human Services Xavier Becerra refused this week to support any restrictions on abortion.
During a Senate Appropriations Committee hearing on Tuesday, Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) posed a simple question to Becerra: Do you support the abortion of a healthy unborn baby up until the moment of birth?
"Let's suppose it's the day before the due date, and the baby is fully formed, and the baby is healthy, and the mother is healthy. Do you support the right to abort the baby then?" Kennedy asked.
But instead of answering the question, Becerra argued that no one is promoting late-term abortions. The Republican senator responded by quoting Becerra's own words from a press release when he was attorney general of California. "No government, state or federal, has the right to make decisions for a woman about her body or her health care," Becerra said at the time.
"Your words, not mine," Kennedy said.
"Good words," Becerra quipped.
"I ask you again, up to the moment of birth, if the mother's healthy and the baby’s healthy, do you believe that there should be the right to abort that baby up to the moment of birth?" Kennedy followed up.
"I have always supported Roe v. Wade, which does not do what you just said," Becerra responded. "I know of no one who is proposing or advocating what you've just announced, and I would hope what you would recognize is that that should not stop a woman from having the right to decide for herself with the consultation of her physician what she should do."
For the next several minutes, Kennedy and Becerra fought back and forth over his refusal to provide any direct answers.
Kennedy refined his question, asking Becerra if he supports restrictions on abortions in the third-trimester, but he repeatedly dodged the question. Becerra would only say that he trusts women to make their own decisions while reiterating his support for Roe.
"Why are you embarrassed to answer?" Kennedy finally asked. "Why are you scared to answer the question?"
Becerra denied being embarrassed or scared, and yet he never answered Kennedy's question. It was clear the secretary did not want to say publicly that he supports any restrictions on abortion, even if that meant appearing to support late-term abortions.
"You're dodgin' and weavin' and flip-floppin' like a mad catfish," Kennedy observed.
For the record: Becerra never provided a substantive answer to Kennedy's questions, for which a simple "yes" or "no" would have sufficed.
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The United States Labor Department filed a lawsuit in late March against a California poultry processor and its affiliated entities, accusing the firms of using "oppressive child labor." The newly filed lawsuit marks the latest in a long list of recent DOL investigations that have uncovered alleged illegal child labor.
The complaint, filed against L&Y Food, Moon Poultry, JRC Culinary, and the owner of the companies, Fu Qian Chen Lu, claims that the facilities hired minors to use "sharp knives" to debone raw poultry in meat coolers. Additionally, the department accused the defendants of interfering with and obstructing the DOL's Wage and Hours Division's probe.
The Labor Department stated that it found two children working at Moon Poultry's Irwindale facility who had been employed since at least October. An investigator observed one of the children on March 20 during a search of the facility, and the other child was discovered through the company's payroll system, the DOL reported.
"The goods processed in this facility up to April 19, 2024, are tainted by child labor and are now 'hot goods' under the [Fair Labor Standards Act]," the complaint read.
According to the DOL, the companies continued to ship the products despite previously agreeing to voluntarily refrain. The FLSA's "hot goods" provision prohibits businesses from shipping goods 30 days following an observed child labor violation. The court filing stated that investigators "discovered that 794 boxes of processed chicken and seven 1,500-pound bins of chicken had been removed from the Irwindale facility."
Gregory W. Patterson, a Los Angeles attorney representing the poultry facilities, claimed that the DOL planted a 17-year-old worker at the facility. The minor "gain[ed] employment with Moon Poultry under false pretenses by presenting a fake government identification" and "directed this person to work in a hazardous area of the Moon Poultry facility in Irwindale," he told the Los Angeles Times.
According to Patterson, the department planted the minor to "strengthen its negotiating hand" in a probe concerning overtime wages that allegedly were not paid to employees. He claimed the DOL sought to "attempt to force us into an early settlement of the overtime claims."
When asked whether the two children were U.S. citizens or migrants, Patterson told Blaze News that he "cannot confirm at this time." However, he noted that "in recent discussions with the DOL the allegation is one underage worker at Moon Poultry and not two."
