Thứ Ba, 26 tháng 6, 2018

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Texas Governor Has Perfect New Job For Combat Veterans And Dems Are Irate About It

Regardless of the fact that Memorial Day weekend has passed, we should never cease to take

up an opportunity to thank our veterans for their service.

The best thank you that we can provide is giving them the veterans benefits they have

rightfully earned as well as providing them job opportunities upon their return home to

the United States.

Which is why it is always heartwarming when companies put in place additional guidelines

to provide advantages to them to give them a step up in the job market.

This is why this story will warm your heart.

This is perfect for any combat veteran who might be looking for a new job, but it sure

has the Democrat heads exploding as they can't take it that people who stand for American

freedom are being taken care of.

Breitbart reported:

"Governor Greg Abbott's (R) security plan in response to the Santa Fe High School attack

includes placing armed veterans in Texas schools for defense of students and teachers.

Details are set forth in the School and Firearm Safety Action Plan, released May 30, 2018.

The plan calls for a greater law enforcement presence throughout Texas schools by all means

necessary.

This includes having officers use schools as a stop for "breaks, lunch, or to file

reports."

Abbott's plan also asks schools "to provide office space for a local or state law enforcement

official to work from."

He is asking the state to consider grants to help school's offset the cost of providing

such space and accommodating a great law enforcement presence.

Abbott's plan also focuses on the use of retired police officers and employing veterans

to serve as armed patrols in Texas schools:

Texas public schools are permitted to hire any person who is a licensed peace officer

to provide campus security.

Texas retired and off-duty peace officers already have extensive firearms and emergency

response training, and many would be willing and able to protect Texas campuses.

Texas should authorize schools to prioritize recruitment and hiring of such personnel to

protect their campuses and their student bodies, faculty, employees, and guests.

Hiring should prioritize individuals with the most applicable skill sets (i.e., former

police, sheriffs, and constables).

In addition, the state should create a pathway for our veterans – many of whom have extensive

firearm training – to help protect our schools through a modified school marshal program

that ensures they have the appropriate training to transition their expertise into the campus

environment.

Veterans who complete tailored training and background checks should have the ability

to once again serve their communities in times of need.

Abbott is also focused on arming more teachers.

Fox 5 reports that Texas has 1,000 school districts, and approximately 170 of those

districts allow teachers and school staff to be armed on campus for self-defense.

Abbott's plan would increase the number of armed teachers and staff so that individuals

intent on harming innocents will have to deal with the fact that good guys with guns are

at the ready."

CNN reported about a Texas school in which students say they "feel protected" knowing

the teachers are armed.

The school is another rural school just like the ones in Missouri where the teachers are

armed.

It's just common sense to have armed teachers when it would take too long for the police

to come quickly for an emergency.

After the piece on the Texas school, the CNN host and guest never talked about the fact

that students would feel safe with armed teachers.

They talked about policy and tiptoed around other topics.

The "Guardian Program" is common sense but the left just can't see it.

Rural places must have this!

Texas has allowed 170 schools to have armed teachers.

Training once a year and target practice are requirements.

Armed teachers should be volunteers and should be trained so they will be ready at all times.

Notice how the CNN commentators never say this would be voluntary.

They make it sound like the teachers would be forced to do this.

Four "trained" deputies stood outside and did nothing!

The discussion over what will end school shootings has been highly divisive.

Some prefer ideas of mental health awareness training and more investment in mental illness

prevention while others prefer to focus on anti-second amendment laws.

Providing armed veterans, who are trained in the same way law enforcement is no doubt

will provide an extra layer of safety and protection that would not otherwise be there.

Considering the ineptitude of the school resource officer at the Parkland, Florida shooting

it would certainly prove to be beneficial to have a former military soldier there who

have been trained to respond quickly to these types of threats.

This should not be a political discussion this should be a discussion of right and wrong,

there are no questions about it.

For more infomation >> Texas Governor Has Perfect New Job For Combat Veterans And Dems Are Irate About It - Duration: 4:37.

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Border patrol catches smuggler bringing illegal immigrants into Texas - 247 news - Duration: 6:15.

