Thoughts on how an ordinary citizen can make a difference by strengthening faith in God, family, and country.
Declaration of Independence
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. - That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.
The
topic of discussion for this Constitution Monday is federalism, or the
division of powers between the federal government and the state governments.
This site provided the following information on federalism.
Another
basic concept embodied in the Constitution is federalism, which refers to the
division and sharing of power between the national and state governments. By
allocating power among state and federalgovernments, the Framers sought to establish a unified national
government of limited powers while maintaining a distinct sphere of autonomy in
which state governments could exercise a general police power. Although the
Framers sought to preserve liberty by diffusing power, Justices and scholars
have noted that federalism has other advantages, including that it allows
individual states to experiment with novel government programs as laboratories
of democracy and increases the accountability of elected government officials
to citizens.
Although
the text of the Constitution does not clearly delineate many of the boundaries
between the powers of the federal and state governments, the Supreme Court has
frequently invoked certain constitutional provisions when determining that
Congress has exceeded its constitutional powers and infringed upon state
sovereignty. One well-known provision, regarded by the Court as both a shield
and sword to thwart federal encroachment, is the Tenth Amendment, which
provides that the powers not delegated to the United States by the
Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States
respectively, or to the people…. Other notable provisions addressing Congress’s
power relative to the states that the Court has debated include the Supremacy
Clause in Article VI, which establishes federal law as superior to state law,
the Commerce Clause in Article I, Section 8, Clause 3, which grants Congress
the authority to legislate on matters concerning interstate commerce; and
Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment, which grants Congress the power to
enforce that Amendment’s guarantees against the states through the enactment of
appropriate legislation. More broadly, federalism principles also undergird
many Supreme Court decisions interpreting individual rights and the extent to
which the Court should federalize, for example, the rights afforded to state
criminal defendants. But judges and scholars disagree on how basic principles
of federalism should be realized, and a key point of controversy is whether the
judiciary should enforce the interests of the states against the Federal
Government or leave the resolution of such key questions about the relationship
between federal and state power to the political process.
With
the above cited information in mind, this essay will share a recent example
about how the federal government can hinder or help the states. In her article
published at The Daily Signal, Virginia Allen reported on the recent
remarks of Alaska Governor Mike Dunleavy about the differences in how “development
and extraction of resources in Alaska” were managed by the Biden administration
and the Trump administration.
“Trump
is all about opportunity. In other words, no limits, giving Alaska the
opportunity to develop its resources, build things, market things, exactly the
way it was supposed to be,” the Alaska Republican governor said.
“Under
[President Joe Biden], it was the opposite. They were violently determined not
to allow anything to happen in Alaska.”
“They
put the environmentalists first, not the people or the needs of the state or
country first,” Dunleavy said of the Biden administration, while talking with The
Daily Signal at the Miami Security Forum….
Alaska: Resource Rich
Alaska
was the only state to receive its own executive order on Trump’s first day back
in the White House. The order, titled “Unleashing Alaska’s Extraordinary
Resource Potential,” again made it the policy of the United States to “fully
avail itself of Alaska’s vast lands and resources,” including Alaska’s
liquefied natural gas.
Trump’s
order “means hope” for Alaska because it compels the federal government to take
full advantage of the state’s natural resources, from timber to mining, thus
increasing investment in Alaska, the governor explained.
Trump’s
executive order to further develop Alaskan oil resources is significant
following the conflict with Iran that has rocked global oil markets. Iran
threatens ships moving through the Strait of Hormuz, a key oil shipping lane.
Japan,
for example, imports about 90% of its oil from the Persian Gulf. It takes,
under normal circumstances, about 20 days for an oil shipment to reach Japan
from the Middle East, but it would take just eight days for an oil shipment to
reach Japan from Alaska, Dunleavy explained.
National Security
In
addition to holding a wealth of natural resources, Alaska is also a critical
U.S. national security asset due to its proximity to Russia and its location in
the Arctic.
Both
Russia and China demonstrate a keen interest in the Arctic. Russia, in
particular, is extracting the region’s natural resources for economic purposes
and asserting military dominance there.
