These judges need to be very afraid of keeping this up. Messages need to be sent.
Dear Federal Judges:
— 🇺🇸 Mike Davis 🇺🇸 (@mrddmia) June 5, 2025
We The People are the sovereign.
The cornerstone of sovereignty is control of our border.
We lend the federal government limited, specific, enumerated, and divided powers.
Congress may create due-process rights for the expulsion of illegal aliens, if it…
Quote:
Dear Federal Judges:
We The People are the sovereign.
The cornerstone of sovereignty is control of our border.
We lend the federal government limited, specific, enumerated, and divided powers.
Congress may create due-process rights for the expulsion of illegal aliens, if it chooses.
But we never gave you that power.
Not at our founding.
Not after the Civil War.
Not in any subsequent Congress.
Certainly not after the last election.
You allowed Biden to illegally mass-import over 10,000,000 illegal aliens, including terrorists.
Now you're illegally stopping Trump from expelling the worst terrorists and their enablers.
You are violating one of our most important sovereign rights.
You are destroying your legitimacy with a large swath of Americans.
Why don't you get on that and see how it goesChampion of Fireball said:
These judges need to be very afraid of keeping this up. Messages need to be sent.
this is not a nationwide injunction, so even when SCOTUS does make this decision, it won't affect these types of situations where a class certified gets an injunction.MouthBQ98 said:
The executive branch should ignore ALL nationwide district court injunctions until SCOTUS decisively establishes that they are even lawful. They were not a thing at all until the 1960's. For the first 180 years of the nations history, that power was not recognized and it is absolutely not established by the constitution explicitly.
Absolute ****ing insanity.Quote:
"In short, the Government must facilitate the Class's ability to seek habeas relief to contest their removal under the Act
There is that word again! "Facilitate."Quote:
the Government must facilitate the Class's ability
So if they cross the river and then ask for an attorney, they should be free to go and we should pay for their attorney and incarceration before deporting them?Loquacious Lunchbox said:
Why is it unamerican to say people who are subjected to incarceration by our government must have some means to contest whether that ongoing incarceration is in fact legal?
Why is it so hard for folks to understand that we have laws and violation of those laws comes with consequences? Also, why is it so hard for the bleeding hearts to come to the reality that those of us that pay the bills are fcking tired of illegals suckling off of the American taxpayer teat and that if you are here illegally, the government can summarily tell you to GTFO without cause because YOU HAVE NO RIGHT TO BE HERE.Loquacious Lunchbox said:
Why is it unamerican to say people who are subjected to incarceration by our government must have some means to contest whether that ongoing incarceration is in fact legal?
it was unamerican to open the border intentionally and subject American citizens to dangerous risks from gangs, cartels, terrorists, and criminals- drug and human trafficking, etc. ..to put on the tax payer, who funds the government, the onus of transporting, sheltering, and feeding them by the millions, as well as the burden of public/tax funded services like roads, first responders, peace officers, hospitals, schools, etc. ...all of that was unamerican. Removing illegal aliens from America and asking them to try again legally without phony asylum claims or sneaking in is not unamerican.Loquacious Lunchbox said:
Why is it unamerican to say people who are subjected to incarceration by our government must have some means to contest whether that ongoing incarceration is in fact legal?
The better analogy would be if some people broke into my house and they were facing jail time for breaking and entering or burglary or criminal trespass or whatever. I would fully expect there to be an opportunity for them to contest their guilt, claim they had a valid reason to be there, etc before they could be sentenced to imprisonment. And they would have the right to bring a habeas petition if they claimed they were being held illegally.schmellba99 said:
Loquacious Lunchbox said:
"No person shall be… deprived of… liberty… without due process of law." To imprison people in a Salvadoran gulag without due process of law is unconstitutional, period. It really doesn't matter that it's inconvenient. It's supposed to be inconvenient to incarcerate people. Not citizens, people.
He had due process, and what due process looks like for each person is different based on if they are an ILLEGAL or not.Loquacious Lunchbox said:
"No person shall be… deprived of… liberty… without due process of law." To imprison people in a Salvadoran gulag without due process of law is unconstitutional, period. It really doesn't matter that it's inconvenient. It's supposed to be inconvenient to incarcerate people. Not citizens, people.
You are an idiot sir!Loquacious Lunchbox said:
The better analogy would be if some people broke into my house and they were facing jail time for breaking and entering or burglary or criminal trespass or whatever. I would fully expect there to be an opportunity for them to contest their guilt, claim they had a valid reason to be there, etc before they could be sentenced to imprisonment. And they would have the right to bring a habeas petition if they claimed they were being held illegally.
