Message from @retiredDep
Discord ID: 460243777194557470
He's a smarmy little dick(David S)
The U.S. Navy is preparing to house as many as 25,000 migrants at remote Navy facilities in California, Arizona, and Alabama, according to a U.S. official with knowledge of an internal Navy document.
The document, prepared for Navy Secretary Richard Spencer by an assistant secretary, appears to have been written in anticipation of the Trump administration requesting the Department of Defense house migrants at U.S. military facilities.
The existence of the memo, which ABC has not seen, was first reported by TIME Magazine.
Earlier this week, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) requested that Pentagon be prepared to house up to 20,000 unaccompanied migrant children at U.S. military bases, but it is unclear if the facilities identified by the Navy in the internal memo would meet HHS needs.
The document said the Navy could spend $233 million to construct and operate a facility that could house 25,000 migrants for up to six months. The facilities, which could be constructed as tent cities, are described in the memo as "temporary and austere," the official confirmed.
Although the Navy is preparing to house 25,000 migrants, some of the facilities identified in the document could house up to 47,000. Facilities at former Naval Weapons Station Concord, near San Francisco, and the Marine Corps' Camp Pendleton in Southern California could each house up to 47,000 migrants.
Twenty-five thousand migrants could be located at Navy Outlying Field Wolf in Orange Beach, Alabama and nearby Navy Outlying Field Silverhill. An unknown number of migrants could be held at the Marine Corps Air Station near Yuma, Arizona.
It would be inappropriate to discuss internal deliberative planning documents," Navy spokesperson Capt. Greg Hicks told ABC News.
Department of Defense spokesperson Lt. Col. Jamie Davis said DoD was "conducting prudent planning" and looking at its installations should the Department of Homeland Security "ask for assistance in housing adult illegal immigrants."
There has not been a request to the Defense Department to house adult migrants, only up to 20,000 unaccompanied migrant children.
Last month, ABC News reported that HHS officials were touring four U.S. military bases to see if they could be used to house migrants in the event that other facilities reached capacity. Those bases did not include any Naval facilities, but Air Force bases in Texas and Arkansas, as well as the Army's Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas.
While officials have completed their tours of those installations, no final determination has been made as to whether any of those four bases would house migrants.
HHS has used U.S. military facilities to house migrants in the past.
In 2014, the department used bases in Texas, Oklahoma, and California to house 7,000 unaccompanied migrant children after HHS facilities reached capacity.
I know nothing about Defango
or Jason Goodman, so I have nothing to say.. Seaman was strong on pizzagate but yeah say "No" to Q now
Seems like lots of followership's happened in the movement in the past
When Q crowned 24/7 by handing the keys over to the account for a moment, and Pam handed them back, that was... this is the place.
The others don't have that.
They want the mic but cannot control it.
The People have it now.
😉
I believe YT has been forbidden from taking down the 24/7 YT channel
LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- For many who live in the dark corners of Los Angeles, sleeping in tents is a daily reality.
But earlier this week, Mayor Eric Garcetti told the L.A. Times that the city may start arresting people for spending the night on the sidewalk.
Many people living on one Hollywood street, including Vicki Dollar, are questioning the news.
"What are they going to do with us?" Dollar asked. "We ain't cattle. And even if we were, what pasture are we going to be in? I mean, where are we going to go?"
Eleven years ago, city leaders banned overnight sidewalk sleeping but reversed course when faced with pushback from advocates. According to the L.A. Times, Garcetti intends to enforce the law again now that the city has enough new housing to meet settlement requirements.
"They can't do that," homeless man Khayree Weaver said, "because there's going to be another riot."
The Rev. Andy Bales, CEO of the Union Rescue Mission, is alarmed by the mayor's suggestion.
"If we clear the tents now, I'm not sure where the people will go," Bales said. "I have no idea. Deeper into the wilderness? Deeper into the woods where they won't have services? Deeper into alleys and neighborhoods, peoples yards?"
According to Bales and contrary to the L.A. Times report, there are approximately 53,000 homeless people in L.A. but only around 13,000 beds across all the shelters.
"The mayor did tell the Times the city would only enforce the law if there was a place for the homeless to go, and would help those people relocate," Bales said. "But here on the street, there's not much faith in that plan."
Perhaps, @Deleted User
Doesn't stop all the technical difficulties, though.
s'truth
early days
freudian slip
we're going to look back on this with fondness... when things were shoestrings and faithful contributions
Good morning....afternoon...evening where ever you may be, having a awesome day?
Has anyone watched "Wormwood"?
Yes awesome
Good day @Kiwi61Karma
How about the youtube interviews of Kay Griggs...really shocking stuff
NORWALK, OH (AP) — Two of the largest workplace immigration raids yet under the Trump administration, carried out just weeks apart in Ohio, have upended the lives of hundreds of children caught in the middle.
Unlike the migrant children removed from their families at the U.S.-Mexico border, many of these young people were born in the U.S. and are therefore citizens, and most haven't been separated from their families entirely. What they face, though, is a future that is just as uncertain as they wait to find out whether their mothers and fathers will be deported.
Some families will be forced to decide whether to keep themselves together by moving everyone back to their home country, in most cases Mexico or Guatemala, or face being split apart if one parent stays with the children or parents let relatives or friends keep them.
"What's happening on the southern border is happening on the northern border in a different way," said Veronica Dahlberg, leader of Hola, a Hispanic advocacy group in Ohio. "But these children are going to suffer for many years from the trauma, the uncertainty, the fear."
While children at the border were held separately from their parents in what some called cage-like atmospheres, churches and social service agencies made sure most of the kids in Ohio reconnected with relatives or stayed with caretakers. In some cases, parents in the Ohio raids were released with electronic tethers because there was no one else available.
It's likely that hundreds of children are affected by the large raids in Ohio. The first resulted in the arrest of 114 workers at a gardening and landscaping company on June 5. Aid organizations, using information gathered from those detainees, estimate those parents collectively have 200 children.
There's no tally yet on how many children were affected by raids Tuesday at four meatpacking plants. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials said 146 workers were arrested in the raids this week because they are in the country illegally and believed to have used fake identities to get their jobs.
In the hours after Tuesday's raid began, churches and social service agencies in Salem, where most of the workers were detained, arranged for their children to be picked up from their homes and babysitters.
Volunteers entertained about 50 youngsters of all ages with games and fed them pasta. Those who were with the children said the youngest ones played happily while their older brothers and sisters cried with looks of shock, not knowing when they would see their parents again or where they would go.
Most were picked up that night by a parent or relative who wasn't arrested, but a few went home with other families, said Sister Rene Weeks, director of Hispanic ministry at St. Paul Catholic Church.
One schoolteacher took home five children, who were reunited with their parents the next day after some were released with electronic ankle monitors by immigration authorities because there was no one else to care for their children.
About 60 of the workers were released based on health or family considerations under a longstanding policy that gives ICE discretion to release detainees because of humanitarian concerns, said Khaalid Walls, an agency spokesman.
While President Donald Trump has come under fire for a policy that has separated more than 2,300 children from their parents at the Mexico border, these large-scale workplace raids have been going on since President Bill Clinton was in office, and arrests increased dramatically during his second term.