Thursday, February 12, 2026

An 'Outstanding' post that calls a spade a spade and must be read and re-read!

 

The Morality and Pragmatism of Immigration Laws

The mass overrunning of our borders warrants a Watergate-style investigation. Meanwhile, the Left’s performative indignition can be countered by both moral principle and by pragmatic reason.

Larry Gordon | February 12, 2026 www.americanthinker.com

It is undeniable that millions of individuals entered the United States between 2021 and 2025 without following U.S. laws on how to do so. This was not only allowed by the previous administration, it actively facilitated the influx with intricate planning and funding and with no democratic consensus.

Polls show most Americans strongly agree that our immigration laws are good and should be enforced. And yet when they are, it evokes ritualistic indignation all the way up to big city mayors, governors, and U.S. senators, all of the same political party that created this mess.

The Pavlovian Left has predictably responded as riotous street mobs that actively interfere with law enforcement. Their focus is upon ICE agents doing the heavy lifting of deportation, while the legacy media stokes their anger.

There is no prologue here, no acknowledgement, much less debate, about what led up to this. And still no official explanation from that same party as to why this influx was orchestrated.

You might think there would be indignation that airplanes were clandestinely flown in in the middle of the night to pick up persons to enter the U.S. illegally, who were then given free housing all on the taxpayer’s dime.

And where is the indignation that hostile countries emptied their prisons and mental institutions into the U.S.? Who could possibly think that would be benign?

The mass overrunning of our borders warrants a Watergate-style investigation. Meanwhile, the Left’s performative indignition can be countered by both moral principle and by pragmatic reason.

Put simply, if someone sneaks into a ballgame, theme park, or concert and gets caught, he gets put out. There is no “Due Process,” and the “sneaker” does not expect any. He expects to get shown out.

Likewise, U.S. immigration law enforcement does not result in imprisonment but rather deportation. That simply means getting sent back preferably to the country from which they came and where they can apply for citizenship per the proper procedure.

Deportation is tough on all involved and can get rough physically (thus optically) when resisted, but it is not cruel or unusual. All countries do this; previous Democrat administrations have routinely done this, and they did not need to hide behind the apologetic spin “we’re only focusing on child rapists and terrorists.”

Clinton and Obama deported millions by enforcing the law and its simple principle, “You sneak in, you get caught, you get put out.” No one prattled about “neighbors being kidnapped ,” and ICE agents did not feel the need to be masked.

Deportation isn’t cruel and unusual and it’s not even “punishment” per se. It is not intended as such, it is following the law. Isn’t "The Law" the central element of Justice?

In fact, we might label ICE’s task “Restorative Justice” as it seeks to cure a malady deliberately brought upon us. Justice typically results in law, but when law does not (and cannot) cover everything, then we must sense there is unfairness, something unjust afoot that should be rectified in our pursuit of justice.

So, it is undeniable that waves of folks sneaking across our borders is not fair to those who have already gone through the procedures properly, nor is it fair to those waiting to be naturalized by the book.

And most importantly, it is not fair to our own citizenry, who must bear the consequences of overrun borders. Think costs and crime and competition and culture. Each one of those things is immensely important in its own right, but all this has been blissfully ignored by a myopic mainstream media.

ICE’s Restorative Justice can rightly pound both the law and the facts while their critics can only pound their chests and still not win the moral side of the argument.

The pragmatism of immigration law is just as clear. We all understand that there are persons who sincerely want to be U.S. citizens and who could be good citizens, but we cannot take all who wish to come.

This is not complicated: For every one American citizen, there are also twenty-four other human beings on the planet. An open borders policy could allow any and every one of them to enter the U.S.

That ratio should give pause and sobering perspective. We cannot have even one-tenth of those people sneaking into our country, nor can we afford to give the world medical care when our government with its deep deficit struggles to provide care for our own citizenry.

Certainly, no one should be coming in unvetted. Vetting should be the real “due process.” And for “asylum” to be granted there should be confirmation and consensus, not just “claims.”

And finally, some analogy to bear this out: If the mantra of “open borders” is taken to its logical conclusion then it should also follow that anyone who wishes to attend an Ivy League school can just go plop themselves down in a seat in any classroom. You can skip the admissions department. And forget tuition, Education is a good thing and should be a right.

Other students should cheer you on as a fellow classmate, one who should not be kidnapped out of the classroom by the Gestapo campus security.

And ditto for hospitals. If you are not feeling well then just go crawl up in a hospital bed. You don’t need no stinkin’ admissions department. After all, healthcare is a right, right?

Or should there be laws and procedural admission rules? What happens if those laws are not enforced?

If a private theatre or theme park allowed folks to sneak in, it would soon go out of business. A hospital might hang on via government subsidies as could a university via even more begging for private donations, but their institutional quality i.e. functionality would dramatically decline.

Likewise, countries that fail to enforce immigration laws might survive at best but with a marked deterioration in quality of life, and no outside entities will be there to bail them out. Take them over, yes, bail them out, no.

