• ACLU tries to ban Border Patrol (CBP) from even talking to "brown skinn

    From Dark Brandon@21:1/5 to All on Fri May 2 09:20:56 2025
    XPost: alt.politics.immigration, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, misc.survivalism

    The ACLU is using the tactic that since not all brown skinned people are illegal aliens, it is racial profiling to stop and question any brown
    skinned people at all, giving illegal aliens perfect cover. It's similar
    to the tactic of guerrilla armies who blend in with the civilian
    population and, because they are indistinguishable from non-combatants,
    make it difficult to impossible to defeat them. This is the way the
    ACLU makes it nearly impossible to maintain the security and social
    cohesion of our nation and to keep out TdA and MS-13 terrorists. The
    ACLU is like an AIDS virus, destroying the defense mechanisms of our
    nation and thus enabling the replacement of the white demographic with
    invaders of color.

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/federal-judge-slams-border-patrol-for-stopping-anyone-with-brown-skin-in-crackdown/ar-AA1E1Nbi

    A federal judge in California issued a preliminary injunction against
    U.S Customs and Border Patrol on Tuesday, forbidding the agency from
    conducting warrantless immigration stops throughout a large area of the
    state.

    The ruling came in response to a lawsuit filed by the American Civil
    Liberties Union after El Centro Border Patrol conducted a three-day
    immigration sweep in Kern County in January, detaining day laborers,
    farm workers and others in a Home Depot parking lot, outside a
    convenience store and along a highway between orchards, LAist reported.

    The judge's ruling on Tuesday prevents Border Patrol agents from taking
    similar actions, including restricting them from stopping someone
    without having reasonable suspicion they have violated U.S. immigration
    law. It also forbids agents from carrying out warrantless arrests unless
    they have probable cause a suspect could escape before a warrant can be secured.

    “You just can’t walk up to people with brown skin and say, ‘Give me your papers,’” U.S. District Court Judge Jennifer L. Thurston said during a Monday hearing in Fresno that featured moments of heated exchange
    between government attorneys and the judge.

    The lawsuit from the ACLU was filed on behalf of the United Farm Workers
    union, on the grounds that the agency's actions violated unreasonable
    search and seizure protections under the Fourth Amendment. The judge has
    not ruled in the totality of the case but ruled to issue the preliminary injunction to prevent agents from carrying out similar actions while the
    case moves through the courts.

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