Wednesday, February 26, 2025

Along with Illegal Immigrants, Infectious Diseases are Crossing America’s Border


For the past four years, our national borders have been as porous as a sieve, allowing thousands of illegal aliens to cross into America every day. Few are screened for criminal backgrounds, useful skills, intentions toward America, or infectious diseases.

The criminal toll from invading gang members is significant, but not every border crosser is a thief, rapist, pedophile, or murderer.

However, everyone crossing the border could be a carrier of an infectious disease -- a walking petri dish of bacteria and other microorganisms that may cause far greater problems than the criminal aliens.

I am using the description “illegal alien” instead of the more woke terms of “migrant," “refugee," “visitor," “undocumented,” or “immigrant” as a hat tip to President Bill Clinton, who, in his 1995 State of the Union address, stated, “All Americans … are rightly disturbed by the large numbers of illegal aliens entering our country. The jobs they hold might otherwise be occupied by citizens or legal immigrants.”

He was spot on, so I honored him by using his words. I suspect most Democrats and their media stenographers will object to the term “alien” despite it being used by one of their party’s heroes.

Most corporate media portray illegal aliens as pure and innocent as the wind-driven snow, overlooking the significant public health implications.

Fortunately, Fox News has demonstrated the courage to report honestly about the infectious diseases crossing America’s borders (emphasis mine).

Open borders allow deadly narcotics and criminal gangs to invade our country. But there's a silent killer also making its way across the border: tuberculosis.

America's woke public health authorities are more concerned with equity -- redistributing health resources among racial groups -- than with keeping a disease the U.S. once nearly eradicated from becoming a threat again.

Reported cases of TB shot up 34% from 2020 to 2023, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and continue to rise. More than three quarters of the cases are foreign-born people who picked up the disease in their home countries or traveling through countries with high TB rates. The TB incidence rate is 60 times higher in Haiti than in the U.S.

This article highlights New York City as the leading destination for illegal aliens, where the incidence of TB is 2.5 times higher than the national average. Additionally, 89 percent of TB patients in NYC are foreign-born.

The Southern Medical Association states, “Illegal immigration may expose Americans to diseases that have been virtually eradicated but are highly contagious, as in the case of TB.” ProPublica reviewed ICE detention centers and found staff often break strict rules for testing contagious diseases.

According to the CDC, symptoms of TB include a persistent cough, weakness, fatigue, weight loss, and night sweats. Most everyone crossing the Mexican desert, hiding from authorities, and having limited food and water for weeks on end will have these symptoms. Who gets screened? Everyone or no one? The latter is likely the case based on the sheer volume of immigrants crossing during the Biden administration.

Because they are ignorant of good hygiene measures, children are great transmitters of infectious diseases. Just ask any parent with children in daycare or elementary school.

Once across the U.S. border, immigrant children are sent to New York City, California, Denver, and other cities and states. What a perfect way to disseminate an infectious disease, especially since the children will again be living in close quarters in makeshift detention centers, coughing and sneezing on each other.

So far, I have only been discussing standard TB, which is treatable with a variety of medications. What about “multi-drug-resistant TB” or, even worse, “extensively drug-resistant TB”? Both, according to the CDC, are significantly more challenging to treat.

The global prevalence of active or latent TB is 25 percent. The CDC reports, “The TB rate among non–U.S.-born persons was 15 times the rate among U.S.-born persons.” Furthermore, Latin American slums are “a breeding ground for disease,” with TB being just one example.

TB is just one of many diseases that can cross the border into the US. Other infectious diseases, such as scabies, MRSA staph infections, hepatitis, measles, and chicken pox, can also be introduced. Researchers at Boston Medical Center found that “Immigrants have ongoing links with populations in their countries of origin that may provide a channel through which infectious diseases potentially can be introduced to new areas.”

Scientific American warns of tropical diseases that are “endemic in warmer, wetter, and poorer areas of the world, often closer to the equator,” such as schistosomiasis, Chagas disease, dengue, and Chikungunya, making their way to the U.S. as “immigration may become a greater disease pipeline.”

