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After CEO Bob Iger Claims He’s Removed The Company From The Culture War, Disneyland Announced Disneyland … – That Park Place

Just a day after The Walt Disney Company CEO Bob Iger claimed he removed the company from the culture war, Disneyland announced Disneyland After Dark: Pride Nite.

Disneyland Pride Nite via Patrick Dougall YouTube

In an interview with CNBC, Iger was asked, The woke thing has had more of an impact. Youve said to me that you would love to be just out of the culture wars. Do you feel your succeeding in that?

He answered, Well, I think Yes. I mean, I think the noise is sort of quieted down.

READ: Disney CEO Bob Iger Believes Hes Removed Disney From The Culture War And Claims Company Is Not Infusing Messaging In Its Films And TV Shows

Ive been preaching this for a long time at the company, before I left and since I came back, that our number one goal is to entertain, Iger said. Look, the term woke is thrown around liberally, no pun intended in that regard. I think a lot of people dont understand really what it means. The bottom line is that infusing messaging as a sort of a number one priority in our films and TV shows is not what were up to. They need to be entertaining.

And look, where the Disney Company can have a positive impact on the world, fostering acceptance and understanding of people of all different types, great. But generally speaking, we need to be be an entertainment first company. And Ive worked really hard to do that, he asserted.

Bob Iger via CNBC Television YouTube

When asked how hes done that, Iger explained, Engaging with our executives, engaging with the creative community, returning to our roots, making sure that everybody is aligned with what our priorities are, and understanding that, look, were trying to reach a very, very diverse audience.

He continued, And on one hand in order to do that, the stories you tell have to really reflect the audience that youre trying to reach. But that audience, because they are so diverse, really, first and foremost, they want to be entertained and sometimes they can be turned off by certain things and we have to be more sensitive to the interest of a broad audience. Its not easy. You cant please everybody all the time.

Bob Iger via CNBC Television YouTube

READ: After Bob Iger Claims Disney Does Not Advance Any Kind Of Agenda Ozarks Julia Garner Cast To Play Gender-Swapped Silver Surfer In Marvels Fantastic Four Film

Just a day after making these claims, Disneyland Resorts Public Relations Director Kelsey Lynch announced on the Disney Parks website that Disneyland is hosting a Disneyland After Dark: Pride Nite on June 18 and 20th.

Lynch writes on the website, Disneyland After Dark: Pride Nitereturns to theDisneyland Resort for its second year with colorful celebrations, joyful photo opportunities, event merchandise, fabulous food and divine drinks.

She adds, Disneyland After Dark: Pride Nite celebrates the LGBTQIA+ community, bringing allies and community members together as Disneyland park is illuminated with rainbow projections.

Disneyland Pride Nite via Patrick Dougall YouTube

This event is clearly trying to promote and celebrate disordered lifestyles.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church notes the lifestyles and acts these individuals live cannot be approved, Basing itself on Sacred Scripture, which presents homosexual acts as acts of grave depravity, tradition has always declared that homosexual acts are intrinsically disordered. They are contrary to the natural law. They close the sexual act to the gift of life. They do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved.

Christ Crucified between the Two Thieves. Photo Credit: Giovanni Battista Piazzetta, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

READ: Disney Allegedly Selling Off Parts of Closed Star Wars Hotel Experience

This event clearly contradicts Bob Igers comments. It shows that he lied to viewers on CNBC and that he also lied to shareholders during a Q&A portion of the companys shareholder meeting when he was asked, Is it possible for Disney to stay out of political and social agenda and just provide entertainment?

He answered, Our job is to entertain first and foremost. And by telling great stories we continue to have a positive impact on the world and inspire future generations just as weve done for over 100 years. Disney has always been and will continue to be a source of hope, joy, and optimism for people of all ages.