This is the moment U.S. border patrol catches a people smuggler red-handed before he flees back to Mexico in an inflatable raft

A border agent was showing reporters the main route smugglers use through McAllen, Texas, when they came across a group of illegal immigrants

but the shirtless man made it to the Rio Grande and rowed away. 'Look, there's a smuggler,' Agent Rodriguez shouted as he caught sight of the group and ran through the woods towards the shore

 'I cannot go in the river to apprehend him. As long as he goes back south, I'm all right

'After the smuggler rowed away, the about half a dozen young immigrants, including an infant, were taken for questioning

Elsewhere in McAllen, another smuggler escaped back across the border by driving quickly down a dirt road after abandoning his cargo

  Two Honduran women - one with a 12-year-old daughter and one with a year-old boy - and two teenagers turned themselves in agents a short distance from the river

Agents found Gerberht Charac, 19, on the roof of a trailer with a fellow Guatemalan seeking to elude authorities

 The teenager said he agreed to pay a smuggler $12,000 to get from Guatemala to Houston, where he planned to join a friend

  Share this article Share He swam across the Rio Grande and stayed in a smuggling organization's house before getting caught

'I had hopes of making it,' Charac said after he choked up explaining that he came to the U

S. to provide for his wife and daughter who stayed behind in Guatemala.Another man was detained along with a four-month-old Honduran who first claimed to be his daughter

  He then said he was her uncle, and presented what appeared to be a false birth certificate

The girl, wrapped in white bedding, was placed in a white crib under close watch of U

S. investigators, who waited for a Honduran consular official to arrive on Monday

  McAllen is now the nation's busiest station after the key drivers of illegal immigration shifted over the last decade from adult Mexican men entering in Arizona, to Central American families and unaccompanied children crossing the river

Immigrants are held in a 77,000-square-foot facility that has tripled in sized in the past year, mostly with Central Americans, and now houses 1,100 people

Families and children rested under shiny thermal blankets in cells of chain-link fences adorned with high-hanging televisions

They exited their cells for a lunch of a sandwich and apples.There are separate pods for boys who came alone, girls who came alone and parents with their young children

Some older children are split from their parents to avoid having them mix with much younger children

Within 72 hours, the adults and families are turned over to Immigration and Customs Enforcement and unaccompanied children are handed to the Department of Health and Human Services

Border Agents arrest 5,000 illegal immigrants with criminal records trying to cross the border Hundreds of gang members and more than 5,000 convicted criminals were arrested trying to sneak back into the U

S. in just eight months.They included 505 confirmed members of violent groups MS-13, 18th Street gang, and the Mexican Mafia hoping to rejoin their organizations

Last week six violent criminals were detained for deportation after crossing the border, including a convicted murder and paedophile

Border Patrol agents arrested a Mexican national near El Centro, California who was convicted of child molestation on June 22

On the same day a suspected MS-13 gang member was picked up near McAllen, Texas

On the other side of the country, a Peruvian national and a Mexican national were apprehended on June 23 near Averill, Vermont on Saturday

Record checks revealed both were previously deported and the Mexican admitted to being a member of the 18th Street gang

The next day a Mexican man who served 32 years in jail for murder was apprehended near San Ysidro, California

Two more confessed gang members from El Salvador were arrested on the same day, and MS-13 member near Three Points, Arizona, and a 18th street member near Rio Grande City, Texas

'Human smuggling is a violent criminal enterprise that puts the safety of our communities and our country at risk,' Acting Deputy Chief Scott Luck said

'We are committed to using the wealth of resources, technology and expertise at our disposal not only to disrupt the current activity, but to identify and dismantle the criminal organizations behind it

'Border Patrol was able to identify the criminals and gang members by searching CBP and FBI biometric databases

 The databases electronically compared a live-scanned fingerprint against a nationwide database of biometrically indexed records

President Donald Trump would prefer this never happened and immigrants were immediately turned back to the border when found

 'This is the only real answer,' he argued in a series of tweets on Monday morning

He said he'd like to send migrants back without due process, an option that is not currently available by law to his administration

 He said hiring the thousands of judges claimed to be needed to process asylum claims, and a long legal process, was not the way to proceed

'Hiring many thousands of judges, and going through a long and complicated legal process, is not the way to go - will always be disfunctional,' he wrote

'People must simply be stopped at the Border and told they cannot come into the U

S. illegally. Children brought back to their country.''If this is done, illegal immigration will be stopped in it's tracks - and at very little, by comparison, cost

This is the only real answer - and we must continue to BUILD THE WALL!'

For more infomation >> Border patrol catches smuggler bringing illegal immigrants into Texas - 247 news - Duration: 6:15.

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Explosion reported at Central Texas hospital - Duration: 1:02.

