Published on Jun 27, 2019


Egyptians Mohamed Ibrahim, 33, and Mahmoud Samy Eissa, 26, and Iraqis Ahmed Ghanim Mohamed Al jubury, 41, and Mustafa Ali Mohamed Yaoob, 29, were all arrested in an unprotected area near the Nicaraguan border with Costa Rica.
âThese alerts are quite frequent, and often donât necessarily mean those mentioned will try to enter the country. They just mean that possible terrorist suspects have been identified, but do not provide any insight into their movements or destinations,â Alfonso Durazo of the Nicaraguan military police said.
All four were found to have legitimate travel visas for Costa Rica and they will be deported from Nicaragua and handed over to the Costa Rican authorities.

Costa Rican and Mexican authorities had already been placed on high alert about the possibility of three ISIS members attempting to cross through Central America to enter the US, a matter which caught the attention of Donald Trump Jr. through media reports.

Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador had also been alerted of the presence of possible ISIS members by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Earlier this month, captured IS fighter Abu Henricki al Canadi revealed another plot targeting the US financial system, with a group of militants due to be ferried to Puerto Rico and then Mexico before crossing into the US.

By Laurie Kellman
The back-to-back Democratic presidential debates beginning Wednesday are exercises in competitive sound bites featuring 20 candidates hoping to oust President Donald Trump in 2020. The hopefuls range widely in age, sex and backgrounds and include a former vice president, six women and a pair of mayors.
The challenge: Convey their plans for the nation, throw a few elbows and sharpen whatâs been a blur of a race so far for many Americans.
What to watch Wednesday at 9 p.m. Eastern on NBC, MSNBC and Telemundo:
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WHATâS HER PLAN?
Sen. Elizabeth Warrenâs task is to harness the recent momentum surrounding her campaign to prove to voters that she has what it takes to defeat Trump. As the sole top-tier candidate on stage Wednesday, she could have the most to lose.
The Massachusetts senator and former Harvard professor is known for her many policy plans and a mastery of classical, orderly debate. But presidential showdowns can be more âGladiatorâ-style than the high-minded âGreat Debaters.â This is no time for a wonky multipoint case for âMedicare for All,â student debt relief or the Green New Deal.
So, one challenge for Warren, 70, is stylistic. Look for her to try to champion her progressive ideas â and fend off attacks from lesser-known candidates â with gravitas, warmth and the brevity required by the format.
âPreparing for the debates is trying to learn to speak in 60 seconds or less,â she said in Miami, ahead of a visit she live-streamed to a migrant detention center in Homestead, Florida.
Another obstacle is to do so without alienating moderates any Democrat would need in a general election against Trump.
Being the front-runner on stage conveys a possible advantage: If the others pile on Warren, she gets more time to speak because the candidates are allowed 30 extra seconds for responses.
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WHOâS THAT?
There may be some familiar faces across the rest of the stage, such as New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, 50, or former Texas congressman Beto OâRourke, 46. But a few names probably wonât ring any bells at all.
These virtual strangers to most Americans may be enjoying their first â and maybe last â turn on the national stage, so they have the least to lose.
Take John Delaney, 56, a former member of the House from Maryland. Look for him to try to make an impression by keeping up his criticism of Warrenâs plans.
Or Ohio Rep. Tim Ryan, 45, who sits on the powerful House Appropriations Committee. He has likened the Democratic primary to âspeed dating with the American people.â
BREAKING OUT, GOING VIRAL
For several of the candidates onstage Wednesday, the forum is about finding the breakout moment â a zinger, a burn â that stays in viewersâ minds, is built for social media and generates donations, the lifeblood of campaigns.
In 2015, Carly Fiorina won applause and a short surge for her response to Trump, who had been quoted in Rolling Stone as criticizing Fiorinaâs face.
âLook at that face,â Trump was quoted as saying. âWould anyone vote for that?â
Asked on CNN to respond, Fiorina evenly replied: âI think women all over this country heard very clearly what Mr. Trump said.â
For candidates such as OâRourke, a breakthrough moment on Wednesday is critical to revitalizing a campaign that has faded. The 10 White House contenders have two hours on stage that night and up until the curtain rises on the star-studded second debate the next day to make their mark. Former Vice President Joe Biden, 76, and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, 77, headline Thursdayâs debate and are certain to take up much of the spotlight.
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BREAKING OUT BADLY
An âoopsâ moment can be politically crippling to any presidential campaign.
Just ask Energy Secretary Rick Perry, the former Texas governor who, in a 2011 debate, blanked on the third agency of government he had said would be âgoneâ if he became president.
âCommerce, Education and the, uh, whatâs the third one there?â Perry said.
âEPA?â fellow Republican Ron Paul offered. Yep, Perry said, the Environmental Protection Agency.
âOops,â he finished. Perryâs campaign, already struggling, never recovered.
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WHAT ISSUES?
Thereâs simply no time for an in-depth discussion of issues. But the migrant crisis would be an apt topic, even in shorthand. Dominating the news in the hours before the showdown were vivid reports and images of the toll of the administrationâs policy on children, especially.
Expect at least a mention, or perhaps the appearance, of a bracing photo of the bodies of a migrant father and his 23-month-old daughter face-down along the Rio Grande.
In addition to Warren, other candidates, such as Sen. Amy Klobuchar, were visiting the migrant center.
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TRUMP
This is the Democratsâ night.
But Trump has dominated the political conversation since that escalator ride four years ago, and he loathes being upstaged. Itâs worth asking: Will he tweet during the debates? And if he does, will NBC and the moderators ignore him or respond in real time?
NBC News executive Rashida Jones said the focus will be on the candidates and the issues.
âBeyond that, it has to rise to a certain level,â she said.
During Wednesdayâs debate, Trump will be on Air Force One on his way to the Group of 20 summit in Osaka, Japan. The planeâs cable televisions are usually turned to Fox News, which is not hosting the debates. For the second debate, Trump will be beginning meetings at the G-20.
Trump told Fox Business Network on Wednesday that heâd watch because âitâs part of my lifeâ but that âIt just seems very boring. … Thatâs a very unexciting group of people.â