In a statement to Blaze News, the DOL confirmed that it "found that these defendants employed children in oppressive child labor."
Patterson could not say how the falsified government identification was obtained but stated that his client used a staffing agency to hire its workers.
The DOL said that Patterson's claims that the department planted the minor worker were "baseless."
"The defense counsel's allegations are false. The Department of Labor has notified defense counsel that these claims are baseless, but he has nevertheless chosen to pursue them," the department said.
Patterson argued that the DOL "never denied with any clarity that they did not cause this person to work at Moon Poultry."
"The DOL dodged the question," Patterson wrote in an emailed statement to Blaze News. "The presentation of fake identification was precisely timed with the DOL's initiation of its overtime investigation in late January 2024. The DOL had significant information on this person very quickly and used it in the context of overtime allegations to gain leverage. When asked whether the DOL instigated the employment and presentation of fake identification, the DOL did not deny it. Instead, the DOL avoided the question by claiming it did not direct the employee to work in the hazardous area of the facility. When pressed further by noting that they had avoided the question, the DOL refused to respond further."
Patterson said that the "DOL's conduct was illegal."
"The DOL is systematically destroying businesses that pay employees bonuses based on worker output (called 'piece compensation'), and these mechanisms are how they do it," Patterson stated.
The DOL's lawsuit requests that the judge order Patterson's client to forfeit all profits earned from child labor and pay civil penalties.
The DOL has reported an increase in child labor violations, steadily increasing over the last several years. Since December, the agency has investigated 34 child labor cases involving 103 children in California alone.
Many of the children illegally employed in the country are migrants working in dangerous conditions and enduring long hours.
Over the past decade, the number of minors employed in violation of federal law has increased by roughly 316%, according to data recorded by the DOL. In fiscal year 2013, the department recorded 1,393 minors employed in violation compared to 5,792 in 2023.
The most common violations include "working longer or later than legally allowed," "driving a motor vehicle or forklift," "using meat-processing machines and vertical dough or batter mixers," and "performing jobs that are off-limits for their age," the DOL's website states.
At the same time that child labor violations have been on the rise, the number of illegal migrant encounters at the southern border has also been increasing exponentially. In fiscal year 2013, Customs and Border Protection recorded 489,498 southwest border "apprehensions" or "inadmissibles." The department recorded 2,475,669 border "encounters" in 2023, a nearly 406% increase. CBP's recorded data does not account for known and unknown gotaways who have entered the U.S. illegally and whose movements within the interior of the country are not being tracked.
Critics of the Biden administration's relaxed border policies have argued that the migrant crisis is fueling illegal child labor across the country.
Arizona state Senator Jake Hoffman (R) told Blaze News, "Child exploitation is disgusting under any circumstance. The fact that it is now on the rise in the U.S. due to Democrats' criminally negligent open-border policies should send shock waves through American culture."
"This increase in exploitative child labor simply cannot be viewed in isolation from the crisis we have on our southern border — the two are inextricably linked, and the fundamental truth is that Democrats aren't just passively encouraging the crisis, they are actively facilitating it," Hoffman stated.
The DOL told Blaze News that it "does not inquire about immigration status as part of its investigations."
"All children are protected by the child labor provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act," the agency added.
Last month, the DOL imposed a nearly $2 million fine against Tuff Torq, a manufacturer in Morristown, Tennessee, for allegedly "employing children to operate dangerous machinery" and "requiring them to work more hours than the law allows."
NBC News reported that the 10 children illegally working at the facility were immigrants as young as 14 years old.
Ryan Pott, Tuff Torq's legal representative, claimed that the children were hired through a staffing company after providing falsified identification.
Several businesses that have recently been accused of illegally hiring underage employees claimed that the children provided fake identification, falsely stating they were adults.
Ira Mehlman, the media director for the Federation for American Immigration Reform, told Blaze News that the illegal migrant crisis is "probably the primary driver" for illegal child labor in the United States.
Criminal cartels are smuggling illegal migrants into the country not "out of the goodness of their hearts," he explained.