 

If it isn't Judges it's Governors opposing the Federal government from enforcing the Nation's immigration laws, rules and regulations. It's a vicious circle.

 

'She is putting a target on their backs': New Jersey governor launches online portal to track ICE agents

Carlos Garcia February 11, 2026 theblaze.com

The website is available in 22 languages.

The Democratic governor of New Jersey is taking action to oppose operations by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in her state.

Gov. Mikie Sherrill announced Tuesday that she is going to restrict ICE agents from state property as well as launch an online portal to track agents' movements.

'She is putting a target on their backs. It's dangerous and completely backwards.'

"ICE is making everyone less safe. Today, I'm taking action to protect New Jerseyans. First, I'm signing an Executive Order to ban ICE from launching actions from any state property," Sherrill posted in a statement on the X platform.

She then linked to the site run by the New Jersey Attorney General's office "where people can upload videos of ICE interactions they see in our state."

The website says people can report "incidents involving harmful conduct by, or negative interactions with," federal agents.

"If you're approached by an agent or see an ICE operation taking place, and you're at a safe distance — send us your videos," Sherrill added.

She touted another website set up by the state to ensure "people know their Constitutional rights when interacting with federal agents," and to connect residents with "important resources" that include "pro-bono legal services."

Republican Rep. Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey immediately criticized the portal.

RELATED: 'This is where ICE has come to die': Self-identified Antifa member arrested for threats against federal agents, DOJ says

"The Governor of New Jersey just launched a state portal to track ICE agents," he wrote. "These are federal officers removing violent criminals from our streets, and she is putting a target on their backs. It's dangerous and completely backwards."

However, the information gathered through the portal will not be shared with the public.

The website is available in 22 languages.

 

Around and around we go - the judicial merry go round continues in this mass of judicial rulings. It is an absolute immigration nightmare.

 


Politico: Judges Use ‘Workarounds’ To ‘Bypass’ Pro-Trump Rulings On Immigration

By: Brianna Lyman February 11, 2026 thefederalist.com

The judges highlighted by Politico are not outliers, in fact, they are emblematic of an activist judiciary that defies constitutional limits.

Unelected, inferior court judges are looking at ways to launch a judicial coup against higher court rulings that they don’t like, Politico reported Tuesday.

“Federal judges may have found a workaround to reject the Trump administration’s mass detention policy after an appeals court backed the approach,” Politico’s Kyle Cheney reported.

A three-judge panel of the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Friday that the Trump administration could continue to detain illegal aliens without bond, with Circuit Judge Edith H. Jones writing for the 2-1 majority that “unadmitted aliens apprehended anywhere in the United States are ineligible for release on bond, regardless of how long they have resided inside the United States.”

“That prior Administrations decided to use less than their full enforcement authority under [the law] does not mean they lacked the authority to do more,” Jones wrote. Under previous administrations, illegal aliens not detained at the border had been able to request a bond hearing, and, if they did not have a violent criminal history, they were often granted bond, Fox News reported.

But as Politico reported, two federal district court judges in Texas who are bound by the ruling said the decision “left an opening for them to continue granting immigrants’ release on other grounds, primarily constitutional arguments against detaining people who have established roots in the U.S. without due process.”

The judges reportedly believe that the Constitution permits a “liberty interest” to be accounted for.

One of the judges, Kathleen Cardone, ruled in a Monday decision that despite the Fifth Circuit’s recent decision, it “has no bearing on this Court’s determination of whether [the petitioner] is being detained in violation of his constitutional right to procedural due process.”

The other judge, David Briones, made a similar finding.

“The Court reiterates its original holding that noncitizens who have ‘established connections’ in the United States by virtue of living in the country for a substantial period acquire a liberty interest in being free from government detention without due process of law,” he wrote.

But what Politico frames as a clever legal workaround is actually just inferior court judges openly searching for ways to ignore a precedent they dislike. When judges acknowledge they are bound by a high court ruling but then immediately search for theories to evade such ruling, they’re making clear they are supporting a judicial coup.

The Trump administration has been plagued by an ongoing judicial coup by unelected, inferior, activist judges who believe in judicial supremacy. Judicial supremacy is the idea that the legislative and executive branches are not co-equal to the judicial branch, but rather, its subordinates.

Fifth Circuit Court of Appeal Judge James Ho previously wrote that judges across the country are championing “judicial supremacy.”

“What we’re really seeing in the judiciary is not principle, but arrogance.”

While the Supreme Court did rule that unelected, inferior court judges do not have broad authority to issue universal injunctions, the court left gaping loopholes in the ruling.

“[F]ederal courts do not exercise general oversight of the Executive Branch; they resolve cases and controversies consistent with the authority Congress has given them. When a court concludes that the Executive Branch has acted unlawfully, the answer is not for the court to exceed its power, too,” Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote.