Polio has been eradicated in much of the world but remains endemic in three countries: Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Nigeria. Additionally, polio has reemerged in Venezuela, as reported by CNN. Currently, 770,000 Venezuelan migrants are living in the U.S.

Standard legal immigration into the U.S. requires a medical examination, which includes a review of medical history, a physical examination, a chest X-ray, and blood tests for syphilis. Blood testing and chest X-rays are not required for children and teenagers. What about illegal immigration? It's like closing and locking your home windows while leaving the front door wide open.

Remember the scene from The Godfather Part II where young Vito Corleone arrived at Ellis Island with suspected smallpox? He was placed in quarantineuntil he was deemed healthy enough to enter New York City. Under previous policies, Vito would have been sent to various U.S. cities and enrolled in overcrowded public schools, coughing and spreading tuberculosis or smallpox to his entire classroom and their families.

Fortunately, a new sheriff and a posse of cabinet-level deputies are in town, many of whom understand infectious diseases and the necessity of protecting Americans from needless illness and death. While Tren de Aragua and criminal gang members make the news, don’t overlook the silent microscopic killers out there, which are just as dangerous, if not more so, to American citizens.



X22, And we Know, and more- Feb 26

 



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Dear Federal Workers, We Don't Care That Your Jobs Are Getting Put Through the Wood Chipper


It’s sad whenever someone loses their job, but that can't be said for federal workers. The Legacy Media's reaction to the slew of firings isn’t helping either, treating these people as if they’re the only ones to get terminated in the history of American employment. These former employees complain about childcare, the disruption to their lives regarding President Trump’s return to office order, and how their mental health was shattered when they were axed, courtesy of the work done by Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Sorry, but millions of Americans have been laid off before, and they have no time for adolescent tantrums from entitled, whiny, liberal federal workers.

I’ll quote American sports personality Stephen A. Smith all day on this stuff: “I’m here to tell you right now, we don’t care.” 

When the Keystone Pipeline was shut down by former President Joe Biden, around 16,000 people lost their jobs. I didn’t see CBS News racing to give them interviews. Last week, the network got smashed in the face for its laughable interview of two supposed USAID workers who were fired due to the DOGE cuts, only to learn they weren’t long-time employees per se—they were communications specialists, one of which was a speechwriter for Samantha Power, the former head of USAID. Professional left-wing political operatives got the axe? Why should I feel bad, especially since these people have immense disdain for anyone not like them?


Government employment was never meant to be a long-term deal. It was never meant to be protected the way it is now, so I’m overjoyed that everyone on probationary status, which number in the hundreds of thousands, is on the chopping block. Agencies are cutting the fat; thousands are being shown the door. The ending of the great suck of our tax dollars starts now, and we don’t want to hear the whining.

No one cares that government workers are scared. Many of these people have lived off the hog and have done nothing while millions had their livelihoods decimated by the COVID lockdowns. These people aren’t special and should be subjected to the same accountability measures we’re all subjected to. It’s not uncommon for businesses to ask their employees what they did this week.



Elon Musk’s email to federal workers to list their action items or be fired was met with derision and fury from a worker class that thinks they have a right to be lazy and not answer to anyone. Too bad. These aren’t Gestapo demands. Collecting this information is another area, as some agencies handle classified information. The FBI and most intelligence agencies have already said they’ll handle this review, but the message counts with President Trump’s people in place, especially at the FBI. It’s not going away.

The point is that tens of millions of Americans have already gone through the trauma and fallout of losing their job. It’s brutal. And yet, they never got a major outlet to highlight their plight. These are working families, too—not professional operatives or white-collar paper pushers. These people are in shambles, but everyone else shrugs and says, "Welcome to the party, pal."

"The great federal reckoning" is happening, and it has widespread support. Deal with it.