JUNE 26, 2019
The same press and left-wing talking heads who claim that showing child victims of Islamic terror attacks is âinsensitiveâ are all too willing to share photos of child victims who supposedly died because evil western countries have borders.
âItâs OK when we do it.â
The left has found its new âAylan Kurdiâ â a toddler who washed up dead on a beach in Turkey and whose dead body photo was ruthlessly exploited by progressives to demand western Europe throw open its borders to Middle Eastern migrants.
The latest image shows a man and his 23 month old daughter lying face down dead along the bank of the Rio Grande.

It is now being breathlessly shared by leftists are yet more proof that the Nazi-like Trump administration has enacted policies that are killing brown people en masse.
In reality, as Raheem Kassam points out, the fault for this poor childâs death lies firmly at the feet of numerous entities, none of which are Trump or his administration.
â The childâs parents for making her cross âsome of the most perilous terrain on the continentâ.
â Mexico for allowing their country to become a conduit for mass illegal immigration.
â Criminal gangs who are responsible for much of the instability in the region.
â Democrats who incentivize illegal immigration by refusing to support sensible border policies.
â Open borders activists funded by NGOs and corporations who also incentivize dangerous illegal immigration.
The most humanitarian way to prevent tragic scenes like the one above is to disincentivize illegal border crossings.
Matteo Salvini did it and more than halved the number of migrant deaths in the Mediterranean.
If Democrats actually cared about kids dying, theyâd help President Trump build the wall.
Do leftists actually want to save the lives of children, or do they want to continue to exploit photos of their dead bodies to score political points and usurp power?
The answer is obvious.

By Nate Church
âICE raids targeting 10 cities start Sunday. Know your rights,â the subject read. Appended to the e-mail were two graphics â one in English, the other Spanish â describing immigrant rights via guidance by the American Civil Liberties Union.
âItâs not strictly on point when it comes to building out a presidential campaign [to use campaign data] for the purpose other than running for president,â Ruthie Epstein, the ACLU deputy director of immigration policy, said. She reportedly claimed that the organization âplayed no roleâ in the e-mail alert.
The e-mail came from Sandersâ Press Secretary BelĂ©n Sisa, an undocumented immigrant through the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. According to Vox, it read:
Multiple news outlets are reporting that Immigration and Customs Enforcement is planning deportation raids against immigrant families in Atlanta, Baltimore, Chicago, Denver, Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, New Orleans, New York City, and San Francisco starting early Sunday morning.
Whether or not you are an immigrant, please share this âKnow Your Rightsâ information widely to help those who might fall victim to the cruel and inhumane policies of the Trump administration.
Sisa stood by her actions. âIt is no longer enough to talk about issues like immigration, but we must take real action to fight back and protect our undocumented community, like we did on Saturday,â she told Vox. âThere isnât much else that anybody can do other than stand up in unity.â
And Sanders has pivoted hard into this issue for his 2020 campaign, though he has deliberately stopped short of advocating for open borders. âWhat we need is comprehensive immigration reform,â Sanders said at a town hall in Iowa.
âIf you open the borders, my God, thereâs a lot of poverty in this world, and youâre going to have people from all over the world,â he continued. âAnd I donât think thatâs something that we can do at this point. Canât do it. So that is not my position.â