In
just the past 10 years in the Arctic, Russia has “revitalized Soviet-era bases,
deployed missile defense systems, invested in domain awareness capabilities,
increased aerial and maritime patrols, and stepped up its exercise schedule,”
according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
While
Russia has about 40 icebreakers, special ships that can navigate the Arctic’s
icy waters, the U.S. has had only two, one of which never fully worked,
according to Dunleavy. However, the Big Beautiful Bill, which Trump signed last
year, included funding to procure an estimated 17 new icebreakers.
The
new icebreakers “will position us as a year-round Arctic nation where we have
icebreaking going on, we have shipping going on,” Dunleavy said, calling the
investment “very, very important.”
While
“a lot of administrations have fallen asleep regarding Alaska,” Dunleavy said,
referring to the state’s natural resources and key security location, “the Trump
administration has not.”
The
effect on Anchorage shows in the number of schools and businesses that have
closed over the past few years. When there are no high-paying, energy-related
jobs in Alaska, employees and families move out of Alaska. This means that there
are no adults to visit the businesses or students to attend the schools.
Hopefully, Alaska, under the Trump administration, can get the jobs flowing to
Alaska once again.
My Come
Follow Me studies for this week took me to Genesis 42-50 in a lesson titled “God Meant It unto Good.” The lesson was introduced by the following information.
It had been about 22 years since Joseph’s brothers
sold him into slavery. Joseph had suffered many trials, including false
accusations and imprisonment. When he finally saw his brothers again, Joseph
was the governor of all Egypt, second only to the pharaoh. He could easily have
taken revenge on his brothers, and considering what they had done to Joseph,
that might seem understandable. And yet Joseph forgave them. Not only that, but
he helped them see divine purpose in his suffering. “God meant it unto good” (Genesis
50:20), he told them, because it put him in a position to save “all his
father’s household” (Genesis 47:12) from famine.
In many ways, Joseph was like Jesus Christ. Even though our
sins caused Jesus great suffering, He offers forgiveness, delivering all of us
from a fate far worse than famine. Whether we need to receive forgiveness or
extend it—at some point we all need to do both—Joseph’s example points us to
the Savior, the true source of healing and reconciliation.
This scripture block taught numerous principles, including
(1) “God sent me before you to preserve you” (Genesis 45:5-7; 47:12); (2) Forgiveness
brings healing (Genesis 45; 50:15-21); (3) Jacob gave his family prophetic
blessings (Genesis 49); (4) God can help me find meaning in my trials (Genesis
50:19-21); (5) “A seer shall the Lord my God raise up” (Genesis 50:24-25).
All the principles are worthy of discussion and extremely
interesting. However, this essay will discuss the last principle about a seer
being raised up. The scripture verses are as follow, the first set from Genesis
50:24-25, and the second set from Joseph Smith Translation, Genesis 50:24-38.
24 And Joseph said unto his
brethren, I die: and God will surely visit you, and bring you out of
this land unto the land which he sware to Abraham, to Isaac, and
to Jacob.
25 And Joseph took an oath of
the children of Israel, saying, God will surely visit you, and ye shall carry
up my bones from hence.
26 So Joseph died, being an hundred and ten years old: and they embalmed him,
and he was put in a coffin in Egypt.
24 And Joseph said unto his brethren,
I die, and go unto my fathers; and I go down to my
grave with joy. The God of my father Jacob be with you, to deliver you out of
affliction in the days of your bondage; for the Lord hath visited me, and I
have obtained a promise of the Lord, that out of the fruit of my loins, the
Lord God will raise up a righteous branch out of my loins; and unto thee, whom
my father Jacob hath named Israel, a prophet; (not the Messiah who is called
Shilo;) and this prophet shall deliver my people out of Egypt in the days of
thy bondage.
25 And it shall
come to pass that they shall be scattered again; and a branch shall be
broken off, and shall be carried into a far country; nevertheless they shall be
remembered in the covenants of the Lord, when the Messiah cometh; for he shall
be made manifest unto them in the latter days, in the Spirit of
power; and shall bring them out of darkness into light; out of hidden darkness,
and out of captivity unto freedom.
26 A seer shall
the Lord my God raise up, who shall be a choice seer unto the fruit of my
loins.
27 Thus saith
the Lord God of my fathers unto me, A choice seer will I raise up out of
the fruit of thy loins, and he shall be esteemed highly among the fruit of thy
loins; and unto him will I give commandment that he shall do a work for the
fruit of thy loins, his brethren.
28 And he
shall bring them to the knowledge of the covenants which I have made with
thy fathers; and he shall do whatsoever work I shall command him.