It's irrelevant that I'm mad at them for being in my house without permission. It's irrelevant that I didn't get some form of judicial process from them before they committed a crime against my property.
BadMoonRisin said:
How much brain damage do you have to defend wife beating, human trafficking, gang banging illegal aliens?
Loquacious Lunchbox said:
Why is it unamerican to say people who are subjected to incarceration by our government must have some means to contest whether that ongoing incarceration is in fact legal?
You know something very close to this scenario is already happening in certain states. Squatters move into an empty house and the owner of said house can't get them out without a long legal process.schmellba99 said:Why is it so hard for folks to understand that we have laws and violation of those laws comes with consequences? Also, why is it so hard for the bleeding hearts to come to the reality that those of us that pay the bills are fcking tired of illegals suckling off of the American taxpayer teat and that if you are here illegally, the government can summarily tell you to GTFO without cause because YOU HAVE NO RIGHT TO BE HERE.Loquacious Lunchbox said:
Why is it unamerican to say people who are subjected to incarceration by our government must have some means to contest whether that ongoing incarceration is in fact legal?
I bet an untold amount of money if you came home and somebody you didn't know was camped up in your living room you'd want them out of your house, no questions asked. And you'd throw a gatdamned fit if when the cops showed up they said "sorry, we are going to have to go through a long and lengthy legal process because they are contesting that you have the right to tell them to leave your house, so just deal with it".
You'd throw a bigger fit if the cops showed up and escorted the intruders out of your house but some judge somewhere decided to overturn that decision and allow them back in your house against your will simply because they don't like your politics, the cops, where you live, etc.
Or would you just shrug your shoulders and say "okay, guess these people that I don't know who broke into my house illegally and decided to camp out will stay here on my dime until somebody somewhere decides that they need to leave, if they ever make that decision"?
They are not bleeding hearts. They are marxists.schmellba99 said:Why is it so hard for folks to understand that we have laws and violation of those laws comes with consequences? Also, why is it so hard for the bleeding hearts to come to the realityLoquacious Lunchbox said:
Why is it unamerican to say people who are subjected to incarceration by our government must have some means to contest whether that ongoing incarceration is in fact legal?
Over the price/taxes on tea. I saw a meme this week that 'we should tar and feather just one congressman/woman, and see what happens.' About right.schmellba99 said:
Loquacious Lunchbox said:
Why is it unamerican to say people who are subjected to incarceration by our government must have some means to contest whether that ongoing incarceration is in fact legal?
2/ Full brief: https://t.co/gu6SCFApbh
— Margot Cleveland (@ProfMJCleveland) June 10, 2025
BREAKING: DOJ has filed a misconduct complaint against activist Judge James Boasberg for making improper public comments about President Trump
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) July 29, 2025
"These comments have undermined the integrity of the judiciary, and we will not stand for that." - AG Pam Bondi pic.twitter.com/jw3VeqKtQq
rocky the dog said:
Rattler12 said:You know something very close to this scenario is already happening in certain states. Squatters move into an empty house and the owner of said house can't get them out without a long legal process.schmellba99 said:Why is it so hard for folks to understand that we have laws and violation of those laws comes with consequences? Also, why is it so hard for the bleeding hearts to come to the reality that those of us that pay the bills are fcking tired of illegals suckling off of the American taxpayer teat and that if you are here illegally, the government can summarily tell you to GTFO without cause because YOU HAVE NO RIGHT TO BE HERE.Loquacious Lunchbox said:
Why is it unamerican to say people who are subjected to incarceration by our government must have some means to contest whether that ongoing incarceration is in fact legal?
I bet an untold amount of money if you came home and somebody you didn't know was camped up in your living room you'd want them out of your house, no questions asked. And you'd throw a gatdamned fit if when the cops showed up they said "sorry, we are going to have to go through a long and lengthy legal process because they are contesting that you have the right to tell them to leave your house, so just deal with it".
You'd throw a bigger fit if the cops showed up and escorted the intruders out of your house but some judge somewhere decided to overturn that decision and allow them back in your house against your will simply because they don't like your politics, the cops, where you live, etc.
Or would you just shrug your shoulders and say "okay, guess these people that I don't know who broke into my house illegally and decided to camp out will stay here on my dime until somebody somewhere decides that they need to leave, if they ever make that decision"?
misterguinness said:
He's a public servant, so I'll just leave this here: Boasberg_Chambers@dcd.uscourts.gov.
chiphijason said:
Do NOT email judges. The US Marshalls take any type of derogatory email seriously and you will end up on a list at best and probably get an unfriendly visit from some feds.misterguinness said:
He's a public servant, so I'll just leave this here: Boasberg_Chambers@dcd.uscourts.gov.