Monday, April 20, 2026

Very interesting, to say the least!

 


Shakespeare for Open Borders?

The world-famous Shakespearean actor Ian McKellen would have you think so. But his take misses a lot.

Jeremy Egerer | April 19, 2026 www.americanthinker.com

William Shakespeare is the greatest poet in English history — but if you don’t know English history, you can easily be made to think he’s the worst.

To prove this, Sir Ian McKellen says, in a recent monologue on The Late Show with Steven Colbert,

It’s all happening 400 years ago, and in London there’s a riot happening — there’s a mob out in the streets. And they’re complaining about the presence of strangers in London. By which they mean the recent immigrants who’ve arrived there. And they’re shouting ... and complaining and saying that the immigrants should be sent home wherever they came from.

And the authorities sent out this young lawyer, Thomas More, to put down the riots, which he does in two ways — one by saying, you can’t riot like this: It’s against the law, so shut up and be quiet. And also, being by Shakespeare, with an appeal to their humanity. And in order to set it up, I’m going to have to ask somebody to shout, “The strangers should be removed.”

Somebody shouts it, and then he launches on a beautiful monologue from Sir Thomas More — which you really should see for yourself.

It goes,

Grant them removed, and grant that this your noise

Hath chid down all the majesty of England;

Imagine that you see the wretched strangers,

Their babies at their backs and their poor luggage,

Plodding tooth ports and costs for transportation,

And that you sit as kings in your desires,

Authority quite silent by your brawl,

And you in ruff of your opinions clothed;

What had you got? I’ll tell you: you had taught

How insolence and strong hand should prevail,

How order should be quelled; and by this pattern

Not one of you should live an aged man,

For other ruffians, as their fancies wrought,

With self same hand, self reasons, and self right,

Would shark on you, and men like ravenous fishes

Would feed on one another.

He goes on later, with an appeal to The Golden Rule,

You’ll put down strangers,

Kill them, cut their throats, possess their houses,

And lead the majesty of law in line,

To slip him like a hound.

Say now the king (As he is clement, if th’ offender mourn)

Should so much come to short of your great trespass

As but to banish you, whether would you go?

What country, by the nature of your error,

Should give you harbor? go you to France or Flanders,

To any German province, to Spain or Portugal,

Nay, any where that not adheres to England,

— Why, you must needs be strangers: would you be pleased

To find a nation of such barbarous temper,

That, breaking out in hideous violence,

Would not afford you an abode on earth,

Whet their detested knives against your throats,

Spurn you like dogs, and like as if that God

Owed not nor made not you, nor that the claimants

Were not all appropriate to your comforts,

But chartered unto them, what would you think

To be thus used? this is the strangers case;

And this your mountanish inhumanity.

Here is the greatest case in the English language, I think, for helping refugees, and a reminder that in the majority of men, the love of justice is simply the fear of suffering injustice.

But there’s just one problem.

What Colbert and Sir Ian McKellen missed here — probably on purpose — is that Shakespeare was writing about Evil May Day.  This was May 1st, 1517, when English rioters, impelled by jealousy and greed, went around town, dragging lawful German and Flemish business owners out of bed, smashing up their shops, and beating them up.  Some sources estimate that around a dozen victims died.

In Shakespeare’s time (almost a century after the riots), this monologue would have been relevant — so relevant, in fact, that the royal censor banned it.  Over the past generation, the Huguenots had fled France and settled in England.  There was a religious war raging between the Catholics and Protestants across the continent, and one that was so sanguine that Catholics had gotten up in the middle of the night in France, formed into mobs, and proceeded to kill as many Protestant neighbors as possible.  This was known as the Saint Bartholomew’s Day Massacre, now inconceivable in Europe.  We have a hard time imagining our ancestors doing it.

During this period, there weren’t just “hard times” in Paris.  The likelihood that Protestants would be jailed or murdered (or worse) was extremely high.  And they had no legal recourse, because the violence wasn’t only supported by the government, but many times instigated by it.

What this means is that most of the refugees in Shakespeare’s day were families.  They were of the same religion as the English — and almost guaranteed, due to persecution, to be sincerely religious.  They shared a common enemy with the English.  There was no modern welfare system in Shakespeare’s England, so they couldn’t be coming to leech off the system.  Thus, the English weren’t upset about an influx of criminals; they were worried about being outclassed by an influx of skilled and religious artisans.  This would be almost comparable, in our day, to an influx of Ukrainian doctors, engineers, MBAs, and techies.  In Shakespeare’s day, there was grumbling, but the royal censor made sure nobody acted like his grandparents.  He commanded Shakespeare to “leave out the insurrection wholly and the cause thereof.”