By Neil Munro
âWe have to shut down that facility and shut it down now,â Warren told supporters, according to a tweet by a Washington Post reporter. The crowd enthusiastically chanted, âShut it down!â
Warrenâs gambit highlights the growing number of progressives who emotionally oppose the federal agenciesâ efforts to identify â although not actually stop â the huge wave of Central American migrants and their children who are walking into Americansâ blue-collar workplaces, schools, and neighborhoods.
Amid the emotion, and its use by Democratic politicians, only about ten percent of adult migrants are being blocked at the border. The vast majority are quickly being released precisely because they bring young children on the dangerous journey solely to trigger the catch-and-release laws that are supported by Democrats.
Also, another huge wave of more than 56,000 children and teenagers â who claim to be unaccompanied â have surrendered to border officials since October. Roughly 2,500 of those teenagers are being temporarily sheltered at the center in Homestead, Florida, run by the Department of Health and Human Services.
The Washington Post did not report where Warren thinks the Homestead youths should be sent if the HHS center is closed.

These youths at the Homestead shelter are legally dubbed âUnaccompanied Alien Childrenâ (UAC) because they told border agents that they were not traveling with their parents.
Most of the UAC teenagers at the center will be quickly sent to âsponsorsâ after officials have checked the potential sponsors for possible criminality, such as forced labor, prostitution, drug selling, and MS-13 links. The average stay is just 36 days, according to a June 19 HHSÂ report.
But the vast majority of the sponsors are either the parents or the in-laws of the UAC teenagers, and many sponsors are also illegal migrants who have paid cartel-linked coyotes to deliver their teenagers to the Homestead camp, via the border agencies.
This UAC-smuggling strategy is dubbed the âUAC pipeline,â and it has been used since at least 2013. So far, the cartels earned a fortune by delivering a huge share of the 270,000 children and youths who have passed through the federally-operated pipeline since 2009.
In March, Democrats included a clause in the 2019 spending bill to hinder federal agencies from narrowing the UAC pipeline by deporting sponsors who are illegal migrants

Warrenâs TV-ready visit to Homestead will happen the day of the first of two Democratic debates in Miami, Florida. The Homestead center is just 30 miles down the road.
Warrenâs promised visit â which will likely be accompanied by a cheering crowd of pro-migration activists â is part of an escalating race by Democrats to out-do each other in promising to open the borders to poor migrants.
For example, Beto OâRourke pledged to dismantle the border wall, Julian Castro promised to decriminalize illegal migration, and Joe Biden wants to welcome migrants from Venezuela and also âstreamline and strengthenâ the asylum laws being used by 100,000 economic migrants each month to get into the United States.
Warren, however, is keeping pace.
On June 21, for example, she promised to end the use of company-run prisons for holdingmigrants. That goal has long been sought by pro-migration groups because it would force the border agencies to expand the catch-and-release policy. In turn, the expanded catch-and-release policy would allow the cartel-linked traffickers to quickly recoup the cost of smuggling migrants into the U.S. blue-collar labor market and so stimulate the labor trafficking business that is pressuring down Americansâ salaries.
On June 25, Warren escalated again, saying she prefers to decriminalize illegal migration by letting âmamas and babiesâ into the United States.
âWe should not be criminalizing mamas and babies trying to flee violence at home or trying to build a better future,â Warren told the Huffington Post. âWe must pass comprehensive immigration reform that is in line with our values, creates a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants including our DREAMers, and protects our borders.â
A June 19 statement by HHS described operations at the center:
Due to the crisis on the southern border, ORR is facing a dramatic spike in referrals of UAC. As of June 10, DHS has referred over 52,000 UAC to HHS this fiscal year (FY), an increase of over 60 percent from FY 2018. Preliminary information shows over 9,000 referrals in May- one of the highest monthly totals in the history of the program. If these numbers continue, this fiscal year HHS will care for the largest number of UAC in the programâs history. Based on the anticipated growth pattern in referrals of UAC from DHS to HHS, HHS is preparing for the need for high bed capacity to continue.
HHS has expanded bed capacity at the Homestead Temporary Shelter for UAC in Homestead, Florida to 2,470 based on need resulting from a current increase in UAC referrals from DHS. Family separations that resulted from the Zero Tolerance Policy that ended in 2018 are not driving the continuing operation of Homestead. In addition, no children at Homestead are there due to the Zero Tolerance Policy.
Since opening in March 2018 over 13,300 UAC have been placed at the site and more than 10,800 have been discharged to a suitable sponsor.