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA FEBRUARY 28: (L-R) The Walt Disney Company CEO Bob Iger, Showrunner/Executive Producer Jon Favreau, Pedro Pascal and Alan Bergman, Chairman of Disney Studios Content attends the Mandalorian special launch event at El Capitan Theatre in Hollywood, California on February 28, 2023. (Photo by Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images for Disney)

We are committed to telling stories that reflect the world around us and using those stories to entertain stories from all walks of life, he asserted. I believe we have a responsibility to do good in the world.

He then declared, But we know our job is not to advance any kind of agenda. So as long as Im in the job, Im going to continue to be guided by a sense of decency and respect. And we will always trust our instincts.

(L-R): Alaqua Cox as Maya Lopez and Vincent DOnofrio as Wilson Fisk/Kingpin in Marvel Studios Echo, releasing on Hulu and Disney+. Photo by Chuck Zlotnick. Marvel Studios 2023. All Rights Reserved.

What do you make of The Walt Disney Company immediately pushing an agenda and engaging in the culture war immediately after Bob Iger claimed the companys job was not to advance any kind of agenda and that he had removed the company from the culture war?

NEXT: Measurement, Merit, and Mendacity: How We Keep Track Of Things Reveals Our ValuesOr Lack Of Them

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After CEO Bob Iger Claims He's Removed The Company From The Culture War, Disneyland Announced Disneyland ... - That Park Place

Culture War Bills Mostly Fizzle on the Georgia Legislature’s Last Day in Session – Flagpole – Flagpole Magazine

State lawmakers closed out the 2024 legislative session with a flurry of votes that spilled over into the early morning hours.

But the night ended with some of the most closely watched billslike a bill banning puberty blockers for minors and a proposal to put sports betting on the ballot this fallfizzling out in the House.

The last votes were taken well after the traditional midnight deadline and in a fog of confusion. Paper airplanes, balls and tatters were already flying around the House as lawmakers waited anxiously for the speaker to yell Sine Die! Some House lawmakers had already left when they were called back to their desks shortly before 1 a.m. to pass a bill renaming roads and another that increases the states homestead exemption in a move to give property owners some tax relief.

But the final day offered its share of controversial bills, too. Republican lawmakers signed off on a wide-ranging election measure Thursday, prompting the ACLU of Georgia to immediately issue a statement saying it would file a lawsuit if the governor signs the bill into law.

And GOP leaders pushed through a bill designed to punish sheriffs who do not enforce federal immigration laws, though another related bill did not survive. These bills gained momentum after the death of a nursing student on the University of Georgias campus, which has become a political flashpoint nationally.

One of the biggest storylines of the session, though, wrapped up last week. After months of chatter, a proposal to fully expand Medicaid failed in a Senate committee. Instead, lawmakers passed changes to the states health care business regulations and created a commission that will look at fully expanding Medicaid.

Ive gotten in trouble for saying this, but Ill say it again: Theres nothing that the House cannot talk about, that we cant discuss, Speaker Jon Burns told reporters early Friday morning. And we can look for the facts on it to see how it may impact our state.

Burns said those conversations will continue this summer as the commission gets to work. But he also said he thought the governors partial expansion plan is gaining some momentum. About 3,500 people have signed up for Pathways to Coverage, which launched last summer.

No Statue for Clarence Thomas

House lawmakers took a pass on voting on a proposal calling for a statue of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, who is from Georgia.

The proposed tribute to the controversial figure was met with intense opposition in the Senate the last two years. State senators wanted to place the statue on the state Capitol grounds as a high honor.

House lawmakers explored alternatives this week. A proposal floated earlier this week would have put the statue of Thomas within the nearby Nathan Deal Judicial Center, along with statues of other Supreme Court justices from Georgia. Three other justices called Georgia home.

A revised House plan would have limited the tribute to just Thomas but kept it at the judicial center. The Senate mimicked that idea and tacked it onto another bill, but in the end, the proposal was never called up for a vote in the House.

