


A federal judge in Boston previously blocked the Trump administration’s plan to end a Biden-era program that granted humanitarian parole protection for more than 500,000 migrants from: Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela. Today the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 7-2 that President Trump can eliminate the program and potentially deport the migrants. [RULING HERE w/ KBJ Dissent]
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This is a good opportunity to remind everyone that installing Justice Ketanji Brown-Jackson was an Obama operation using Joe Biden. I wrote about the plan a full year before KBJ was nominated to the Supreme Court [GO DEEP] Everything was by design.
Ketanji Brown-Jackson was always going to be installed in the supreme court as part of the overall Obama team’s use of Joe Biden. Merrick Garland was removed from his position specifically to create the path for KBJ to travel. Everything about this was planned well in advance of Biden’s installation. KBJ is to the judicial branch what BHO was/is to the executive branch.
Merrick Garland was pulled from the DC judicial circuit to replace him with KBJ. Garland was never going to be the U.S. Attorney General in anything more than a title. Deputy AG Lisa Monaco was the person in control of Main Justice during Joe Biden’s tenure.
The political pendulum has never, in the history of humanity, stayed on one side of a swing. The back lash from overreach has always been proportionate to how far off center it went before coming back … and right now we’re staring at a whole hell of a lot of the country (about 80-90% of the land mass, as well as about 70% of the population) that is fed up. As people realize the operation around Joe Biden, more alarms will begin to resound.
The Supreme Court is compromised, not only by the operation that installed Justice Brown-Jackson, but also by the activity President Trump noted in his full wolverine message last night about the Federalist Society. Additionally, Chief Justice John Roberts is navigating a minefield of surfacing consequences from his previously political operation surrounding former SCOTUS Staffer Sheldon Snook and the leak of the Dobbs decision.
If we know Mary McCord’s husband Sheldon Snook leaked the Dobbs decision, it is only a matter of time before the reinvigorated FBI investigation into the Supreme Court leak discovers the source. What happens then?
When I travel to Washington DC, discuss ancillary investigative issues and then begin to outline these factual series of events, trust me – none of the people in positions of authority want to talk about it. They are scared; they don’t even want to know. It’s like they encounter a truth-carrying Ebola virus that scares the bejeebus out of them. [Yet in some ways, it’s cool; because truth carried as a weapon protects us from their backlash.]
I always depart the conversations with the same short message, “Think about it. If I know, then it’s only a matter of time.” There is never a reply, just a look that says they’re now thinking about stuff they don’t want to think about.
To say things in the judicial branch are precarious is an understatement.
WASHINGTON DC – […] The immigrants who entered through the programs will now lose their permits to work in the U.S. and are at risk of imminent deportation, although many are expected to apply for asylum or similar protections.
Two Democratic-appointed justices — Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson — dissented.
The majority’s decision to allow the administration to cancel the programs while legal challenges were still pending will “facilitate needless human suffering” and will unleash “devastation” on the affected immigrants, Jackson wrote in an eight-page dissent joined by Sotomayor.
In March, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem revoked the legal status of immigrants in the so-called CHNV parole programs and gave participants 30 days to leave the U.S. However, a federal judge in Boston blocked Noem’s move the following month, concluding that “en masse” termination of the groups’ immigration status was likely illegal and that officials could end individuals’ parole grants early only on a case-by-case basis.
The high court granted the administration’s emergency appeal seeking to lift that block while litigation continues.
While about 500,000 Cuban, Haitian, Nicaraguan and Venezuelan immigrants are directly affected by the ruling, it may have consequences for about 500,000 others allowed into the U.S. under the same parole provision, including Ukrainians, Afghans and children from Central America. (read more)