Mass Shooting & Gun Violence | War related attacks in MI Temple & at ODU

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“…
CBS News reports that Jalloh was walking around Constant Hall and asked if he arrived at an ROTC class, a law enforcement source told CBS News. When someone responded that it was, the shooter opened fire, fatally injuring the class instructor, who was a retired Army officer.

FBI Director Kash Patel would later confirm on social media that Jalloh was subdued by "a group of brave students."…”
 


He was a veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom, Operation Enduring Freedom, and Atlantic Resolve.His awards included two Bronze Stars, Senior Army Aviator Badge, Combat Action Badge, Parachutist Badge, Air Assault Badge, Defense Meritorious Service Medal, Meritorious Service Medal, Air Medal with Valor, Joint Service Commendation Medal, Army Commendation Medal, and the Joint Service Achievement Medal.
 
Austin shooter: naturalized citizen

ODU: Naturalized citizen

NYC teen bombers: children of naturalized citizens

Michigan synagogue attack: naturalized citizen.

We may need to revisit and reconsider our immigration screening process.
 
Austin shooter: naturalized citizen

ODU: Naturalized citizen

NYC teen bombers: children of naturalized citizens

Michigan synagogue attack: naturalized citizen.

We may need to revisit and reconsider our immigration screening process.
I thought Trump was going to get rid of all the violent illegals. Instead ICE is too busy harassing anyone with brown skin, killing Americans and arresting and deporting people with no criminal record.
 
Decades of bad policy.
Agree.


The team negotiated for four months to produce this bill. It took less than four days for its support among Republicans to collapse. Why?

The easiest explanation is that Republicans in both the House and Senate yielded to objections from their all-but-certain presidential nominee, former president Donald Trump. Once the House Speaker stated publicly that he would not allow the Senate bill to reach the House floor for a vote, Republican senators were unwilling to run the political risk of supporting a measure that would not become law.

However, there are deeper reasons for the deadlock over immigration. The last comprehensive immigration reform was enacted almost four decades ago, during Ronald Reagan’s presidency. This bill represented a grand bargain between elected officials who sought to extend legal protection to millions of migrants who had entered the U.S. illegally and officials who were most concerned about stemming the flow of such migrants. The bill accomplished the former but had no discernible impact on the latter, leading many conservatives to denounce it as an “amnesty” bill.

This history colored the next two decades of efforts to pass immigration reform legislation. In President George W. Bush’s second term, two such efforts failed after encountering a crossfire of objections from both the left and the right. The best chance to enact comprehensive reform came in 2013 during President Barack Obama’s second term, when a bipartisan group of senators dubbed the “Gang of Eight” agreed on a bill that would toughen security at the southern border and make it harder for employers to hire migrants who had entered the U.S. illegally while providing legal status and a path to citizenship for millions of such migrants who had resided in the U.S. for many years. The proposal passed the Senate 68 to 32 with strong bipartisan support. But because it did not enjoy the support of a majority of House Republicans, then-Speaker John Boehner refused to bring it to floor for a vote, and the measure died.
 
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