Effort to Protect Okefenokee Sinks

A late attempt to impose a three-year moratorium on new mining permits near the Okefenokee Swamp hit a brick wall in the Senate.

Under pressure, House lawmakers used a legislative maneuver Tuesday to usher forward the proposal.

The bill was a scaled-down version of another House proposal that had picked up opposition from environmental groups. Specifically, it calls for a moratorium on dragline miningthe method Alabama-based Twin Pines Minerals plans to use at Trail Ridgein previously untouched areas like Trail Ridge.

Like other proposals, it would not have stopped Twin Pines from mining for titanium dioxide and zirconium at a nearly 600-acre demonstration site about three miles from the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge.

Rep. Lynn Smith, a Newnan Republican who chairs the House Natural Resources and Environment Committee, said the bill is intended to have the effect of quieting things down. Another bill that would permanently block new or expanded mining permits at Trail Ridge was stuck in Smiths committee despite having more than 91 signersenough support to clear the full House. It passed out of the House Tuesday with a 167-to-4 vote, though some voted for it with reservations.

Although Im not really in love with this bill, and Im not ever going to be for the mining this is the only thing we can do right now to save the swamp. Its the only option, said Rep. Debbie Buckner, a Junction City Democrat.

Buckner said she hoped a three-year moratorium would at least buy opponents of mining near the Okefenokee some time to figure out a way to save the swamp.

But the bill faced an even cooler reception in the Senate. Majority Leader Steve Gooch said on the Atlanta Journal-Constitutions Politically Georgia podcast Thursday that he thought the state Environmental Protection Division should be left alone to decide what should be done.

The EPD issued draft permits last month and is in the process of collecting public input on those permits. Those permits have faced intense public opposition.

If we began the process of circumventing the rule makers and the regulatory agencies on this issue, then the next issue will be landfills, quarries, water treatment, wastewater treatment, so the list goes on and on and on, the Dahlonega Republican said.

Transgender Bills Die

Two bills watched with dread by transgender Georgians and their allies withered away in the wee hours Friday morning after the House took no action on them on the final day of the 2024 legislative session.

Every year under the Gold Dome brings new battles in the culture wars and bills often based more upon ideology than practicality, nestled firmly within the crusty crannies of the cultural divide.

This year, as in previous years, questions of ethical appropriateness centered largely on transgender children, but unlike in recent years, trans kids made it through Sine Die without new restrictionsdespite two bills out of the Senate that would have banned transgender children from playing on sports teams or using restrooms corresponding with their gender identities, and blocked them from accessing puberty blocking drugs.

Both passed the Senate on party lines, but neither got a House vote Thursday.

We know theres some things, we know theres some issues, social issues, if you will, that are important to Georgians, Burns said to reporters after the House adjourned. And theres some of them that we embrace, but theyre alsowe know theres a time. And timing was maybe not right today for some of those issues that came over from the Senate.

Well continue to work with the Senate and look at those issues and make some determinations on whats good for all Georgians in every walk of life, he added. And so were conscious of those issues. Theyre prioritiesmany of them are, but theyre maybe not the same ones as the Senate.

Cole Muzio, president of the conservative Frontline Policy lobbying group, called the bills failure to pass a missed opportunity.

Both of those issues are broadly supported by a lot of Georgians, he said. And I think as people prepare to go to the polls in November, as theyre looking for what they expect out of this building, thats the kind of bold action they are looking for. Obviously, a lot of good things happened in this building this year. Georgia needs to turn in the right direction, but weve a lot to do heading into 2025, and so were excited to add those onto our agenda then and well be back tomorrow.

House Democrats expressed relief when the chamber adjourned close to 1 a.m. without taking up the controversial measures.

Im happy that we did not pass legislation that would have caused a lot of real harm for a very vulnerable population, transgender youth, said Lawrenceville Rep. Sam Park, Democratic Caucus whip and the first openly gay man elected to the General Assembly. Its a reminder that despite the polarized political environment that were in, that we can still come together and move Georgia forward by, again, not passing a very dangerous and harmful piece of legislation. Its been a tough legislative session, but yeah, I think we ended just fine.

