America’s Grievances Against Its “King” on Constitution Day 2025
Georgia’s Historic Worksite Raid Underscores the Chaos Fueled by Trump’s Immigration Agenda
Published: September 5, 2025
Other reports from American Immigration Council
- Blog
- Publication Date: September 9, 2025
How the Supreme Court’s Latest Decision Clears the Way for Racial Profiling During Immigration Raids
This week the U.S. Supreme Court issued a decision that clears the way for racial profiling during immigration raids and sweeps. Now we could see the Trump administration rapidly expand the racially discriminatory ICE practices we
Strength In Numbers
"America’s Reichstag fire"
Political violence remains rare, but leaders can help prevent tragedy by condemning hate and defending democratic values
Political violence is an avoidable tragedy that tears nations apart.
The assassination of right-wing activist Charlie Kirk this Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2025, is the latest in a devastating pattern of attacks that rips at the very fabric of American civic life and the Constitution. The recent escalation is stark. Select events from just this year include: the stalking and assassination of Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband in June, the bombing of a Palm Springs fertility clinic in May, and the attempted murder by arson of Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro and his family in April.
This recent violence builds on years of noteworthy attacks, including multiple assassination attempts against Donald Trump in 2024, the assault of Paul Pelosi and attempted kidnapping of Nancy Pelosi in 2022, and, of course, the events of Jan. 6, 2021, that injured 174 police officers and led to five officer deaths.
To state the obvious: This is not how political disagreements are settled in a functioning democracy.
Patel says he doesn't regret social media post about Charlie Kirk case that turned out to be wrong
/ CBS News
Officials claim FBI director said he had been instructed by White House to fire any agent who worked on an investigation of Trump
Fox News’ Brian Kilmeade says comment about killing mentally ill homeless people an ‘extremely callous remark’
This article has f-bombs.
Trump Begging South Korea To Forget THAT ONE TIME He Imprisoned All Their Workers
The balls on that guy.
https://www.americanimmigrationcouncil.org/
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.