"If they have hearts at all, there's certainly no goodness in them. They expect to get paid. If these families had the money, they probably wouldn't be coming to the United States in the first place," Mehlman continued.
Once migrants enter the country, adults and children are expected to work off debt owed to their smugglers, he added.
"They're all pressed into the service of paying off the debts that they owe to the criminal cartels," Mehlman remarked. "It's not just child labor. Some of these kids have been pressed into sex trafficking trades, which is even worse. This is all being facilitated by the surge of illegal immigration that's being encouraged by the Biden administration."
"We are seeing things happen in the country that should more than offend us — it should appall us," he said.
In many cases, the migrants are being directed where to work by the cartels, Mehlman stated. When asked whether the federal government, the companies hiring children, or the staffing agencies are primarily responsible for the increase in child labor, Mehlman told Blaze News, "The simple answer is that they're all to blame. Every single one of them, starting from the policies of the government that allow this to be taking place."
Mehlman explained that unaccompanied minors crossing illegally into the United States are placed into the custody of the Department of Health and Human Services. The agency is responsible for finding and vetting sponsors for the children.
"These sponsors — they claim to be relatives or friends — very often turn out to be agents of the cartels themselves," he stated.
Mehlman referenced a report from the New York Times that claimed HHS "lost immediate contact with" 85,000 unaccompanied alien children. The Times report, which was based on testimony provided by HHS whistleblower Tara Lee Rodas, contended that the department could no longer contact the children after placing them with the sponsors.
"It's just an appalling number," Mehlman remarked. "It's just blatant negligence on the part of the government. If they're placing kids in the hands of so-called sponsors, they should know who these sponsors are and where these kids are, but they don't. They don't seem to care, either."
Last year, Rodas told the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration Integrity, Security, and Enforcement that she was assigned to "help the HHS Office of Refugee Resettlement reunite children with sponsors in the U.S."
"I thought I was going to help place children in loving homes," she continued. "Instead, I discovered that children are being trafficked through a sophisticated network that begins with being recruited in home country, smuggled to the U.S. border, and ends when ORR delivers a child to a Sponsors [sic] — some sponsors are criminals and traffickers and members of Transnational Criminal Organizations. Some sponsors view children as commodities and assets to be used for earning income — this is why we are witnessing an explosion of labor trafficking."
Rodas accused HHS of having a "culture of speed over safety."
The overwhelming influx of illegal immigration has pressured the federal government to push migrants through the system as quickly as possible, Mehlman noted.
Additionally, the HHS no longer requires sponsors of unaccompanied migrant minors to be U.S. citizens.
Nearly two dozen Republican attorneys general penned a letter in March to Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas, Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Christopher Wray, and HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra, slamming the "loosened vetting procedures" and demanding that the federal government "stop handing over children to 'probable traffickers.'"
Utah Attorney General Sean D. Reyes, one of the AGs to write the correspondence, said in a statement to Blaze News, “There is substantial evidence and numerous reports of unaccompanied minors being turned over to ‘sponsors’ who may be exploiting children in factories and agricultural jobs.”
According to Reyes, the ORR is “not properly vetting the ‘sponsors.’”
“Teachers, other factory workers, and NGOs have documented many instances of this human rights abuse and violation of state and federal labor laws,” Reyes stated. “The other issue is about children who are making multiple trips to the border with non-biological ‘parents’ who are adults presenting them as a whole family. This is a serious issue and just one of the many crises caused by the failed Biden border policies.”
U.S. Senator Bill Cassidy (R-La.) sent a separate letter to the Labor Department expressing his concerns about the "upward trend in exploitative child labor," which he blamed on the Biden administration's decisions to "relax[] sponsor vetting requirements." He argued that the loosened requirements put children at risk of becoming victims of forced labor and sex trafficking.
In a statement to Blaze News, Cassidy wrote, "There is more child exploitation because there are more children crossing the border. The guilt for this rise in child labor violations is directly related to the Biden administration's decision to not enforce immigration laws. Unfortunately, he is the executive. The executive is supposed to enforce the law. We need an executive who enforces the law if we are to stop child labor violations."
Neither the DOL nor HHS has responded to Cassidy's letter, his office noted.