Puberty Blockers

Under the pen of Senate Education and Youth Committee Chair Clint Dixon, House Bill 1170, which originally put opioid reversal drugs into government buildings, instead became an effort to ban puberty-blocking drugs for transgender minors.

These drugs, originally used by children who enter puberty too early, have been used in recent years by kids with gender dysphoria to put off going through a puberty that doesnt match their views of themselves. Last year, the state banned hormone therapy, or prescribing testosterone or estrogen, to minors, but allowed puberty blockers to remain as what GOP lawmakers called a compromise.

Sen. Ben Watson, a Savannah physician who sponsored the bill in the Senate, said also forbidding doctors from prescribing drugs to prevent children from going through puberty will make parents jobs easier.

Last year and this year, many parents have come to me privately wishing that this law was in effect in the past, he said. And I find that affirming, I find that sometimes challenging, from that perspective, it is difficult, no doubt, being a parent, and sometimes saying no is difficult, but saying no, many times, with the law behind you makes it easier.

Watson said the effects of puberty blockers can be permanent, and he hoped to prevent minors from making life-altering decisions.

Surgery is irreversible. Sex change hormones are irreversible, and puberty blockers can also be irreversible, he said. With the fact that if youre not on puberty blockers, half of the children do not go on to proceed changing their sex, I think thats very important. With the puberty blockers, virtually 100% go ahead and do sex change hormones. I think we need to give the children continued mental health counseling, continued care, continued love.

Many transgender people say going through what they often call the wrong puberty was a difficult time.

It can really make a big difference. I started before I turned 18, and that was before SB 140, and that was a big hot-button issue for some people, but I cant tell you how happy that made me, said Lucas Tucker, a transgender man from Decatur who came to the Capitol to speak against anti-trans bills in committee hearings. If I wasnt on them now, I would not be the person I am. It really makes a huge difference.

Giving trans children access to their bathrooms and their hormone therapy and things like that will save them, he added. Because people make fun of us. They say, oh, 40% or whatever of trans people kill themselves. You know why? Its because of you. Its because you make it possible for us to do that. You enforce legislation that shoves us back in the closet. And for a lot of people, being in the closet is the same as being dead, because you cant live in the closet.

Christmas Tree Bills

Senators placed provisions banning transgender students from playing on sports teams or using restrooms conforming with their gender identity, as well as a ban on sex education before 6th grade and provisions allowing parents to more easily monitor the books their children check out from school libraries, into House Bill 1104. That measure was originally a bill from Decatur Democratic Rep. Omari Crawford that was intended to address mental health and suicide risks for student athletes.

Such bills are sometimes called Christmas tree bills because they are adorned with amendments like a Christmas tree is covered in decorations.

As he left the chamber early Friday morning, Crawford said he hopes to come back next year and push for his original bill, which he says will protect student athletes mental health.

Im glad that the bill and the Senate substitute did not pass, he said. There was a lot of language that I didnt agree with, and so what well try to do next year is make sure that language that was the intention of the bill is reintroduced, hopefully we can pass that.

Renter Protections

A proposal to increase protections for Georgia renters is now in the governors hands after receiving a final vote in the House on Mar. 26.

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Kasey Carpenter (R-Dalton), sailed through the House a year ago before stalling in the Senate. The measure fared better in the Senate this year, advancing with only a minor change and finding overwhelming support last week.

Under the measure, rental properties must be fit for human habitation and security deposits are capped at two months rent. It also requires landlords to give tenants a three-day grace period after failing to pay rent and bars them from turning off the air conditioning during an eviction process.

For the first in Georgia code we are going to put fit for human habitation for the rights of tenants across this state, Carpenter said.