29 And I will
make him great in mine eyes, for he shall do my work; and he shall be great
like unto him whom I have said I would raise up unto you, to deliver my people,
O house of Israel, out of the land of Egypt; for a seer will I raise up to
deliver my people out of the land of Egypt; and he shall be called Moses.
And by this name he shall know that he is of thy house; for he shall be nursed
by the king’s daughter, and shall be called her son.
30 And again, a
seer will I raise up out of the fruit of thy loins, and unto him will I give
power to bring forth my word unto the seed of thy loins; and not to the
bringing forth of my word only, saith the Lord, but to the convincing them of
my word, which shall have already gone forth among them in the last days;
31 Wherefore the
fruit of thy loins shall write, and the fruit of the loins of Judah shall
write; and that which shall be written by the fruit of thy loins, and also that
which shall be written by the fruit of the loins of Judah, shall grow
together unto the confounding of false doctrines, and laying down of
contentions, and establishing peace among the fruit of thy loins, and bringing
them to a knowledge of their fathers in the latter days; and also to the
knowledge of my covenants, saith the Lord.
32 And out of
weakness shall he be made strong, in that day when my work shall go forth among
all my people, which shall restore them, who are of the house of Israel, in the
last days.
33 And that seer
will I bless, and they that seek to destroy him shall be confounded; for this
promise I give unto you; for I will remember you from generation to generation;
and his name shall be called Joseph, and it shall be after the name
of his father; and he shall be like unto you; for the thing which the Lord
shall bring forth by his hand shall bring my people unto salvation.
34 And the Lord
sware unto Joseph that he would preserve his seed forever, saying, I will raise
up Moses, and a rod shall be in his hand, and he shall gather together my
people, and he shall lead them as a flock, and he shall smite the waters of the
Red Sea with his rod.
35 And he shall
have judgment, and shall write the word of the Lord. And he shall not speak
many words, for I will write unto him my law by the finger of mine own hand.
And I will make a spokesman for him, and his name shall be called Aaron.
36 And it shall
be done unto thee in the last days also, even as I have sworn. Therefore, Joseph said unto his
brethren, God will surely visit you, and bring you out of this land, unto the
land which he sware unto Abraham, and unto Isaac, and to Jacob.
37 And Joseph confirmed
many other things unto his brethren, and took an oath of the children of Israel, saying
unto them, God will surely visit you, and ye shall carry up my bones from
hence.
38 So Joseph died when he was an hundred and ten years old;
and they embalmed him, and they put him in a coffin in Egypt; and he was
kept from burial by the children of Israel, that he might be carried up and laid
in the sepulchre with his father. And thus they remembered the oath
which they sware unto him. [Emphasis added.]
Sacred
history sometimes unfolds with a symmetry inviting to careful attention. One
such pattern appears in the prophetic link between Joseph of Egypt and
Joseph Smith. Latter day Saint scripture presents this relationship not as
coincidence but as part of a divine design reaching across millennia. The idea
emerges in the Joseph Smith Translation of Genesis 50 and
receives powerful reinforcement in the Book of Mormon, particularly
in 2Nephi 3. When the passages are read together,
they present a compelling vision of prophecy fulfilled through lineage,
revelation, and the restoration of sacred records.
Joseph of
Egypt already stands as one of the great figures of the Old Testament.
His story carries the drama of betrayal, endurance, and eventual deliverance.
Sold into slavery by his own brothers, he rose through years of hardship to
become a trusted leader in Egypt. Through revelation and wisdom he prepared the
land for famine and preserved the family of Jacob during a time of desperate
need.
However,
Latter day Saint scripture adds another dimension to Joseph’s prophetic role.
According to the Joseph Smith Translation of Genesis 50,
Joseph did not look only to the immediate future of his people. He also saw far
down the corridors of time. In this vision he spoke of a latter-day seer who
would arise from among his own descendants. That seer would bear Joseph’s name.
His mission would involve bringing forth the word of God and helping restore
truth obscured over the centuries.
The
prophecy becomes even more specific. The future seer’s father would also be
named Joseph. The Lord would raise him up to perform a work of great value for
the house of Israel. His words would bring people to the knowledge of the
covenants made with their fathers. Those familiar with the life of Joseph Smith
cannot miss the striking parallels.