Thus, though Colbert’s and McKellen’s timing draws an obvious parallel between Shakespeare’s rioters and Republicans, the difference between Shakespeare’s day and ours couldn’t be more stark.  First of all, a large chunk of our immigrants today came against the laws.  We’re getting not families, but hordes of single, military-aged men.  Most of our migrants are coming from the poorest and least educated classes of the poorest and least educated nations.  We don’t share a border with the great majority of illegals.  We don’t share a common race or heritage with the great majority of legal immigrants, either.  We don’t have a common enemy, and in fact, according to our leftists, the common enemy of the new foreigners is white Americans and Republicans.  Oh, and Venezuela emptied its prisons and sent all its rapists to us.

We are currently housing large chunks of illegal aliens in our prisons — according to the Bureau of Prisons, foreign nationals make up around 16% — and the riots we see happening are mostly by Democrats to keep foreign criminals in house.  Due to our laws, migrants get access to food stamps and social security, and many illegal aliens get free medical care — adding time to wait lists and driving up the prices drastically for natives.  News about immigrants raping children, or drunk-driving over pedestrians, or butchering innocents, is routinely and notoriously buried.  And finally, it can be proved that no mass violence — ever, during my entire life — has ever been staged by our natives against immigrants.  To put it simply, we’re on the receiving end of a beating, not in the process of dishing one out.

Not only does this make Sir Ian McKellen’s parallel slanderous; it makes it stupid.  It’s an abuse of Shakespeare one could expect from an American ignoramus, or maybe from one of Shakespeare’s villains — maybe Macbeth’s wife or Othello’s Iago.  But certainly not from a Shakespearean actor.  And certainly not from the man who played Gandalf — a wise, noble old wizard who drove invaders back to Mordor and sent even more of them to meet Jesus.

Shakespeare’s play was banned by the law because it hit too close to home.  If Shakespeare were to live here a few years and see McKellen’s monologue, I doubt he’d know which home Colbert’s show was trying to hit.  But it’s apparent that with our home, Colbert doesn’t really know it; and if he does know it, it’s pretty clear he doesn’t love it.  Two things nobody could say about Shakespeare in his day without getting hooted off a soap-box.

 

Saturday, April 18, 2026

The cost of illegal immigration since 1965 - over half a century is in the trillions - we MUST correct this national tragedy!

 


DHS Says It Costs $18,000 To Deport An Illegal Alien

It’s criminal that taxpayers must foot that bill, but it’s worth every penny.

Vince Coyner | April 18, 2026 www.americanthinker.com

I saw a video yesterday of Markwayne Mullin, the new DHS Secretary, appearing on Laura Ingraham’s show. He stated that it costs more than $18,000 per deportee to remove an illegal from the United States. If you’re thinking that’s because we’re giving them swag bags and first-class tickets home, you’d be wrong. At least that would be fast. No, the $18,000 is what it costs to navigate an illegal through the justice system because activist “judges” make the government jump through a labyrinth of laws and hoops.

Mullins encourages us to imagine the cost of doing that to the twenty million illegals allowed in during the Biden administration. That would be $360 billion! And there would still be another 30 million illegals in the country.

All of this reminded me of a conversation I was having with a young person recently about the cost of illegals to the country. In this case, we were talking about housing. I mentioned that one of the reasons that housing was so expensive is that there are 50 million illegals in the United States. Despite California’s insane Homeless Industrial Complex, most of them are not living on the streets, in California, or anywhere else. They are living in homes.

The population of the United States is approximately 350 million people, who live in approximately 148 million housing units. That is an average of 2.4 people per house or apartment (collectively, “residences”).

Immigrants typically have more people living in their homes—3.5 people per residence. Using that number, the 50 million illegal aliens in the United States live in 14 million residences. If those 50 million illegals were not here, the housing stock available for American citizens and other legal residents would increase by almost 10%. To put that in perspective, on average, the net number of new residences to hit the market each year is about 1.5 million.

Needless to say, if an inventory of 14 million units were freed up over a 3-5 year period, the cost of housing across America would drop significantly. There would, of course, be consequences, given that real estate is a key element of so many Americans’ net worth, particularly older individuals.

That drop in value, though, would be only one of the myriad effects of removing 50 million illegals, most of them good. Others include changes to education, healthcare, welfare, and, of course, criminal justice and jobs.

Let’s take education. On average, schools spend $16,500 per pupil educating their charges. There are approximately five million children of illegal aliens living in the United States and going to school. Five million students times $16,500 equals $80 billion for education. That number is actually conservative because most illegals live in urban areas, where governments spend far more than average on schooling. There’s also the intangible cost of the decline in education because of students who arrive in the schools speaking no English.