But, almost immediately after the ruling, an Obama-appointed district judge ruled that Trump exceeded his authority when he issued an executive order on Jan. 20 prohibiting illegal aliens who “engaged in the invasion across the southern border” from seeking asylum or withholding of removal. The judge granted a certified class status, allowing the lawsuit against the administration to proceed.

The judges highlighted by Politico are not outliers. In fact, they are emblematic of an activist judiciary that defies constitutional limits. When inferior court judges hunt and exploit loopholes to override higher court rulings, they are not safeguarding liberty. Rather, they are asserting supremacy over other branches of government.

 

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Our southern border with Mexico continues to be a mass of confusion - 'border wall' is a perfect example.

 

DHS officials point fingers over delays in border wall construction

By Anna Giaritelli February 3, 2026 washingtonexaminer.com

Border wall construction during President Donald Trump’s second term is far ahead of where it was at the same point in his first term, but Department of Homeland Security officials say it should be moving much faster this time around.

Officials involved in planning and implementing the border wall system along the 1,950-mile U.S.-Mexico border can agree that more progress should have been made by now, but they cannot agree on who is to blame.

A government document that outlines border wall progress as of Jan. 27, obtained by the Washington Examiner on Monday evening, states that more than 100 miles of wall and 93 miles of waterborne barriers in Laredo, Del Rio, and Big Bend, Texas, have stalled because the final approval is waiting on DHS Secretary Kristi Noem — a claim that the DHS denied.

The Customs and Border Protection memo states that the Big Bend, Laredo, and Del Rio regions of Texas will receive 102 miles of steel bollard wall, more than 90 miles of waterborne “buoy” barriers, and 2 miles of smaller replacement fencing.

The document states that the contract awards are ready to be made for those three sections of the wall but that they are still pending approval from Noem, who is referred to in the document as “S1.”

The two-page document also states that CBP is awaiting DHS approval before awarding contracts to procure bulk steel; a project in El Centro, California; and a project in El Paso, Texas.

In mid-2025, Noem said she would personally review all contracts across the department that are worth more than $100,000, which government employees feared would lead to a major slowdown in grant and contract approvals.

Four senior federal sources told the Washington Examiner that they believe Noem’s demand to review all contracts is the reason for the delay in wall construction.

“She has required all contracts over 100K be signed off by her. I don’t think she fully understands how many 100K contracts DHS has. It has slowed several things down,” the official wrote in an email.

However, the DHS has pointed the finger at CBP Commissioner Rodney Scott. In a story published by Politico in January, anonymous sources said that Scott, who was confirmed in his job in June, was holding up progress.

DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin wrote in an email on Tuesday afternoon that “there are no wall contracts currently sitting in front of Secretary Noem.” McLaughlin added that because the wall funding was passed through the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, contracts did not fall under the $100,000 contract approval process that Noem implemented last year.

“Bottom line is the premise of your story is inaccurate because wall contracts don’t even follow the $100k process,” McLaughlin told the Washington Examiner, “nor are there any border wall-related contracts pending the Secretary’s review.”

Following publication, the DHS sent more information about three individual projects totaling 100 miles of new wall. The DHS maintained that “CBP [had] just sent over” paperwork related to the three border wall projects “today” and that the memos had requested Noem’s approval between Feb. 6 and 16. However, the CBP memo makes no mention of the deadlines and says that each project was awaiting Noem’s “approvals.” Other projects outlined in the memo had specified deadlines.

“Again, there are currently no border related contracts pending the Secretary’s review and just last year the Secretary review over 1,000 contracts related to border Security,” McLaughlin wrote in an email. “The Department has already awarded over $12 billion in contracts for hundreds of miles of border wall from OB3.”

A second senior federal source said that, regardless of the $100,000 approval process Noem implemented last year, the contracts have been sitting since December.

“The process doesn’t require all this s***,” the official said in a phone call. “This is Trump’s agenda. Why isn’t it getting through?”

As of Jan. 26, CBP had completed 29.5 miles of border wall during the second Trump administration, including 12 miles installed over the past 45 days.

In 2025, Republicans tucked $46.5 billion for border security projects into the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. That means that more than 1,400 miles of the entire southern border will have a physical barrier to deter people from crossing by the time the current and future projects are completed.

The remaining 535 miles are not viewed by planners as ideal for building a wall or are considered low-risk areas for illegal crossings. CBP is installing 550 miles of technology in parts of the border that have a physical barrier but lack ground sensors, cameras, and other tech.

Over the past four months, CBP has put $11.4 billion in funding toward 16 new wall projects across the southern border, the memo states.

TRUMP’S BORDER WALL SYSTEM GOES FAR BEYOND JUST A WALL. HERE’S WHAT TO KNOW

The Border Patrol is averaging 2 miles of wall installed per week as of mid-December 2025 and intends to increase this to 10 miles per week, according to Border Patrol Chief Mike Banks.

Banks explained during an interview in Brownsville, Texas, on Jan. 7 that the smart wall system comes with technology, lighting, infrastructure, ground-sensing radars, roads, and more.