The Book
of Mormon strengthens this prophetic connection in a remarkable way.
In 2Nephi 3, the prophet Lehi gathers his sons
and speaks directly to his youngest son, who is also named Joseph. In this
intimate setting Lehi recalls the prophecy of Joseph of Egypt. The ancient
patriarch, Lehi explains, foresaw a latter-day seer among his descendants. This
seer would bring forth long hidden sacred records.
The passage
then moves from prediction to purpose. The records brought forth by this latter-day
Joseph would work together with the Bible to establish the truth of God’s word.
They would restore plain and precious lost teachings. They would also help
convince scattered Israel of the covenants made with their fathers. This is not
a vague forecast. The prophecy identifies lineage, mission, and even name. It
describes a seer whose work would center on scripture, revelation, and the
gathering of Israel.
Joseph
Smith’s life aligns closely with this description. Born in 1805 to Joseph Smith
Sr., he emerged from a family line identified in Latter-day Saint patriarchal
blessings with the tribe of Ephraim, the son of Joseph of Egypt. Through divine
guidance he translated the Book of Mormon from ancient plates
and published it in 1830. Latter-day Saints view this moment as the opening
chapter of the Restoration.
The
connection between the two Josephs becomes even more meaningful when their
roles are considered side by side. Joseph of Egypt preserved physical life
during a season of famine. By preparing the storehouses of Egypt, he ensured
his family and many others survived a devastating crisis.
Joseph
Smith entered a different kind of famine. The spiritual landscape of the
nineteenth century included deep religious yearning but also widespread
confusion about doctrine, authority, and revelation. Through the coming forth
of the Book ofMormon and the restoration of
priesthood authority, Joseph Smith helped reopen channels of revelation we see
as essential to the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Another
shared element in their stories involves adversity. Joseph of Egypt endured
betrayal by those closest to him. He faced slavery, false accusation, and
imprisonment before his calling became widely known. Joseph Smith encountered
relentless opposition during his ministry. Mobs drove him and his followers
from their homes more than once. The hardships of his life formed part of the
larger narrative surrounding the Restoration. These parallels do not suggest
identical experiences. But they do reveal a pattern in which God prepares
chosen servants through trial before placing them in positions of sacred
responsibility.
The
prophecy in 2 Nephi 3 also emphasizes the gathering of Israel.
Joseph of Egypt preserved the house of Jacob in his generation. Joseph Smith
taught extensively about the gathering of Israel in the latter days. Missionary
work, temple covenants, and renewed attention to the promises made to Abraham
have all become central elements of Latter- day Saint belief and practice.
Seen
through this lens, the prophecy concerning the latter-day Joseph forms more
than an interesting historical detail. It places the Restoration within a much
longer sacred narrative. The covenant promises made to the ancient patriarchs
continue to unfold in later generations.
For Latter
day Saints, the connection between Joseph of Egypt and Joseph Smith illustrates
how prophecy and fulfillment can span vast stretches of time. A patriarch in
ancient Egypt looked forward to a future servant who would help restore God’s
word. Centuries later, a young man in rural New York stepped into the role and
began a work which continues to shape the faith of millions.
This
prophetic thread invites a deeper appreciation for the unity of
scripture. The Old Testament, the Book of Mormon, and
modern revelation do not stand as isolated witnesses. They join together in
telling a single unfolding story of covenant and redemption.
When those
passages are read together, the voice of Joseph of Egypt reaches across the
centuries with quiet certainty. The Lord would raise up a seer named Joseph.
Through him sacred records would come forth and the knowledge of God’s
covenants would expand again among His people.
History has
now provided the name that prophecy anticipated.
Families
are stronger when they are healthy, and immunizations tend to help individuals
stay healthy. For decades, there were few measles outbreaks because parents had
their children immunized. Then parents began questioning the effectiveness of
immunizations.
I found
an article published at the Deseret News to be interesting and educational,
and I encourage all parents to read it. Dr. Nathan Money is a board-certified,
hospital-based pediatrician in Utah and a fellow of the American Academy of
Pediatrics. Thus, he should be qualified to share his thoughts on the topic of
measles and immunization.
In
2025, the United States had its worst measles outbreak in decades, including
the first children to die from measles in 20 years. It’s 2026, and measles cases
seem to only be getting worse: 2026 cases have already reached 50% of 2025’s
total cases in just two months. Utah has been a hotbed for measles cases, accounting
for nearly 1 in 3 of all cases in the United States, with most cases occurring
in the southwestern counties.