FAIR, the Foundation for American Immigration Reform, a relatively anti-illegal immigration organization, estimates that the United States spent $41 billion in 2023 on healthcare for illegal aliens and their children. For some unknown reason, that number is based on the laughably low 15 million illegals. But we’ll keep it to give them the benefit of the doubt. If we multiply it by two ($82 billion), that’s probably still not close to the real cost.

According to CIS, the Center for Immigration Studies, the average number of immigrant families receiving welfare is extraordinary. For perspective, 27% of US-born households receive some form of welfare. Among immigrants, it’s…slightly higher.

Among Afghan families, it’s 87%, Dominican Republic families 78%, Guatemalan 77%, El Salvadoran 75%, Honduran 75%, Ecuadoran 70%, Mexican 67%, etc. As bad as these numbers are, in reality, they understate the problem.

Ostensibly, illegal aliens are not supposed to receive benefits at all, but they do, and do so at higher rates than legal immigrant families. The numbers above are for both legal and illegal immigrants. As such, the above numbers are averages of both and, therefore, are lower than the percentages of illegal alien families on welfare. CIS estimates that, taken together, illegal aliens cost American taxpayers $42 billion annually.

Then there’s crime. Even if one ignores the psychological and physical damage violent crime does to victims, both individuals and businesses, illegal aliens cost Americans tens of billions of dollars per year. FAIR—again using their laughably low numbers—estimates that at the federal level alone, Americans spend $25 billion a year dealing with illegals in the justice system. Elsewhere, FAIR asserts that states spend an additional $22 billion per year dealing with illegal aliens in their respective justice systems.

All of that taken together—$80 billion for education, $41 billion for healthcare, $42 billion for welfare, $47 billion on justice—equals $210 billion per year spent on illegals by American taxpayers. And again, some of those are very low-ball estimates.

The above are explicitly government expenditures. But there are also billions of dollars of additional NGO spending on illegals, although the fact that many NGOs are funded by the government means there’s probably some overlap.

And of course, there are caveats. Some illegal aliens work and pay taxes, which would reduce that number. Schools would be operating in most places even if there were no illegal aliens, so that might reduce that number.

At the same time, most organizations and government agencies have a vested interest in keeping the reported number of illegals far below the actual number. Plus, of course, as stated at the top of this essay, we cannot discount the tens, if not hundreds of billions of dollars of additional housing costs Americans face because there are 50 million illegals competing for the same housing stock.

Assuming we stick with the $210 billion figure and divide it by 50 million illegal aliens in America, that would work out to about $4,200 per illegal alien per year. Compared to Mullin’s $18,000 per illegal deported, it sounds like we would save money by letting them stay. But we wouldn’t, of course. And we shouldn’t. Deportation is a one-time cost. Funding an illegal alien is often a process of years or even an alien’s lifetime.

Given that April 15th was just a few days ago, all of this resonates as one is sitting down to write the IRS a check. And if we had to include in that the impact of illegals on the housing market and wages, it no doubt would be much bigger.

But illegal immigration isn’t just about money. It’s about right and wrong, whether Americans are in control of their own country, and whether our laws mean anything. If we allow some groups to get away with breaking the law with impunity (and benefitting from subsidies, to boot), what message does that send to the rest of the people in America, and more importantly, what message does it send to the rest of the world, particularly the third world, where most illegals come from?

Mullins is right to point out the cost associated with sending illegal aliens home because it’s always helpful for people to visualize where their tax dollars are going and how the out-of-control judicial system is making it worse.

But at the end of the day, illegal immigration is far bigger than just dollars. It’s justice. It’s safety. It’s right and wrong. And sadly, it’s control of Congress! As grifters like Maria Salazar try to pass amnesty by calling it “Dignity,” we shouldn’t let them. She and other Democrats in RINO clothing would replicate Reagan’s worst mistake, on steroids.

Although far too high, that $18,000 is worth every single penny.

 

Friday, April 17, 2026

If leftist governments fail to apply and follow laws, rules and regulations - withholding funding is the last resort.

 

Transportation Dept withholding $73M in federal funds from New York due to CDL failures

Secretary Sean Duffy said the state failed to revoke “illegally issued nondomiciled commercial learner’s permits and commercial driver’s licenses.” An audit of 200 sampled records found 107 – 53.5% – were issued in violation of federal law.

By Alan Wooten | The Center Square 4-16-26 justthenews.com

Federal funds totaling $73 million will be withheld from New York by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, the U.S. Department of Transportation said Thursday.

Secretary Sean Duffy said the state failed to revoke “illegally issued nondomiciled commercial learner’s permits and commercial driver’s licenses.” An audit of 200 sampled records found 107 – 53.5% – were issued in violation of federal law.