Simon Hankinson, a senior research fellow with the Heritage Foundation's Border Security and Immigration Center, told Blaze News that once unaccompanied alien children enter the country, Customs and Border Protection places them in the custody of HHS' Office of Refugee Resettlement "even though they are not 'refugees' by any definition."
"Many are children whose parents are living illegally in the U.S. and pay smugglers to bring them over. But some are sent by their families to work for 'sponsors' in the U.S. (often themselves illegal) who farm them out for labor, including dangerous jobs and even sex work. Because they are sent to join parents, guardians, or (badly vetted) 'sponsors,' they go where those people are, which tend to be areas of high immigration, legal and illegal."
He noted that most unaccompanied minors are moved to Texas, California, Florida, New York, and New Jersey.
Immigration attorney Hector Quiroga, owner of Quiroga Law Office, told Blaze News, "We have seen an increase in the number of asylums. Many migrants look for their family or friends, and they go to where they are located in hopes of some help. This creates migration patterns within the U.S."
"HHS largely forgets" about the unaccompanied minors after they are placed with a sponsor, Hankinson said. "DHS was not prepared to be in loco parentis to the world's children."
A February report from the HHS inspector general revealed that the agency failed to conduct safety checks for 16% of children placed with sponsors.
Hankinson explained that many of the unaccompanied children coming into the country and gaining employment in hazardous positions are between the ages of 15 and 17. Others crossing the border are adults pretending to be children, he added.
"You'd be amazed how many are '17' when apprehended. With no verified ID, and with DHS having deliberately abandoned DNA testing and not doing bone-density or other methods, there is no way to be sure. This is a great way for transnational criminal organizations (gangs) like Tren de Aragua and MS-13 to bring in members," Hankinson told Blaze News.
Employers seeking to hire cheap labor look the other way when workers provide false identification and do not carefully verify the documentation, he explained.
"Everyone will pass the buck, and no one will take responsibility. But when the federal the system is overrun, mistakes will often be made, costing suffering at best, lives at worst," Hankinson said. "To prevent it, Biden should turn off the giant magnet for UACs created by a combination of Biden administration policies, sweeping judicial decisions like Flores, and illogical laws."
The Flores v. Reno Settlement Agreement established the regulations for how HHS must process unaccompanied minors, Quiroga told Blaze News.
He explained that the HHS' ORR has a particular order of preference for turning the children over to sponsors: parent, legal guardian, an adult relative, an adult individual or entity designated by the parent or legal guardian, or a licensed program. As a last resort, the child may also be placed with "an adult individual or entity seeking custody when it appears that there is no other likely alternative to long-term ORR care and custody," Quiroga stated.
Hankinson added, "The Flores settlement, by Judge Dolly Gee in California, meant that UACs had to be released before 21 days. She amended that in 2014 to include family groups with the putative child. If there is no confirmation of child's age, and no confirmation of relationship to the 'family,' and no chance of deportation, there is almost no downside, so economic migrants take the chance. Mostly they succeed, with occasional tragedies."
When it comes to businesses turning a blind eye to false identification, Quiroga noted that he has seen some instances where employers "provide and/or recommend where to go get the fake document needed."
"We have seen this not on the context of children, but undocumented workers," he clarified.
"There is an increase in the number of children working generally. Child labor in the U.S. fell to its lowest level in 2015, but ever since, the numbers have been rising. Many states have relaxed laws regulating child labor in the United States. Unaccompanied minor children are especially vulnerable to abuses," Quiroga told Blaze News. "Protections put into place to assist unaccompanied minors generally have broken down over the last years, overwhelmed as they are by more cases than they were designed to handle."
He added that the children who arrive in the U.S. without a guardian are "under intense pressure to earn money" to send money back to family, pay debt owed to sponsors for smuggling fees, or cover their living expenses.
According to Quiroga, the ORR has been struggling to keep up with the number of unaccompanied minors since 2021. As a result, "necessary safeguards are being dismantled in order to speed up the processing."
HHS stated that it could not respond to Blaze News' request for comment by the time of publication.
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