The
recent outbreak is likely a direct result of declining measles immunization
rates. Improving immunization rates against measles will be vital to reversing
its spread in our community. Recent models suggest that if measles immunization
rates decrease 10%, the United States will see an estimated 11 million cases of
measles over the next 25 years (an average of 440,000 cases per year). In
contrast, if we can increase immunization rates by 5%, there will be only 5,800
cases over that same time frame (an average of around 200 cases per year).
Measles
is far more than a rash and fever – it is pneumonia in a previously healthy
child, brain swelling in an intensive care unit and anxiety for families who
thought it was gone. At its core, measles prevention is about protecting
children, especially those who are too young or too medically vulnerable to be
fully protected themselves.
As
a hospital-based pediatrician in Utah, I want to help keep children safe,
healthy and out of the hospital. Below are 10 important questions Utah parents
should get answered about measles recognition and prevention.
Is measles really that dangerous for children?
Yes.
Measles can be very dangerous and even life threatening, especially in infants.
It is extremely contagious, and many children with measles are hospitalized due
to complications. Of those, 1 in 1,000 dies.
What are the first signs and symptoms of measles?
The
first signs of measles include a fever, runny nose, cough and red eyes. A few
days later, a red rash can appear that starts on the head and spreads downward.
My child was exposed; when might I see symptoms?
Measles
symptoms usually take one to two weeks to start after exposure…. If your child
is immunized, the chances of them getting measles are very low.
How contagious is the measles virus?
Measles
is extremely contagious; it can spread through the air and survive for two
hours in a room after a person with measles has left it. A person with measles
will spread it to 90% of unimmunized people they have contact with. Those with
measles should quarantine until at least four days after the appearance of
their rash.
I think my child has measles, what should I do?
If
you suspect your child has measles – especially if they have been exposed
recently – you should call your health care provider for guidance….
Please
call the facility before you go to notify them … and wear a mask….
My child has measles. What complications should I
watch for?
Two
important complications of measles are pneumonia (1 in 20) and brain swelling
(encephalitis, 1 in 1000). Many cases of measles can safely recover at home,
but you should seek immediate medical attention if your child is struggling to
breathe or has altered mental status or seizures.
When should my child be immunized, and how effective
is immunization?
Measles
immunizations are usually given when children are one and four years old….
The
MMR immunization is 97% effective at preventing infection – only 4% of cases in
2025 were in immunized people. If your child is immunized and still gets
measles, they will have a milder case and are less likely to have complications….
What is subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE)?
SSPE
is a complication of measles that can occur years after infection. One in 600
infants that get measles will have this complication, which is usually fatal….
Is the MMR vaccine associated with autism?
No.
Several large studies have been done to investigate this and immunized children
have never shown an increased risk of autism.
How do the complications from the MMR vaccine compare
to measles complications?
… The MMR vaccination carries some side
effects, but they pale in comparison to potential measles complications.
Estimated risks for the MMR vaccine compared to risk
of measles complications
MMR Vaccine Side Effects
Fever,
rash (1 in 10)
Swollen
lymph nodes (1 in 10)
Joint
pain (1 in 200)
Febrile
seizure (1 in 3,000)
Anaphylaxis
(1 in 700,000)
Immune
Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP) (1 in 40,000)
The
liberty principle for this Freedom Friday concerns immigrants to our nation,
particularly the schizophrenic and ungrateful immigrant who hates America but
refuses to leave. Legal immigration is good for our country.
Most of
the people who are legal immigrants come to America because they recognize the
virtues of our nation, such as democracy, constitutional law, free enterprise,
liberty, freedom, etc. They respect the laws of the United States and are
willing to abide by them. On the other hand, many illegal immigrants curse
those same laws, virtues, and qualities while enjoying the benefits of living
in America.
In an
article published at The Daily Signal, Victor Davis Hanson discussed the
ungrateful immigrant.
I’d
like to talk about a very controversial topic. I call it the ungrateful
immigrant. You know, it used to be in the United States that immigrants were
our great strength….
That
was sort of the general perception that we had of immigrants. Think of Silicon
Valley. I mean, Tesla, SpaceX, eBay, Strip, Sun Microsystems, I could go down
the list. They’re all created by these wonderful legal immigrants.