For more infomation >> Explosion reported at Central Texas hospital - Duration: 1:02.

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7-year-old held down in hot bathtub during Texas home invasion - Duration: 0:36.

For more infomation >> 7-year-old held down in hot bathtub during Texas home invasion - Duration: 0:36.

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North Texas families love, care for babies who are waiting to be adopted-- for free - Duration: 4:26.

For more infomation >> North Texas families love, care for babies who are waiting to be adopted-- for free - Duration: 4:26.

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10,000 Texas homes could flood twice a month, research shows - Duration: 0:39.

For more infomation >> 10,000 Texas homes could flood twice a month, research shows - Duration: 0:39.

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7-year-old held down in hot bathtub during Texas home invasion - Duration: 0:36.

For more infomation >> 7-year-old held down in hot bathtub during Texas home invasion - Duration: 0:36.

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Will Keuhne explains verbal commitment to North Texas - Duration: 1:16.

For more infomation >> Will Keuhne explains verbal commitment to North Texas - Duration: 1:16.

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North Texas families love, care for babies who are waiting to be adopted-- for free - Duration: 3:50.

For more infomation >> North Texas families love, care for babies who are waiting to be adopted-- for free - Duration: 3:50.

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Explosion reported at Central Texas hospital - Duration: 0:29.

For more infomation >> Explosion reported at Central Texas hospital - Duration: 0:29.

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Six Flags Fiesta Texas celebrating the summer season - Duration: 2:26.

For more infomation >> Six Flags Fiesta Texas celebrating the summer season - Duration: 2:26.

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Explosion reported at hospital in Texas - Duration: 0:36.

For more infomation >> Explosion reported at hospital in Texas - Duration: 0:36.

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Texas volleyball team plays through tragedy in tournament at Cobo - Duration: 2:58.

For more infomation >> Texas volleyball team plays through tragedy in tournament at Cobo - Duration: 2:58.

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Supreme Court upholds most of Texas redistricting maps - Duration: 2:27.

For more infomation >> Supreme Court upholds most of Texas redistricting maps - Duration: 2:27.

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Supreme Court upholds Texas voting districts in racial gerrymandering case - Duration: 4:44.

JUDY WOODRUFF: But first: This term, the U.S. Supreme Court was asked to weigh in on one

long-running political debate.

As Amna Nawaz explains, it's all about what is and isn't allowed when lawmakers draw electoral

districts.

AMNA NAWAZ: Over the past year, the Supreme Court in more than one case has tackled gerrymandering.

Today, the court ruled on a case out of Texas questioning whether the state used racial

discrimination when drawing four state district lines.

"The National Law Journal"'s Marcia Coyle joins me at the table to help us understand.

Marcia, thanks for being here.

MARCIA COYLE, "The National Law Journal": Pleasure.

AMNA NAWAZ: So, let's talk about the case today.

It's about a Texas congressional and legislative map, right?

The allegation was that it was challenged as racial gerrymandering.

What did the court say today?

MARCIA COYLE: Well, the court divided 5-4 along ideological lines.

Justice Alito, joined by four conservative justices, led the court in the majority opinion.

And he -- the majority rejected a lower court's findings that Texas had engaged in racial

discrimination, primarily against black and Hispanic voters, in its 2013 redistricting

map.

Justice Alito said that the evidence of discrimination was insufficient to show that Texas had bad

-- the Texas legislature, which drew the map, had bad faith or had engaged in intentional

discrimination.

AMNA NAWAZ: So, is that really a decision about whether or not this was racial gerrymandering?

MARCIA COYLE: Oh, yes, absolutely.

Justice Alito did say that there was one district, though, that stood out as being racially gerrymandered.

And that was a state house district in which Texas had argued, we had to do it in order

to comply with the Federal Voting Rights Act.

And Justice Alito said there wasn't enough evidence to show that they had to discriminate

against Hispanic voters in that particular district.

AMNA NAWAZ: Justice Sotomayor wrote the dissent, using some fairly strong language here.

And part of what she said was that -- quote -- "The court today does great damage to that

right of equal opportunity, not because it denies the existence of that right, but because

it refuses its enforcement."

That's pretty strong language when it comes to something like this.

MARCIA COYLE: It is.

And she is very passionate when it comes to racial discrimination in voting or even in

the criminal justice system.

The dissenters that she led really had a difference of opinion with the majority over what the

lower court found.