New York defaulted to eight-year licenses to foreign drivers for non-REAL ID licenses, regardless of when legal status for the individuals expired. In a Dec. 12 release, the state was ordered by the federal agency to begin revocations; on March 13, the motor carrier administration said again the state failed to complete required corrective actions.

Derek Barrs, administrator of the motor carrier administration, said, ““FMCSA’s mission is safety. That means ensuring that every commercial driver on the road is properly vetted and qualified. New York’s continued refusal to fix these failures undermines that mission, and we will not allow federal dollars to support a system that falls short of the law.”

Added Duffy, “I promised the American people I would hold any state leader accountable for failing to keep them safe from unvetted, unqualified foreign drivers. I’m delivering on that promise today by refusing to fund Governor Hochul’s dangerous, anti-American policies. My message to New York’s far left leadership is clear: families must be prioritized on American roads.”

Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul’s administration is losing 4% of its National Highway Performance Program and Surface Transportation Program Block Grant Funds with the loss of $73,502,543, says Thursday's letter to Hochul and Commissioner J.F. Schroeder of the New York Department of Motor Vehicles.

Sean Butler, from Hochul's office, told The New York Post on Thursday afternoon. "These charges are a baseless attempt to attack blue states, because as everyone knows New York simply follows federally-issued rules when issuing commercial drivers' licenses, something that even the Trump administration has acknowledged.”

Litigation could be in the offing. For example, Hochul’s administration challenged the Trump administration over withheld funding for the Second Avenue Subway in East Harlem.

President Todd Spencer of the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association has applauded efforts to eliminate loopholes for unqualified drivers. The issue has been prevalent coast to coast, from Florida and California tripled fatal crashes last year involving people driving big rigs illegally in America to February’s quadruple fatal in Indiana.

“The days of exploiting cheap labor on the basis of false ‘driver shortage’ claims are over,” Spencer said. “OOIDA and truckers across America applaud Secretary Duffy and FMCSA Administrator Barrs for responding to our concerns by taking substantial actions to crack down on the irresponsible issuance of nondomiciled CDLs, particularly in New York.”

 

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

What the 'Dignity Act' would do - scares me beyond belief! It IS amnesty for illegal alien invaders. Call your elected officials and say NO to this bill.

 


Republican Amnesty? The ‘Dignidad’ Act Ignores the Will of the People

Emmy Griffin patriotpost.us 4-15-26

A bipartisan bill that seeks to bring dignity to illegal aliens misses what voters are screaming for with regard to immigration enforcement.

The leadership of President Donald Trump in deporting illegal aliens after the Biden administration left our borders wide open has been stupendous. Not only has Trump deported over 600,000 illegals despite the unbridled resistance from Democrats and judicial activists, but an estimated two million more have self-deported.

Illegal border crossings are at historic lows. Additionally, the Department of Homeland Security reports 11 consecutive months with zero releases at the border. In other words, no illegal aliens who have been caught are being released into the country’s interior.

This is what we voted for, which is why it is a little baffling that Republicans in Congress are cosponsoring a bill that functions like mass amnesty.

The Dignidad Act (“dignidad” is the Spanish word for “dignity”) was put forward by Florida Republican Congresswoman María Salazar. Salazar was born in the U.S., though her parents were Cuban exiles who fled Castro’s regime. Ergo, immigration is near and dear to her heart.

Salazar has tried to advance similar bills in the past. This legislation, she claims, is different and not at all amnesty.

Here is what the bill would do:

  • Give DREAMers/DACA a legal status.
  • Forgive student loans for lawyers who provide legal services to illegal immigrants.
  • Re-import illegals who have already been deported.
  • Halt deportations altogether, including those of aliens with DUIs or DWIs.
  • Grant automatic green cards to illegals under the age of 18 who have been here since January 1, 2021.
  • DHS would determine whether an illegal alien meets the criteria of the Dignidad Act. In other words, discernment would be at the mercy of whoever is in the Oval Office.

Regarding illegals, Salazar wants to “buy them peace” while the details are sorted out. She also calls the bill “common sense.” Nothing outlined above is common sense. This is an amnesty bill that would undo the hard work of immigration enforcement agencies over the past 14 months.

The Dignidad Act is cosponsored by 20 Republicans and 20 Democrats and has been dubbed the most serious piece of bipartisan legislation under this administration. That alone constitutes a big red flag.

Despite the current irritation with Republicans for ignoring the will of the people, the introduction of the Dignidad Act presents an opportunity for more conversation. How do we permanently deter illegal immigration? How do we prevent noncitizens from exploiting our elections and congressional apportionment? How do we provide legal residency only for those who came purely for economic reasons?

These are constructive arguments that require thoughtful answers. The Dignidad Act is not the answer that voters are looking for, but it should lead to productive discussions while upholding the border, the Rule of Law, and the safety of the American people.