But
that’s changing. And I’m not talking about the 500,000 illegal immigrants who
were known to have come across with criminal records. I’m not talking about the
truck drivers….
I’m
not talking about the Somali fraud…. I’m not talking about Rep. Ilhan Omar and
antisemitic remark, “It’s the Benjamin’s baby,” or labeling and vilifying the
United States as trash. That’s all self-evident.
What’s
new are legal immigrants and naturalized citizens. As if they become almost …
They have a schizophrenic idea. They hate the country, but under no
circumstances do they want to leave it.
Hanson
proceeded to name a few of the “schizophrenic” and “ungrateful” people who are
in the United States legally, but do not love and appreciate America and
American values:
Just
in an eight-day period: A week ago, we had in Austin, Texas, a Senegal
naturalized citizen who went into a beer garden and opened fire. Killed three
and wounded a lot…
At
Old Dominion University in Virginia, a naturalized immigrant from Sierra Leone
came in, and he shot the ROTC instructor and yelled, “Allahu Akbar.”
…
Out in front of the New York mayor’s mansion, there was a protest against Islam
and a counterprotest supporting Mamdani and two naturalized citizens, one an
Afghan, one parents from Turkey, they brought two IEDs and tried to, they said,
surpass the Boston Marathon bomber of 2013.
Remember
them? The Tsarnaev brothers? They were Chechens from Russia. And we were very
magnanimous in allowing them to come in. And how did they repay us? By trying
to slaughter people. They injured dozens. Dozens. More than dozens in Boston.
And
then, of course, we had the synagogue attempt by a Lebanese naturalized
citizen. And he had ties to Hezbollah. His family were Hezbollah members. He
tries to drive his car into a synagogue in Michigan and kill people. And the
question is, why do they do that?
Maybe
a better rephrasing it would be why don’t they do it?
We
have no civic education. We ask very little of the immigrant when they come to
the United States. We don’t ask them to have a high school diploma all the
time. We don’t ask them to be fluent in English. We don’t ask them to study the
Constitution. We don’t ask them to profess their greater loyalty and love to
the United States.
Instead,
we have open borders. Or we bring in thousands of students from the Middle
East.
And
what do they do? They protest, and they push Jews around, and they celebrate at
a time when we’re at war. As we saw in New York City recently, they celebrate
our enemies: Hezbollah, Hamas, and Iran. They’re on their side.
This
is a far different phenomenon from the past when we had wonderful immigrants
from Japan who were treated pretty badly, that many of them, most of them, went
to internment camps, and yet they joined the 442 [C]ombat [B]rigade in Italy.
And they took horrendous casualties fighting for whom? The United States.
So,
something’s wrong, and what I’m getting at is this: These immigrants, whether
they’re temporary immigrants, they’re illegal immigrants, they’re legal
immigrants, or they’re naturalized citizens, or they’re on student visa, they
sense something.
They
look at the Tsarnaev brothers, and they say, “Well, yes, they were Islamicists
and yes, they killed a lot of Americans, but Rolling Stone put one of the
brothers in a very photogenic pose on their cover as if he was a romantic type
of person. Oh, I remember Fort Hood.” That was Major Nidal Hasan. He shot 13 of
his fellow soldiers and wounded over 30 of them.
And
the Pentagon said, we’re not going to attribute this to what? Terrorism. Even
though he yelled, “Allahu Akbar.” … then-Chief of Staff of the Army George
Casey … said one of the greatest tragedies of this shooting might be the injury
to our diversity program.
No,
no. It was not the injury to the diversity. It was the paradigm that was
established that you can go in and kill people and not suffer public opprobrium
and condemnation. It’s almost as if anytime someone yells “Allahu Akbar” – citizen,
illegal citizen, anybody – and you scream and yell, and you do something
terribl[e], the first thing we say is, “Well, we don’t want to condemn it. That
would be Islamophobic.”
But
again, that sends a message. And all of these people, all 50 million people,
who have come to the United States, many of them, some of our best citizens,
but all of them have to be reminded and are reminded, if we’re doing our duty,
that they chose to come here, and they need to become Americanized.
And
a lot of them are not….