The North Georgia lawmaker gave an emotional speech last year, recalling the hardships of his own childhood growing up in Whitfield County. He said at the time his family moved 16 times in 18 years, mostly living in rental properties. When he was 17, his family spent a three-month period during one winter without heat.

We always try to say Georgia is the best place to work and play but sometimes for some folks, its not always the best place to live, Carpenter said. This legislation will move that ball forward so we protect Georgia renters.

House Speaker Jon Burns celebrated the bills final passage, calling on lawmakers to applaud themselves.

Sen. Brian Strickland, a McDonough Republican who carried the bill in the Senate, called the provisions common sense standards.

Carpenter has said the bill is in response to the Atlanta Journal-Constitutions 2022 investigation that showed how the business practices of apartment owners have trapped Atlanta-area renters in unsafe and unsanitary conditions.

These stories originally appeared at georgiarecorder.com.

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Culture War Bills Mostly Fizzle on the Georgia Legislature's Last Day in Session - Flagpole - Flagpole Magazine

Trumps Misleading Chart on Illegal Immigration – FactCheck.org

During a speech in Green Bay, Wisconsin, former President Donald Trump pointed to a chart on apprehensions of people trying to enter the U.S. illegally at the southwest border.

See the arrow on the bottom? That was my last week in office, Trump said. That was the lowest number in history. But Trump was wrong on both points.

In fact, the arrow is pointing to apprehensions in April 2020, when apprehensions plummeted during the height of the pandemic. In his last months in office, apprehensions had more than quadrupled from that pandemic low and were higher than the month he took office.

Also, April 2020 was not the lowest point in history. The lowest since 2000 came in April 2017, shortly after Trump took office and before an ensuing spike.

As we have written, apprehensions at the southwest border, were 14.7% higher in Trumps final year in office compared with the last full year before he was sworn in.

During his speech in Green Bay on April 2, Trump claimed to have fixed the border when he was president.

When I came in, I built 571 miles of wall, we had 200 miles sitting there waiting to be erected, far more than I said I was going to build, Trump said.

Actually, a total of 458 miles of border wall system was built during the Trump administration, according to a Customs and Border Protection status report on Jan. 22, 2021. Most of that, 373 miles of it, was replacement for primary or secondary fencing that was dilapidated or outdated. In addition, 52 miles of new primary wall and 33 miles of secondary wall were built in locations where there were no barriers before. Including barriers that existed before Trump took office, there are now about 706 miles of barriers, covering about 36% of the total southwest border. That is far less than the 1,000-mile-long wall that Trump promised during the 2016 campaign.

Trump then had campaign aides put up a chart showing monthly border apprehensions going back to 2012. You can see the chart in the background of the C-SPAN video, but here it is:

See that low spot, Trump said, pointing to the red arrow at the bottom of the chart. This is illegal migrants coming into our country. See the arrow on the bottom? That was my last week in office. That was the lowest number in history.

Had President Joe Biden just left everything alone, he might have gone down as a decent president, at least on the border, Trump said. But on the border, look at that number, that number is so much lower than anything else. And then look at the right of that number. Thats what happened after I left.It was an invasion of our country.

Its an amazing chart actually, Trump said. Its a Border Patrol chart. But look at that low number, got it down to practically nothing.

Trump repeated the claim in an April 4 interview with Hugh Hewitt, saying, We had the safest border in history, and you saw that chart that was released a couple days ago where literally the day I left office, we had the lowest number in history.

The data in the chart itself are accurate, but the Trump campaign editorial notes are not.

The red arrow at the bottom purports to correspond to the point that Trump leaves office and to be the lowest illegal immigration in recorded history! But the arrow actually points to April 2020, when there were 16,182 apprehensions at the southwest border.

April 2020 was the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. Throughout that month, the U.S. was under Trump administration guidelines recommending people stay at home and away from one another to slow the spread of the disease.

