USA: Seems Like The Civil War Will Start Before Trump Becomes President Again. Texas & Red States’ National Guards Vs Federal National Guard. I Stand By Texas & Red States

Biden is a traitor and Amy Coney Barrett is an idiotic Judge, Trump was never a good President but the Civil War seemingly will start sooner than he can get near the White House again, perhaps there won’t be any 2024 Election and the White House will be a relic of the past, a Museum, the last stance of Nikki Haley and her supporters to normalise American Politics with a normal Right-wing candidate is too late if not too little.

Biden wants to destroy the USA as English Speaking Nation as White Nation as “European Origin” Nation and says it as if it were normal, now two so called “Republican Judges” sided with his leftiwing paedophile Judges to force Texas and the Southern States to keep the border open, according to them Texas has no right to put a simple razor fence at the border with Mexico to keep the migrants out, they “have to” welcome the illegal immigrants in the USA because these ones are black and not English speaking, I don’t give a damn Biden is white Irish and English speaking so he does it “against himself” he cannot do it just the same, like those people in the DaVinci Code who self-whip, for me they can self-whip but they can’t whip me only because they whip also themselves. Biden is disgusting. Seems like Abbott is not intentioned. And now it’s useless to appeal at the Supreme Court now that even the Supreme Court has betrayed. Not only, the Supreme Court, they seem just pompous and useless like the White House. But what do they want? Yes Barrett wasn’t a great Judge but also Roberts wasn’t, let’s tell the truth, Barrett is just a White Catholic Female Quota, she’s a DEI quota and everybody knows it, she was never picked because the best, she was picked as a woman and a white catholic. And they told us. And quotas are quotas, they cannot do the job, not even when they’re Right-wing quotas…

I stand with Texas and the Red States because they are right. And because they are American and look American and sound American.

Texas

And I am not the only one to stand by Texas, by the English Speaking “White Suprematists” who refuse to self-whip because they’re white: Abbott sends the Texas National Guard to put more fences at the border and Biden sent the US National Guard and Federal Patrol Agents to take it down, now it’s a standoff but all Red States’s Governors are sending their own support to Texas too. Ok. Perhaps they’ll send their National Guards. So?

Remember also another detail in favour of Abbott: Texas Has No Federal Land, the razor fence is in Texan land, neither Mexican nor Federal. I would justify it the same, if it were Federal, not if it were Mexican. But this is it moreover.

SOURCE Fox News:

“The latest Supreme Court decision in Texas’ battle with the Biden White House has sparked a showdown over the Lone Star State’s constitutional authority to defend itself with the federal government seemingly getting in its way. 

On Monday, in a 5-4 decision on an emergency appeal, the Supreme Court ruled to temporarily overturn a lower court’s injunction that banned the federal government from cutting razor fencing Texas had installed along the border near Eagle Pass while litigation continues. 

Late Wednesday night, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott declared his constitutional authority to reserve the right of his state to self-defense against an invasion, adding that the executive branch had broken its constitutional pact with the states by failing to enforce federal immigration laws. 

Legal experts told Fox News Digital Texas is well within its constitutional rights and within the Supreme Court’s order to keep building the razor-wire fence even if the feds continue to cut it before an appeals court addresses the matter.

Gene Hamilton, vice president and general counsel at America First Legal and a former Justice Department official in the Trump administration, said Abbott’s continuation of installing the razor wire is “exactly the right move.”

 “Unless and until a federal judge comes in and says, ‘You may not, State of Texas, put razor wire up along the border anymore,’ Texas should keep doing exactly what it needs to do. And, eventually, this turns into a game of will between the feds and the State of Texas,” Hamilton said.

Hamilton noted that he believed the Supreme Court’s controversial order was wrong and gave too much weight to the government’s assertions about the wire’s effect on the federal government’s ability to enforce immigration laws.

He asserted that Texas was not interfering with the government’s enforcement of the laws by creating additional barriers along the border and contended that those barriers actually facilitate the federal government’s ability to deter and prohibit illegal crossings at the locations where they were present.

Texas Razor Wire Border

Texas National Guard soldiers install razor wire along the border in an effort to stop immigrants from illegally crossing into the country from Mexico. (Texas Governor Greg Abbott)

“The Supreme Court’s two-sentence order simply vacated the injunction preventing the federal government from tearing down the barbed wire fencing Texas has placed on state property while the case is on appeal,” Hans von Spakovsky, senior legal fellow at the Edwin Meese III Center for Legal and Judicial Studies told Fox News Digital. 

 “The Supreme Court’s order does not prevent Texas from continuing to place barbed wire or other barriers along the border on state or private property. But while the case is pending, there is nothing preventing the federal government from tearing down the wire fencing,” he said.

As to Abbott’s Article 1 assertions, von Spakovsky said that “whether or not what is happening is an ‘invasion’ within the meaning of the Constitution is a controversial and legally undetermined issue.”

Article 1, Section 10, which Abbott says was “triggered” by Biden’s inaction at the border, states, “No State shall, without the Consent of Congress, lay any Duty of Tonnage, keep Troops, or Ships of War in time of Peace, enter into any Agreement or Compact with another State, or with a foreign Power, or engage in War, unless actually invaded, or in such imminent Danger as will not admit of delay.” 

“It is truly shocking and outrageous that the Biden administration has so intentionally and deliberately mishandled the security of our Southern border that states like Texas, for the first time in our history, feel the need to invoke the invasion clause,” von Spakovsky said. 

Ultimately, he says, the matter will need to be decided by the Supreme Court. 

In 2012, the Supreme Court decided a case against Arizona brought by the federal government, which sued after Arizona empowered state officials to enforce immigration laws.

Arizona lost that case, but the late Justice Antonin Scalia dissented, writing that “as a sovereign, Arizona has the inherent power to exclude persons from its territory, subject only to those limitations expressed in the Constitution or constitutionally imposed by Congress. That power to exclude has long been recognized as inherent in sovereignty.”

 A U.S. Border Patrol agent watches more than 2,000 migrants at a field processing center Dec. 18, 2023, in Eagle Pass, Texas.  (John Moore/Getty Images)

William Lane, a partner at Wiley Rein LLP and former DOJ official, suggested to Fox News Digital the Supreme Court may eventually consider the Texas case on the merits or a number of other challenges between states and the executive branch percolating in the courts. If the court does choose to weigh in, it may be asked to reconsider Justice Scalia’s theory. 
 
“A decade ago, the Supreme Court rejected an attempt by Arizona to regulate immigration. Justice Scalia, dissenting, argued that states retain at least some inherent authority under the Constitution to control their borders,” said Lane.
 
“The court has changed significantly since then, and it’ll be interesting to see whether there’s any appetite to revisit that decision as states like Texas try to address illegal immigration on their own,” he said.
 
“It should be no surprise that Gov. Abbott has chosen to embrace Justice Scalia’s theory of state sovereignty in defending Texas’s actions.”

Josh Blackman, a professor at South Texas College of Law, emphasized that the high court’s ruling Monday, as an emergency docket decision, was “very narrow.” 

“I think what we are getting closer to is, unless the Supreme Court says what Texas can and can’t do, Texas will be pushing the boundaries,” Blackman said. 

The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals will hear the merits of Texas’ case over the Eagle Pass razor wire on Feb. 7.”

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