Government Flunkies Making Themselves Look Terrible


You might think that if you wanted to get the sympathy of the American people, you would start by not acting like total garbage. But government employees don’t seem to be able to do that. They’re whiny, annoying, and entitled, making them utterly unsympathetic. Actually, they’re worse than unsympathetic. They’re straight-up perverts. In just the last week, we found out that the people at the National Security Agency, a premier spy agency, spent their work hours online in bizarre sex chat rooms, talking about trans weirdness and stuff that I’m not even going to put down on paper. Others decided that they would fly upside-down flags off mountains in national parks, and others decided to put AI clips of Donald Trump licking Elon Musk’s toes on the cafeteria TV. You know, if you have time for this kind of antics, you probably don’t fulfill a critical function.

Well, we know that. Them? They have not got a clue.

Elon’s demand that everybody justify their existence with a five-bullet point explanation of what they did last week drove most of these folks around the bend. But those of us in the real world explain ourselves all the time. That’s not unusual. That’s very typical. In the real world, the person writing your check wants to know that you are providing value. But government flunkies don’t believe they should be accountable to normal Americans. They have the idea that their inflated pensions and deflated workloads are theirs by right, something they should get even though they’re terrible.

And they are terrible. Everybody’s had an awful experience with a government employee who fails to perform his, her, or their assigned task in anything like a competent manner. Normal Americans don’t see them as heroes sacrificing for the greater good. They see them as feckless flunkies mooching their way to retirement. Yet, the Democrats are going all in on them, supported by the regime media, of course. Everybody’s a hero. Everybody’s essential. Why, some park ranger dreamed of being a park ranger and now he can’t be a park ranger. Boo-hoo. Stop everything! He’s got to be a park ranger! But you know, there were a lot of oilfield workers who wanted to work on the Keystone pipeline, and that didn’t work out for them, but that was OK. That wasn’t a problem. That wasn’t an issue. No, the only people who matter are the soft-handed cubicle drones who don’t even work in a cubicle – they’ve been working at home for the last four years, and by working, I mean, shaming, scamming, and surfing the interwebs.

There was one particularly hilarious story about somebody who had to get up a couple of hours before work, make her way into work, work, and then go home twice a week. How the hell is anybody supposed to do that? Except all of us do or did that for our entire careers. Why are these people special? Well, they’re not. 

Normal Americans realize that they are not, but the Democrats and their immediate allies don’t seem to understand this. They’ve gotten into their heads that the way they’re going to preserve these jobs forever – because government workers are overwhelmingly Democrats, of course – is to tell us tales about how they are essential and absolutely necessary and doing great work and blah blah blah blah blah. But everybody knows that’s not true. Everyone knows that’s not remotely true. Everyone knows that’s not even on the same continent as true. Yet they’re doubling down on this.

That’s just the people fired for being unnecessary. The ones fired for being garbage, like the J6 prosecutors and such, are really upset. Why, they were American heroes prosecuting a bunch of people for the crime of taking selfies! They are absolutely unable to understand the perspective of normal Americans, but why should they? They’re not normal Americans. Normal Americans don’t get a free ride. Normal Americans have to produce. Normal Americans have to add value or they get shown in the door. Now that Elon Musk is doing the same thing to them as we’ve experienced forever, they’re freaking out. It’s puzzling why they think they’ll get the American people nodding along in support of this special class of do-nothing timeservers.

This is why I fully support their campaign. Democrats, feel free to take the side of the government flunkies against normal, hard-working Americans. You go right ahead and explain why we should come up with money to support their work-free lifestyle. Double down on it. Clarify the line between those of us who work for a living and those of us who are government employees. Let’s see how that works out for you. But with the polls showing that Donald Trump is at his highest approval numbers ever, I think we know how this is going to work out.



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Are Our Vaunted Aircraft Carriers Obsolete?


Ward Clark reporting for RedState 

The aircraft carrier has been the centerpiece of the United States Navy since World War 2. Before that war, battleships reigned supreme, and the U.S. Navy's emphasis was on heavy artillery and good shooting. The 1941-1945 Pacific theater changed all that, most notably at the Battle of Midway, when the opposing forces' ships never came within visual contact.

Now, our modern, nuclear-powered supercarriers roam the oceans, 11 of them currently, surrounded by the smaller ships of their task groups. Those smaller ships are the shield, providing missile and air defense as well as defense against submarines. The carrier is the sword, striking directly at the enemy.