Justice Sotomayor said that the majority here today had mischaracterized the lower court's

findings and that there was ample evidence the Texas legislature acted in bad faith and

intentionally discriminated.

AMNA NAWAZ: So, this wasn't the only gerrymandering case that the court considered this term,

though, right?

It was the only one dealing with race when it comes to gerrymandering.

MARCIA COYLE: Yes.

AMNA NAWAZ: The other two dealt with partisan gerrymandering.

So where does today sort of fit into the landscape of the way the court has ruled on this issue?

MARCIA COYLE: I really think it stands alone, because the court has dealt with racial gerrymandering

in many contexts over the years and does decide these cases.

The partisan gerrymander cases are different because the court has yet to come up with

a standard or a test to determine when politics goes too far and violates the Constitution

in redistricting.

So, today, they actually had a case from North Carolina that was a challenge to North Carolina's

congressional map, a partisan gerrymander challenge.

And they sent that back to the lower court, saying, reconsider this, in light of a decision

we made this month in a Wisconsin case.

And in that Wisconsin case, again, the court didn't come up with a test.

All it did basically was say what you have to show in order to get your foot in the courthouse

door if you want to challenge partisan gerrymandering.

So, it offered a little bit of guidance, but not a whole lot.

AMNA NAWAZ: So, Marcia, very quickly now, the central question in this seems to be,

does the Constitution forbid gerrymandering, and, if so, where should the court draw the

line?

Do we have an answer to that?

MARCIA COYLE: No, we don't.

And it's really a question of, when is partisanship so excessive that it violates the Constitution?

And the challengers to many of these maps around the country -- and these cases will

keep coming back to the Supreme Court until it does rule -- are -- the basis of the challenges

are, violates the First Amendment, your right of association, violates the 14th Amendment,

your right -- your right not to have your vote diluted for partisan reasons.

AMNA NAWAZ: Marcia Coyle, thanks for being here.

MARCIA COYLE: My pleasure.

For more infomation >> Supreme Court upholds Texas voting districts in racial gerrymandering case - Duration: 4:44.

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Inside Look At The Texas Tent Facilities Housing Immigrant Children | MTP Daily | MSNBC - Duration: 5:07.

For more infomation >> Inside Look At The Texas Tent Facilities Housing Immigrant Children | MTP Daily | MSNBC - Duration: 5:07.

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Texas billboard gets makeover with welcoming message - Duration: 1:37.

For more infomation >> Texas billboard gets makeover with welcoming message - Duration: 1:37.

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Texas billboard gets makeover with welcoming message - Duration: 1:42.

For more infomation >> Texas billboard gets makeover with welcoming message - Duration: 1:42.

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'Red Flag Law': Texas lawmakers explore temporarily taking guns in certain cases - Duration: 2:21.

For more infomation >> 'Red Flag Law': Texas lawmakers explore temporarily taking guns in certain cases - Duration: 2:21.

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Commander of Texas tent city blasts "dumb, stupid" zero tolerance immigration policy - Duration: 2:31.

EL PASO, Texas -- The commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) said on Monday the agency has stopped referring immigrant parents for criminal prosecution until federal agencies can agree on a plan to keep parents and children together

More than 500 children have been reunited with their families since the president ordered agencies to stop separating them, but more than 2,300 remain separated

CBS News met five migrant parents who hadn't seen their child since being caught illegally crossing the border, some for as many as 40 days

The hardest part, one parent says, its being away from his 5-year-old

The group was released from detention on Sunday after criminal charges were dismissed -- the most recent evidence of the U

S. CBP's policy not to turn over people who cross illegally for prosecution

Now, those parents want their children back.More than 20 separated children are in a tent city in Tornillo, Texas

CBS News was allowed to tour without cameras. A video distributed by the government gives us a glimpse into their lives

On Monday, the Pentagon announced that additional tent camps will be built at two U

S. military bases.Asylum applicant seeks news of separated 3-year-old granddaughter Protests continue along the Texas border as more than 2,000 separated children remain in custodyDuring the tour, the commander in charge said the administration's "zero tolerance" policy was "a dumb, stupid decision that should've never happened

""We are working as fast as we possibly can to reunify children with sponsors here in the U

S.," said Mark Weber, with the Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees the facility

When asked about the commander's comments, Weber said, "Everyone is allowed to have their opinion

""This program is set up to manage influx," he said. "This program has demonstrated once again, it can do that

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