Hanson
shared an example: Illegal immigrants from Mexico rioting in Los Angeles and
waving the Mexican flag – a country that they do not want to return to – while burning
the American flag – a country that they do not want to leave. Then Hanson
questioned where people got such an idea:
Was
it from the universities? Was it from the K-12 curriculum where we teach people
that the story of the United States is sexism and racism and homophobia? Or is
it when they look on TV and we see ICE people trying to enforce the law, and
predominantly looking at the 500,000 criminals that came in.
And
what happens to them? They’re demonized by us as Gestapo, as Nazis.
Hanson
called the situation a “Frankensteinian monster of immigration” and said that
we created the problem. Immigration “used to be our great strength,” but the
American people have become Dr. Frankenstein. We have turned immigration into a
monster that threatens the American way of life.
Congressional
Democrats partially shut down the U.S. government just after midnight on
Friday, March 8, 2026. Congress failed to fund departments like the Department
of Homeland Security, the Pentagon, the State Department, and the Treasury. The
Justice Department, Veterans Affairs, FDA, and the EPA continued operations
because they received prior funding.
The
shutdown means that nonessential federal employees in the affected agencies are
furloughed. However, essential personnel – air traffic controllers, TSA staff,
and some law enforcement officers – continue to work but without pay. ICE is
not included because they were funded in previously passed legislation.
Congressional
Democrats have stalled for 18 days even while negotiating with the White House.
However, Democrats finally sent their latest counteroffer around 11:00 p.m.
last night, according to an article by Cami Mondeaux in an article posted at the Deseret News. While White House officials are reviewing the details, “top
Republicans on Capitol Hill said the latest proposal ‘didn’t change much from
where we were.’”
“There
are things that, in my view, have been significant gives on the part of the
White House, but the Democrats seem intent on dragging out this political
issue,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., told reporters on Tuesday.
Democrats
have been engaging directly with the White House on funding for DHS for the
2026 fiscal year since early February. Congress was on track to pass a spending
bill that had been negotiated between both parties, but Democrats scuttled
those plans after a pair of deadly shootings by federal immigration officers in
Minneapolis in January.
Since
then, Democrats have demanded major reforms to how immigration officers can
operate, including body cameras and judicial warrants. But as talks drag on,
Democrats say the White House isn’t offering enough while Republicans say the
minority party is refusing to compromise….
Federal
funding for DHS lapsed at midnight on Feb. 14, leaving the department shuttered
for over a month. That’s caused challenges for agencies beyond those that deal
with immigration, such as the Transportation Security Administration that has
dealt with major airline delays due to staffing shortages.
TSA
agents have not been paid since the beginning of the shutdown. Some agents are
calling in sick while others have quit their TSA jobs to find steadier work. Even
though Democrats want to fund TSA in a stand-alone bill, Republicans fear that
such a move “would leave all agencies funded except those that have to do with
immigration and border security.”
In his
article published at The Blaze, Lance Gooden states that Americans stuck
with “longer security lines, missed flights, and mounting frustration” should
blame Democrats.
This
marks the third funding lapse in six months. Instead of doing their job,
Democrats are using the DHS as leverage to undermine President Trump and stall
the work Americans elected him to do.
The
consequences are immediate. More than 95% of TSA employees are working without
pay during this shutdown. Many have taken second jobs to cover basic bills. At
the same time, the TSA has cut staffing, which means fewer screeners and longer
lines – even as the security mission stays the same.
With
TSA wait times reaching three hours at some airports in Texas, Gooden says this
“translates into real costs: lost time, missed flights, and families stranded
because Congress can’t pass a basic funding bill.”
And
this chaos could end overnight. Congress could fund the government and get the
DHS back to work. Instead, Democrats are choosing disruption – and putting
national security at risk – to block Trump’s mandate to secure the border, end
illegal immigration, and Make America Safe Again.
It is
safe to say that many of the policies of the Biden administration encouraged
illegal immigration. Now a “House subcommittee will examine whether the Supreme
Court’s decision that states cannot deny the children of illegal aliens access
to taxpayer-funded K-12 education incentivized more aliens to come to the U.S.
illegally,” according to an article written by Pedro Rodriguez and published in
The Daily Signal.
The
House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on the Constitution and Limited
Government will hold a hearing Wednesday on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Plyler v. Doe (1982), Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, told The Daily Signal Friday. The
Supreme Court allowed illegal alien children to enroll in public schools,
ruling that state laws preventing their enrollment violated the equal
protection clause of the 14th Amendment.