Any complete reading of what took place at the U.S.-Mexico border in 2020 would have to note the emergence of a global pandemic that dramatically chilled mobility of all forms in its early phase, Michelle Mittelstadt, director of communications for the Migration Policy Institute, told us via email. That is not a factor listed on the chart below, best I can tell.

The pandemic was responsible for a near-complete halt to all forms of global mobility in 2020, due to a combination of border restrictions imposed by countries around the world (we recorded more than 43,000 travel measures taken by countries between January and May 2020 alone, lockdowns, and the shutdown of aviation and other transportation routes), Mittelstadt said.

As the chart shows, after apprehensions reached a pandemic low in April 2020, they rose every month after that. By the actual end of Trumps presidency, apprehensions of immigrants attempting to cross illegally had risen to 71,141 in December 2020 and to 75,316 in January 2021, Trumps last month in office.

In recent speeches, Trump has claimed he fixed the border so completely during his presidency, that it was no longer a campaign issue in 2020.

I was saying the other day that in 2016, one of the biggest issues was the border, Trump said during a speech in Ohio on March 16. And I sort of won on the border, I guess, maybe. And we fixed the border. We fixed it so good that I couldnt even use it in 2020, even though we got millions and millions more votes in 2020, but we couldnt even talk about it. Id say, I want to talk about the border. Tell them what a good job. They said, Sir, you fixed it. Nobody cares.

In reality, apprehensions at the border in Trumps final two months in office were substantially higher than in President Barack Obamas last two months in office. (Apprehensions were 43,251 in December 2016 and 31,576 in January 2017, the last two months of the Obama presidency, compared with 71,141 and 75,316 in Trumps last two months.) Indeed, there were more than 69,000 apprehensions in each of the last four months of the Trump administration, from October 2020 through January 2021. But the highest number of apprehensions under Obama was 67,342 in March 2009.

And as we wrote in Trumps Final Numbers, illegal border crossings, as measured by apprehensions at the southwest border, were 14.7% higher in Trumps final year in office compared with the last full year of Obamas term.

Given that, had Obama fixed the border? Not according to Donald Trump in 2016. Then, he repeatedly called the border broken and made fixing it his primary campaign promise.

We have described the roller-coaster of illegal immigration during Trumps time in office. The number of apprehensions fluctuated wildly from a monthly low of 11,127 in April 2017 shortly after he took office to a high of 132,856 in May 2019.

The number of apprehensions peaked for Trump in mid-2019, and the year ended with the highest number of apprehensions since Fiscal Year 2007. In response to rising levels of apprehensions, Trump issued several policies to reduce immigration flows, including measures to restrict eligibility for asylum and return non-Mexican asylum seekers who cross the southwest border to Mexico while their claims work their way through immigration courts (the so-called Remain in Mexico program). Correspondingly, apprehensions dropped steadily through the second half of 2019 and into 2020.

And then, when the pandemic hit, apprehensions dropped even more dramatically in April and May 2020. In response to the pandemic, Trump put into place a series of policies aimed at blocking migration to the U.S., including one that allowed Border Patrol agents to quickly expel any illegal immigrants they stopped, without allowing them access to the asylum process. Nonetheless, apprehensions increased throughout the second half of 2020.

To be sure, illegal immigration soared after Biden took office, as the chart shows even without cherry-picking the pandemic low. According to our latest update to Bidens Numbers in late January, apprehensions for the 12 months ending in November were 296% higher than during Trumps last year in office.

We discussed some of the reasons for that dramatic increase, including not only high levels of migration around the world due to political and economic turmoil in other countries, but also the perception that Biden was more welcoming of migrants.

But illegal immigration was not down to practically nothing in the weeks or months before Trump left office. It was down to nearly nothing during the stay-at-home phase of the pandemic.

Editors note:FactCheck.org does not accept advertising. We rely on grants and individual donations from people like you. Please consider a donation. Credit card donations may be made throughour Donate page. If you prefer to give by check, send to: FactCheck.org, Annenberg Public Policy Center, 202 S. 36th St., Philadelphia, PA 19104.

