Those are not even involved in this debate.As for screaming "Racist!" it's what people of the left
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Those are not even involved in this debate.As for screaming "Racist!" it's what people of the left
President Donald Trump has suffered two legal blows to his deportation agenda in the courts within hours of each other.
One legal blow came from Judge Stephanie Haines, a Trump appointee in Pennsylvania, who told the White House they could not give people a seven-day warning prior to deportation. They must give at least 21 days' notice.
The other came from Judge Orlando Garcia who ruled that the Trump administration cannot immediately deport the family of Mohamed Sabry Soliman, the man accused of attacking a march for Israeli hostages in Boulder, Colorado.
farmers in a deep red area, where 81% voted trump, are seeing uncertainty, collapse of their businesses, and a reneging by the trump administration of Biden administration promised grants to cover hiring, infrastructure improvements and development.In interviews with the Washington Post, multiple farmers expressed their dismay with the loss of farm workers under Donald Trump's harsh immigration policies and his administration's waffling on subsidies.
In a deep dive focusing on one farmer who voted for Trump, 36-year-old J.J. Ficke of Kirk, Colorado, the Washington Post is reporting that he along with other farmers are facing possible ruination now that the round-up of immigrants have begun in earnest and promised help is uncertain.
"The federal government had promised JJ a $200,000 grant, spread across two years, to cover the cost of a seasonal farmhand from Latin America. In a place where local, legal help was nearly impossible to keep<' the Post is reporting before adding, "But then Trump, in the earliest days of his second term, threatened to break tens of thousands of those deals, suspending billions in agricultural funding and decimating the staffs that managed it. Swept up in the freeze was JJ and the $50 million grant program he’d signed up for along with 140 other farmers across the country."
“I’ve employed Americans, and they quit after a few days,” lamented Wisconsin Tracy Vinz, “They quit after a few hours.”
Georgia produce farmer Mitch Lawson claimed he "lost nearly two dozen American employees before he qualified for $200,000," with Lawson stating, "I’ve had a couple who didn’t even last a whole day."
LiarMy neighbor farms 3000 acres and does just fine with legal workers.
I told you about Dave already. Keep up.Liar
Yes, you made up shit about people.I told you about Dave already. Keep up.
Hey. The sky is blue.Yes, you made up shit about people.
I knew that already.