https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opini...n54?li=BBnbfcL
                                     
  Giroir accuses Biden of playing 'fast and loose' with COVID science…
 
 
   
        
  Pennsylvania AG says the big lie ‘did produce a cynical public’
 
 
   
                                            Democrats have a border security problem. Yes, there is the immediate problem of the 
biggest migrant surge in 20 years that has left thousands of children in U.S. custody under questionable conditions with 
little transparency.  Some 100,000 people attempted to enter the country in February alone,  up from a little over 30,000 southwest border apprehensions the same  time last year.
     Surges happen for a variety of reasons, with one occurring in 2019  even under the harsh policies of Donald Trump. But Democrats have  developed a squeamishness about immigration enforcement, except as a way  of removing violent criminals in the way tax charges were used to  finally get Al Capone.
   
  Biden has proposed a moratorium on deportations. He has eased rules  preventing new immigrants from relying on government services and ended  Trump's requirement that asylum seekers stay out of the country while  their applications are approved. He has introduced an immigration bill  that would legalize millions of undocumented immigrants who are already  here, including an eight-year pathway to citizenship, and is light on  border security measures compared to similar proposals in the past.
 While  hesitant to use the word "crisis" to describe the situation at the  border, the White House has acknowledged this is an enticement for  people who might want to come. "Surges tend to respond to hope, and  there was a significant hope for a more humane policy after four years  of, you know, pent-up demand," Roberta Jacobson, the Biden  administration's coordinator for the southern border, told reporters at a  briefing last week. "So, I don't know whether I would call that a  coincidence, but I certainly think that the idea that a more humane  policy would be in place may have driven people to make that decision."
 Our  neighbors to the south agree. "They see him as the migrant president,  and so many feel they're going to reach the United States," Mexican  President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said of Biden at the beginning of  the month.
 Some of Biden's fellow Democrats go even further. Rep.  Joaquin Castro of Texas, a rival for the presidential nomination and  brother of the former secretary of housing and urban development, has  proposed decriminalizing illegal border crossings. A significant faction  of House Democrats would like to abolish Immigration and Customs  Enforcement.
 This isn't quite open borders. But it does suggest  that it's difficult to enforce the border in a way that aligns with  progressive sensibilities.
 It wasn't always this way. Back when  Biden's former boss Barack Obama was a freshman senator from Illinois,  he said, "We simply cannot allow people to pour into the United States  undetected, undocumented, unchecked, and circumventing the line of  people who are waiting patiently, diligently, and lawfully to become  immigrants in this country." As president, Obama believed that  establishing credibility on enforcement was an important component of  building support for immigration reforms that would legalize most of the  undocumented population.
 Hillary Clinton has at various points  supported border fencing and opposed drivers licenses for undocumented  immigrants, stances she later revised. As recently as 2018 she told 
The Guardian that "Europe needs to get a handle on migration" in order to counteract a rising tide of populism and nationalism.
 The  longtime liberal congresswoman from Texas who chaired Clinton's  husband's immigration reform commission in the 1990s, Barbara Jordan,  said that "deportation is crucial," something that would be anathema to  progressive activists today.
 "Credibility in immigration policy  can be summed up in one sentence: those who should get in, get in; those  who should be kept out, are kept out; and those who should not be here  will be required to leave," Jordan said. "The top priorities for  detention and removal, of course, are criminal aliens. But for the  system to be credible, people actually have to be deported at the end of  the process."
 Some of the Democrats' leftward movement on  immigration is a reaction to Trump. His "zero tolerance" policy led to  the original "kids in cages" scandal. Whatever the merits of his  critique of a permissive immigration policy, his way of speaking about  immigrants themselves was often demeaning or worse. And much of what  Democrats do these days is in response to Trump.
 But when Obama sought to enforce immigration laws before Trump, progressive activists began calling him the "
deporter-in-chief." When Bernie Sanders 
pointed out  the unsettling effect open borders would have on U.S. labor markets and  its welfare state, as well as the idea's libertarian pedigree, he faced  
liberal outrage.
 We're  not going to have open borders, of course. But today's liberals have a  hard time enforcing immigration laws against poor people of color, even  if the failure to do so consistently can encourage migrants to take  extreme personal risks in situations where they are more likely to wind  up in a detention center than the promised land. And they are unwilling  to grapple with the impact 
huge numbers of low-paid immigrants have on the wages of working-class Americans who are themselves disproportionately Black and Latino.
 This  is Biden's first real test as president. But if Democrats don't start  thinking more soberly about immigration, it won't be the last.
DPST narrative and rhetoric Trump Alles - they are importing illegals to stack voting for themselves in Amerika.
They should all be Shot for Sedition!!