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Trumps Misleading Chart on Illegal Immigration - FactCheck.org

Rep. Bruck: Whitmer admin’s dangerous policy offers housing subsidies to illegal immigrants – Michigan House Republicans

Rep. Bruck: Whitmer admins dangerous policy offers housing subsidies to illegal immigrants

State Rep. Will Bruck today sounded the alarm about a dangerous policy put in place by the governor that is exacerbating the problems created by failing federal immigration policies.

The Newcomer Rental Subsidy Program offers benefits to people who enter the country illegally but later claim asylum after facing deportation. Various immigrant households can receive up to $500 a month in rental assistance for 12 months under the program. The criteria even allow individuals with a pending asylum application to receive support, including people who came into the United States illegally and then filed a defensive asylum application as a tactic in removal proceedings. Defensive claims comprised 97% of total asylum claims filed in fiscal year 2023, according to data from the U.S. Department of Justice.

Supporting illegal aliens with taxpayer dollars sends the wrong message that breaking the law is rewarded, said Bruck, R-Erie. Every dollar spent to incentivize illegal immigration is a disservice to those who immigrate lawfully and contribute to the prosperity of our state and our nation. Our tax dollars should be invested in opportunities that strengthen our communities, not programs that enable misuse of the system.

Last week, House Republicans sent a letter requesting data about benefit recipients, including how many defensive asylum seekers have received assistance. The letter also raised concerns about loopholes in the employment criteria that allow recipients to avoid the work requirements. Additionally, loopholes in the income criteria offer benefits to individuals earning more than the income caps if they reside in certain qualified census tracts, and applicants can avoid providing proof of income if theyre receiving cash payments, something that seems geared toward accommodating under-the-table work.

Identity verification requirements also contain concerning loopholes. An applicant must provide some form of photo ID, but the options include an alternate identification document and any government-issued identification document, even as some local governments, such as Kalamazoo County, issue IDs for illegal immigrants.

Bruck said bad actors with a pending asylum application could exploit the sweeping criteria in the subsidy program and divert funds from people in need, including refugees and other immigrants who came to the United States the right way.

Offering taxpayer-funded housing to those who exploit asylum laws undermines the integrity of our immigration system, disregarding the hardships faced by both law-abiding citizens and legitimate refugees who follow the proper immigration process, Bruck said.

Bruck said Whitmers program is contributing to the border security crisis perpetuated by the Biden administration. The crisis has reared its head in Michigan with two murders committed by illegal aliens in Kent County in the last year, including a brutal killing last month, and three illegal immigrants arrested in Shiawassee County this year for soliciting sex with minors.

The Newcomer Rental Subsidy program is administered by Whitmers Office of Global Michigan and the Michigan State Housing Development Authority. The agencies are using funds from the Housing and Community Development Fund (HCDF), which supports a variety of state housing programs. Last year, Democrats passed a controversial tax law along nearly party lines that will automatically deposit $50 million in tax revenues into the HCDF every year going forward.

After receiving the letter from House Republicans last week, Office of Global Michigan Director Poppy Sias-Hernandez replied that the office would provide answers by close of business on Monday, but lawmakers still have not received the promised response.

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Originally posted here:
Rep. Bruck: Whitmer admin's dangerous policy offers housing subsidies to illegal immigrants - Michigan House Republicans

Weaponized immigration wrecking sovereign America – The Highland County Press

By Joe Guzzardi Syndicated columnist

Weaponized immigration has come to America and is bringing low-skilled illegal aliens to the labor market. Since July 2018, the economy has created zero jobs for American-born workers.

Kelly Greenhill, a senior research scholar at MIT Center for International Studies and author of Weapons of Mass Migration: Forced Displacement, Coercion and Foreign Policy, wrote in her analysis that the U.S. has been a frequent weaponized immigration target dating back as long ago as President Dwight Eisenhowers administration and through George W. Bushs eight years in the early 21st century. Greenhill blamed Western governments Europe is also a migrant warfare target that dont understand how engineering the movement of foreign nationals across international borders exploits political divisions within the targeted countries. Unless policymakers confront the forces that enable weaponized migration it is unlikely to go away anytime soon, she concluded.