“Decades
ago, the Supreme Court’s erroneous decision in Plyler v. Doe set a misguided
precedent by extending taxpayer-funded public education to those in the country
illegally,” Roy told The Daily Signal. “As our schools face growing strain, it’s
time for Congress and the courts to reexamine this decision and put American
students and taxpayers first.”
The
hearing will also explore the “policy implications” of “allowing large numbers
of illegal aliens to overwhelm public schools, strain resources, teachers, and
hinder class learning.”
Witnesses,
who have yet to be formally announced, will help the subcommittee identify how
Congress could push the Supreme Court to “rectify this judicial and policy gap.”
“This serves as an opportunity to examine the federal judiciary’s recent series
of questionable decisions, highlighting a history of bad precedent,” the Texas
congressmen added.
The
committee hopes to use the hearing as an “opportunity” for them “to build from
the birthright citizenship hearing” by demonstrating that the Plyler precedent
compounds the issue of illegal aliens absorbing public resources.
In
recent years, Republican lawmakers have continuously championed efforts to stop
incentivizing illegal immigration, which they claim includes education.
States,
including Florida and Texas, have already banned illegal immigrants from receiving
in-state tuition benefits in public higher education.
“I
don’t think you should be admitted to college in Florida if you’re here
illegally,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said in a 2025 press conference. “To give
in-state tuition was just a slap in the face to taxpayers.”
It is a
good thing that any part of Congress is looking at how illegal immigration is
being incentivized. If all the handouts and other benefits are cut off, America
will stop looking like the Promised Land to more residents of foreign nations.
My VIP
for this week is Senator John Fetterman (D-PA.). I do not usually consider any
Democrat as being a VIP, but Fetterman has caught my attention. During his
campaign, I wondered why anyone would vote for a man with obvious brain damage.
Yet, he has become THE Democrat who makes the most sense in the vast majority
of cases.
Fetterman
has ruffled the feathers of his fellow Democrats on numerous occasions. His
latest act took place last Saturday, and the topic was his criticism about the
Democrats’ “ongoing partial government shutdown and its impacts on federal
employees and operations.” Harold Hutchison reports the story in his article
published at The Daily Signal.
Multiple
agencies, including the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and U.S. Customs and Border Protection
(CBP), are being subjected to “emergency measures” due to the shutdown of the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS), according to a release by DHS.
Fetterman
said he spoke with TSA agents during his frequent travels about the effects of
the shutdown.
“I
am the only Democrat that has refused to vote in shutting down DHS, literally
the only one,” Fetterman said during Saturday’s episode of “The Big Weekend
Show.” “And now all agree that this would not have any impact on ICE
[Immigration and Customs Enforcement]. They already have their funding, and it
doesn’t push or force ICE to do any of those kinds of reforms that people think
are necessary now, too.”
“Why
would you want to punish all of these workers that are under DHS? The only
thing that it can do is just make us less safe, and that also makes people have
to go without getting paid,” Fetterman continued. “I’m at the airport virtually
every week of the year, and I ask all those TSA agents, and I said, ‘Hey, do
you like not to get paid for your work?’ I haven’t met one saying, ‘No, it’s no
problem.’”
Democrats
are demanding new restrictions on ICE after federal law enforcement officers
were involved in the fatal shootings of Alex Pretti and Renee Nicole Good in
January during Operation Metro Surge. The separate incidents occurred amid the
deployment of hundreds of federal agents to Minnesota in response to reports
about welfare fraud involving Somali migrants.
Fetterman
also criticized Democrats over their efforts to block the funding.
“It’s
not a big deal, you know,” Fetterman said. “I truly don’t understand that,
other than it’s just toxic for a Democrat to agree with something that maybe
that the Republican side might agree with that. And now I know that, but it’s
very easy: more of a country over party, or ‘I’m going to put those union workers
over it,’ or America’s security over the base might demand.”
Fetterman
appears to be a common-sense type of man. He sees the foolishness that has
taken over the Democrat Party. He is solid in his intention to remain a
Democrat, but he sounds more like a Republican than my own Senator Lisa
Murkowski does!
I am a grandmother who is concerned about the direction our country and world are headed and what my grandchildren will inherit. I want to do my part to bring peace on earth and sanity to our insane world.