Recently the BBC's South East Asia Correspondent, Jonathan Head, visited the USS Carl Vinson, a Nimitz-class carrier. He's worried that our super-carriers may be obsolete. Is he right?

Even after years of rapid advances in Chinese military capabilities, the United States is still unrivalled in its capacity to project force anywhere around the world with its fleet of 11 super-carriers.

But does a $13bn (£10bn) aircraft carrier which the latest Chinese missiles could sink in a matter of minutes make sense any more - particularly in the age of Donald Trump?

We had been invited onto the Carl Vinson to see another side of US carrier strategy, one which emphasises American friendliness, and willingness to work with allies – something you don't hear much in Washington these days.

That last statement doesn't hold water; the Trump administration has only been in place for a month. The United States military under President Trump will work just as well with these allies, France and Japan, as they ever have; this is a cheap shot. Shame, Mr. Head.

But he has some other perspectives that are more interesting.

The debate about the utility of aircraft carriers is not new. It goes right back to when they first appeared a century ago. Critics today argue that they are too vulnerable to the latest generation of Chinese ballistic and hypersonic missiles, forcing them to stay at a distance from the Chinese coast which would put their aircraft out of range. The money, they say, would be better spent on newer technology.

There is something archaic about these massive, welded hunks of steel, that seemed to have their heyday in the Pacific War of the 1940s. Yet in the vast expanse of the ocean, with few airfields, it has proved difficult to do without them. Supporters argue that, with their escorts of guided-missile destroyers, the super carriers can defend themselves quite well, and that they are still hard to sink. Downsize these carriers, to carry only helicopters or planes which can land and take off vertically as many countries have done, and you end up with vessels which are even more vulnerable.

The Chinese weapons may well be a concern, but every weapon has a counter. The United States is already looking at counters for hypersonic missiles, such as directed energy weapons. These weapons strike literally at the speed of light and may present a very effective counter to hypersonic cruise or ballistic missiles. We solve today's problems with tomorrow's technology, and these are certainly the weapons of tomorrow.

But in the meantime, our carriers are still worth operating as things are. China certainly thinks so.

It is worth noting that China too believes in the value of aircraft carriers; it has already built three. And as floating symbols of US prestige, they may appeal to President Trump, a man known for his love of flamboyant structures, whatever the economic arguments for and against them.

There are more super-carriers in the works. For the time being, these floating cities will still be America's primary seaborne weapon. And, once the American military gets past some of the staffing problems caused by former administrations using the military as a jobs program for the neurotic instead of as a cadre of warfighters, their value will be even greater.


Parting Shots: Biden Announces Names of Next 2 Nuclear Super-Carriers

US Navy Super-Carrier, Merchant Ship Collide in Mediterranean Sea


New weapons, yes, may present a danger to our carriers. But one doesn't go into a near-peer conflict thinking every single asset will come home; that's why there are wars. The other side doesn't just sit there in the water or on the land saying, "Kill me." They fight back; they try to sink our ships and degrade our assets in general just as we do to them. In a war with China, yes, they may very well be able to sink one or more of our carriers.

That's why we have more than one of them. The aircraft carrier is still one of the most versatile ways the United States has to project power. It can strike far inland, with the ships of a carrier's task group, the admiral in charge has weapons effective against three-dimensional threats, submarine, surface, and air. They are even useful in diplomacy, in cases where the art of diplomacy consists of saying "Nice doggie, nice doggie" until you can find a rock. Many a belligerent third-world tinhorn dictator has suddenly decided to cool his heels when a U.S. Navy carrier task group hoves into view of his shores.

These huge ships are expensive. They aren't invulnerable. But they allow us to project power in a way no other asset does. They aren't obsolete — yet — and they are still vital if we are to maintain the Pax Americana that has kept the world's sea lands safe since 1945.



Federal Judge Declares Constitution Unconstitutional

 Federal Judge Declares Constitution Unconstitutional

U.S.·Feb 26, 2025 · BabylonBee.com
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WASHINGTON, D.C. — A federal appellate judge delivered a heavy blow to the Trump administration today, issuing a stunning ruling that the Constitution of the United States is unconstitutional.

