Riiight.. The fridge they are sending draws too many amps for the little island's solar/battery to sustain 24 hours. But.. I have lived in Colombia long enough to anticipate a fuck up and made a plan B. I've liberated a 12v peltier module from disgarded drinks chiller and rigged it to chill a thermos for the wife's drugs. I even found bits to make it temperature controllable. Little island becons.
You think you won something here but all you end up doing is looking like a dimwitted fool which is exactly how you have come off for months on here. You can pretend otherwise we can all see it for what it is.
This post is absolute crap. Your whole premise is that Trump is ok because he supposedly didn't "rape" a woman he merely sexual assaulted her to the extent that it's called "rape" in most senses. And that makes it ok that he illegally deported a man without any legal justification. Come on now this is your premise you stupid man just take the loss. Like Trump, you want to run on a legal technicality to somehow excuse his illegal behavior.
Can't let it happen...not even one time or it is instant apocalypse and every instantaneously internally combust. Oh, wait! Obama killed due process for illegals a long time ago. Thanks Obama! Obama Kilmar Abrego Garciaed 100,000s times. 75% of illegals deported didn't see a judge in 1995. https://www.aclu.org/news/immigrants-rights/speed-over-fairness-deportation-under-obama Yesterday the Migration Policy Institute ("MPI") released the report, The Deportation Dilemma: Reconciling Tough and Humane Enforcement, on the Obama administration's immigration enforcement record. One of MPI's principal findings is that the deportation system has dramatically changed over the past 19 years – moving from a judicial system prior to 1996, where the vast majority of people facing deportation had immigration court hearings, to a system today of nonjudicial removals, where 75 percent of people removed do not see a judge before being expelled from the U.S. The numbers are staggering: in 1995, 1,400 immigrants were subject to nonjudicial removals, representing 3 percent of total deportations. By FY 2012 that number had sharply increased to 313,000 nonjudicial removals – an all-time high.
More I'm at the main resort tonight so have WiFi. Imagine my disappointment to see your post. Everybody already knew about this all but it's a revelation to you....of course. The 1996 Republican bill introduced faster deportation methods like expedited removal, but it still required due process safeguards such as proof of recent entry, the opportunity to claim asylum, and oversight by DHS. It was also enforceable only at a port of entry, within 14 days of entry, and within a set distance from the border. Bush expanded the distance from border in places, Trump tried and failed to expand it to the whole country. Obama used it as it was the law. The Abrego García case bypasses even those minimal protections, invoking emergency powers to strip rights without a hearing, lawyer, or appeal and ignores standing judgements. This is not just fast-track, it is no track at all.