The southern border of the United States was breached by invaders two years ago when Joe Biden became POTUS, and the invasion has grown to more than six million people entering the United States illegally. On Thursday, May 11, 2023, Title 42 will go away, and the thousands of people waiting in Mexico will enter the United States. Daniel Horowitz wrote the following information about the invasion.
It’s unparalleled in human history. No
other sovereign nation has ever voluntarily invited millions upon millions of
invaders, primarily young men, to line up at the border and march into the
country. With over 140,000 estimated illegal aliens just in the past two weeks
(which would be an annual flow of 3.7 million) – even before the official
rescission of Title 42 on Thursday – we are out of time to stop this invasion through
traditional means. Without control of the federal executive branch, we have no
way of directly forcing the DHS to do its job, and we cannot afford to wait
until 2025. Republican-controlled states are the only way to immediately stop
this invasion.
Most of the opposition against Biden’s
border policies has come from congressional Republicans. Indeed, the House is
passing a bill this week requiring Biden, among other things, to repel those
attempting to enter our country without using asylum as a subterfuge to
override our sovereignty. However, lawmakers don’t have the votes in the Senate,
and even if they did, the DHS will continue doing what it wants.
This is where the states come into play.
The Compact Clause of the Constitution implies that states can even raise an
army to repel an invasion when necessary, if the federal government is not
capable of defending them. In this case, the federal government is breaking the
social compact with the states and is downright orchestrating and inviting the
invasion.
House
Republicans are doing what they can to stop the invasion, but they cannot do
much without support from the Senate and the White House. The only hope to save
our nation on the immigration front sits on the shoulders of Republican
governors in Red States.
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