The ruling was issued by Judge Marsha Lanning of the D.C. Circuit, who stated that the founding document of the United States was in clear violation of the Constitution.

"Something being written in the Constitution does not magically make it constitutional," read Judge Lanning as she announced the decision. "All seven articles and twenty-seven amendments of the U.S. Constitution are hereby ruled unconstitutional. No elected official shall have any power mentioned in the Constitution. That's illegal."

The Trump administration attempted to argue that the Constitution is, in fact, what makes something constitutional, but to no avail. "I've heard enough," said Judge Lanning. "Your appeals to the law are felonious. There shall be no more arguing about what is or is not allowed by the Constitution. That sort of talk is unconstitutional."

At publishing time, Judge Lanning had issued a second ruling that voters duly electing a President was a violation of democracy.

https://babylonbee.com/news/federal-judge-declares-constitution-unconstitutional

Trump White House Adviser Explains the Major Shakeup in the Press Room

Matt Vespa reporting for Townhall 

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt announced what will likely cause heartburn among the legacy press: the total and complete dissolution of the White House’s ties to the Correspondents Association.

"For decades, a group of D.C.-based journalists—the White House Correspondents Association—has long dictated which journalists get to ask questions of the president of the United States in the most intimate spaces. Not anymore,” she said. 

Power is being returned to the people—an upset to the established order in the media is happening (via Politico): 

Press secretary Karoline Leavitt announced the changes in the briefing room on Tuesday, asserting that the White House Correspondents’ Association “should no longer have a monopoly” on organizing pools and that the White House would determine the makeup of the pool on a day-to-day basis. 

“All journalists, outlets and voices deserve a seat at this highly coveted table,” Leavitt said. 

This move is likely going to drive the media insane. Still, with their loss of power and influence, with more voters becoming dismissive of their biased and fake news daily—the Trump White House sees an opportunity to rip open that wound a little wider, and they should.

The Associated Press, which has been banned from Oval Office and Air Force One events, lost its first legal bout with the Trump White House this week, with a judge refusing to restore their access for the time being.

Axios quoted a White House advisor who explained this move, which came off the heels of the recent court ruling, was a FAFO moment for the AP and the rest of the press pool regarding how business was done:

The move comes in response to the lawsuit filed by the Associated Press — a traditional fixture in the Oval Office and on Air Force One — against Leavitt and other top officials after they banned AP from such areas. The correspondents' association filed a friend of the court brief in support of AP. 

The ban followed the AP's decision to continue referring to the Gulf of Mexico by its traditional name, rather than the Gulf of America, as Trump designated that body of water in an executive order. 

The White House said in a court filing Monday that news organizations' access to the president is not "a constitutional right." And since AP mentioned its role in the press pool 52 times in its initial 18-page lawsuit, the White House decided to take over the function of picking the outlets in it. 

"The AP and the White House Correspondents Association wanted to f--k around. Now it's finding out time," one White House adviser told Axios. 

Also, I don’t want to hear it from the media. Biden purged the press pool. The reaction to this move was predictable:

Via the White House Correspondents Association:

This move tears at the independence of a free press in the United States. It suggests the government will choose the journalists who cover the president.  In a free country, leaders must not be able to choose their own press corps. 

“For generations, the working journalists elected to lead the White House Correspondents’ Association board have consistently expanded the WHCA’s membership and its pool rotations to facilitate the inclusion of new and emerging outlets. 

“Since its founding in 1914, the WHCA has sought to ensure that the reporters, photographers, producers and technicians who actually do the work – 365 days of every year – decide amongst themselves how these rotations are operated, so as to ensure consistent professional standards and fairness in access on behalf of all readers, viewers and listeners. 

“To be clear, the White House did not give the WHCA board a heads up or have any discussions about today’s announcements. But the WHCA will never stop advocating for comprehensive access, full transparency and the right of the American public to read, listen to and watch reports from the White House, delivered without fear or favor.”

UPDATE: These people, man...