Since 1951, Greenhill has identified 81 worldwide cases, all of which achieved their weaponized immigration objectives. The targeted countries were disproportionately liberal democracies whose lax attitudes toward the threat determined the degree of success the subversive mission achieved. The Biden administration is a perfect fit for nations that want to implement weaponized migration to undermine the sovereign U.S. Not only has Biden demonstrated enthusiasm for the open border policy that he created and encouraged, but his administration has also promoted, at every turn, globalism at the expense of nationalism.

Nicaragua is a major weaponized immigration enabler. Motivated by his deep hatred of the U.S., President Daniel Ortega loosened visa requirements for Cubans in 2021, and then expanded his list to include Haiti, other Latin American countries and eventually several Asian and African nations that include Indians, Uzbekistanis, and nationals from Mauritania and Senegal. Travelers going through Nicaragua avoided the dangerous trek through the Darien Gap, and Ortega could not only subvert America, but he could also make big money at the same time. Nicaragua hired a private company to organize contracts with charter flight companies across Asia, Europe, and Africa. The flights pay landing fees, and travelers are assessed airport taxes that range from $100 to $200 per person. Transporting migrants from their home countries to Nicaragua is a multimillion-dollar business.

With weaponized migrants arriving at the U.S. border faster than officials could detain them, the Department of Homeland Security decided to process them into the U.S. rather than deport them. The strategy culminated in the May 2023 The Circumvention of Lawful Pathways Final Rule. The title summarizes the objective: for illegal immigrants, DHS created, without congressional approval, an entirely new set of administratively sanctioned methods of being processed into the U.S. DHS moved to expand safe and orderly pathways for migrants to lawfully enter the United States. Included are establishing country-specific and other available processes to seek parole for urgent humanitarian reasons or significant public benefit; expanding opportunities to enter for seasonal employment; putting in place a mechanism for migrants to schedule a time and place to arrive in a safe, orderly, and lawful manner at ports of entry via use of the CBP-One mobile app; and expanding refugee processing in the Western Hemisphere.

An earlier DHS document, the Los Angeles Declaration of Migration and Protection, which 21 countries endorsed in June 2022, resulted in the U.S. committing to resettle 20,000 so-called refugees from Central America during fiscal 2023 and 2024. In fiscal 2022, the federal government issued more than 19,000 H-2B visas to Guatemalans, Hondurans and Salvadorans, a 94% increase from the previous fiscal year. Not surprisingly the 21 endorsing countries were overwhelmingly potential migrant sending countries: Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, Haiti, Honduras and other economically failing nations.

As part of making their case to impeach DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, the House Committee on Homeland Securitys Republicans identified more than a dozen parole programs which, they argue, Mayorkas illegally created to circumvent congressionally established immigration laws. Texas, Florida, and other states have sued over many of DHS programs that have allowed illegal border crossers to remain in the U.S., concurring with the committees chairman, U.S. Rep. Mark Green, R-Tenn., who led the impeachment charge.

Always a long shot in the Senate, the House has not yet sent impeachment articles to the upper chamber. Even though the Senate outcome is predetermined, enforcement-minded, patriotic Americans will be denied the cold comfort of a Mayorkas impeachment trial. Worse, the consequences of his brazen disregard for enforcement and protecting the homeland will continue to play out until January 2025, or until Mayorkas DHS releases about two million more illegal aliens into the interior, bringing the total to well over 10 million during his term as secretary.

Joe Guzzardi is an Institute for Sound Public Policy analyst who has been writing about immigration for more than 30 years.

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Originally posted here:
Weaponized immigration wrecking sovereign America - The Highland County Press