Immigration by the Numbers
Each year, roughly four million young Americans join the workforce after graduating from high school or university.
But the federal government then imports about 1.1 million legal immigrants and refreshes a resident population of roughly 1.5 million white-collar visa workers â including approximately one million H-1B workers â and approximately 500,000 blue-collar visa workers.
The government also prints out more than one million work permits for foreigners, tolerates about eight million illegal workers, and does not punish companies for employing the hundreds of thousands of illegal migrants who sneak across the border or overstay their legal visas each year.
This policy of inflating the labor supply boosts economic growth for investors because it ensures that employers do not have to compete for American workers by offering higher wages and better working conditions.
Flooding the market with cheap, foreign, white-collar graduates and blue-collar labor also shifts enormous wealth from young employees towards older investors, even as it also widens wealth gaps, reduces high-tech investment, increases state and local tax burdens, and hurts childrenâs schools and college educations. It also pushes Americans away from high-tech careers and sidelines millions of marginalized Americans, including many who are now struggling with fentanyl addictions. The labor policy also moves business investment and wealth from the Heartland to the coastal cities, explodes rents and housing costs, shrivels real estate values in the Midwest, and rewards investors for creating low-tech, labor-intensive workplaces.


By Shane Trejo
The latest mind-boggling trend in California cities plagued with crime is actually paying gang members not to commit violent crimes.
After a 3-2 vote at Thursdayâs city council meeting, the local government of Fresno is set to authorize city leaders such as Mayor Lee Brand and Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer to determine whether the Advance Peace program should be implemented.
If city officials determine that the program is viable, they could be budgeted up to $200,000 in taxpayer dollars to dole out to gang members as a supposed deterrent against committing shootings and other violent crimes. They hope to raise private funding as well to further pay off these thugs.
âI donât think we should be spending $200,000 or $300,000 over the next five years on a program that certainly has value, but we have a lot of needs in the city of Fresno, it always comes down to priorities,â said Councilmember Garry Bredefeld, who voted against the proposal.
This measure was proposed by Councilmember Miguel Arias, who believes that tax revenue from the increased âcannabis activityâ going on within the city following the legalization of marijuana would help pay for the costs of the program.
âIn essence, Advanced Peace identifies the most active shooters in Fresno and enrolls them into a prevention program to help them with mentorship and job placement,â Arias said.
Chief Dyer points to the Mayorâs Gang Prevention Initiative and Operation Ceasefire as initiatives that are already in place that make this program unnecessary.
âI am philosophically opposed to giving money to any gang member,â Dyer said.
Fresno would not be the first city in California to implement such a program. The city of Richmond is where the Advance Peace program debuted, and it has since spread to Sacramento and Stockton.
Richmond gives gang members who claim they have given up violence stipends ranging from $300 to $1,000 per month. Sacramento is pumping $1.5 million into their version of the program, with Advance Peace matching that total in privately raised capital.
There is no data showing these programs are effective in combating crime, but that hasnât stopped liberal cities throughout California from pushing them anyway. Fresno may be the latest city to initiate a program that very well may subsidize violent gang activity in their communities.

JUNE 25, 2019
The Fox News host went on the offensive once again over criticism of President Trumpâs decision to call off an attack on Iran at the last minute.
Indeed, Carlson has reportedly been privately advising Trump on the lunacy of getting the United States entangled in yet another Middle Eastern quagmire.
Tucker mocked mocked neo-con Washington Post columnist Hugh Hewitt for âaccusing the president of being a weakling for not launching a trillion dollar war over a broken robot.â
âIsnât it the same people who are pushing us to war in the Middle East, who are also telling us we have to accept the populations of the country in the Middle East coming to our country â howâs that work?â asked Carlson.
His guest agreed that this was âa very strange conceptâ before Tucker ended by saying, âItâs almost like theyâre trying to destroy our country.â

By Shane Trejo


Ocasio-Cortez is pushing a talking point that migrants who are overwhelming the border are being housed in concentration camps.
âThe United States is running concentration camps on our southern border and that is exactly what they are â they are concentration camps â and if that doesnât bother you,â Ocasio- Cortez said.
âI donât use those words lightly. I donât use those words to just throw bombs,â she added. âI use the word because thatâs what an administration that creates concentration camps is. A presidency that creates concentration camps is fascist and itâs very difficult to say that.â
This has offended pro-Jewish groups who feel that her comparison trivializes the tragic events of the Holocaust.
âThe United States Holocaust Memorial Museum unequivocally rejects efforts to create analogies between the Holocaust and other events, whether historical or contemporary,â the US Holocaust Memorial Museum said in a statement released on Monday.
âThat position has repeatedly and unambiguously been made clear in the Museumâs official statement on the matter â a statement that is reiterated and reaffirmed now,â it continued.
The incendiary remarks from Ocasio-Cortez and her radical socialist ilk in the Democratic Party are only dividing the country further and making the U.S. less safe, a glimpse into what the future of America will be unless the demographic shift is swiftly reversed.