Sunday: Hili dialogue

February 15, 2026 • 6:45 am

Welcome to the Sabbath for non-Jewish cats: It’s Sunday, February 15, 2026, and National Hippo Day.  As you see from Wikipedia, there are two species:

The hippopotamus (Hippopotamus amphibius; /ˌhɪpəˈpɒtəməs/pl.hippopotamuses), often shortened to hippo (pl.hippos), further qualified as the common hippopotamusNile hippopotamus and river hippopotamus, is a large semiaquatic mammal native to sub-Saharan Africa. It is one of only two extant species in the family Hippopotamidae, the other being the pygmy hippopotamus (Choeropsis liberiensis or Hexaprotodon liberiensis). Its name comes from the Ancient Greek for “river horse” (ἱπποπόταμος).

Pygmy hippos are rare forest animals, hard to study and threatened by habitat loss. Here’s a short video:

Here’s a baby pygmy hippo from Thailand. It’s adorable!

It’s also National Clementine Day, National Gumdrop Day, National I Want Butterscotch Day, and Susan B. Anthony Day, celebrating the famous women’s rights activist born on this day in 1820.

Today’s Google Doodle features alpine skiing. Click on the screenshot to see where it goes:

Readers are welcome to mark notable events, births, or deaths on this day by consulting the February 15 Wikipedia page.

Da Nooz:

*Well, we have a partial government shutdown, as the Homeland Security funding bill didn’t pass, and the lazy gits in Congress are on vacation for a week. Ironically, ICE is fully funded for a long time to come (via the “Big Beautiful Bill”), so the shutdown won’t affect it.

Funding for the Department of Homeland Security lapsed early Saturday morning, beginning a shutdown that was not expected to bring most of the department’s work to a halt yet could disrupt travelers, immigration enforcement and disaster relief if it is prolonged.

Department officials have said that its essential missions and functions would continue. During last fall’s government shutdown, more than 90 percent of the department’s employees were required to keep working.

But department officials have warned that many employees would be working without pay, posing a financial strain as their bills come due. During previous shutdowns, for instance, the Transportation Security Administration saw a spike in resignations because they were required to report to work without being paid. Work force shortages caused some screening delays at airports in Houston during last fall’s record-long shutdown.

The shutdown is the result of a partisan divide in Congress over new guardrails on federal immigration enforcement. Democrats have pushed for a range of new restrictions on immigration agents, such as mandating that officers remove masks during enforcement operations and that they obtain warrants from judges to make arrests in homes. Many of their demands have met resistance from Republicans.

The shutdown will not affect the administration’s deportation campaign. Todd Lyons, the acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, told lawmakers on Thursday that immigration enforcement would mostly be unaffected, in large part because of the billions in funding Congress approved for the agency last summer as part of its major tax bill. Still, Mr. Lyons said that a shutdown would affect personnel issues, such as pay and retention.

. . .It is unclear how long the shutdown could last. Members of Congress left Washington for a weeklong recess on Thursday. Republican leaders in Congress have said that negotiations would continue, and that members should be ready to return to Washington if an agreement is reached.

The Department of Homeland Security is vast and includes many agencies, such as the T.S.A., Coast Guard, Federal Emergency Management Agency and Customs and Border Protection.

Remember, though, that this conflict is not so much about eliminating ICE as making them behave better. The Democrats want them to wear bodycams (good), masks (controversial), clear identification (good), as well as tightening the rules for getting warrants (good), and ending roving patrols (not so good). Much of that I agree with, but Republicans won’t budge an inch—nor will the Democrats.  The result is that ICE will keep on doing what it’s doing, and the Democrats will be blamed for shutting down important parts of the government. The other departments like TSA and FEMA will function for a while, but sickouts and retirements may hurt them if the shutdown lasts too long. I predict it wil lbe settled within ten days after Congress reconvenes.

*As always, I’ll steal a few items from Nellie Bowles’s news-and-snark column in The Free Press, called this week “TGIF:  MAGA-Coded“:

→ Quote of the year: “And I said, ‘I’m not scared of a germ. I used to snort cocaine off of toilet seats.’ ” —Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaking to podcaster Theo Von (of course).

If a better one comes along, I’ll eat my hat. But I’m calling it now. Quote of the year, and I love him for it.

 No need to find evidence: The war between Hamas and Israel was brutal. But Hamas and its supporters have been obsessed with arguing that it was not a war at all, but a genocide. Is there evidence? Well, it doesn’t matter. Al Jazeera has published a new story to explain why there might not be physical evidence: “Israel Used Weapons in Gaza That Made Thousands of Palestinians Evaporate.” Ah. Of course. Those Jewish space lasers that evaporate anyone they’re aimed at! Naturally.

Meanwhile, Gabrielle Sivia Weiniger, a journalist for The Times UK who focuses on the Middle East, apologized Monday night for posting an AI-generated image that showed Israel’s President Isaac Herzog posing for a picture with Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, and others. What a find, right? Oh, it was fake. “I mistakenly posted a photo of president Herzog, without checking the source and I am sorry for that,” she wrote. Journalists are officially falling for the dumbest AI slop, so long as it helps the narrative.

Here’s that fake photo. OY!!!

(From Jerusalem Post) An AI-generated picture faking President Isaac Herzog posing with convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell, and others, posted by a journalist for The Times on X/Twitter, February 9, 2026. (photo credit: SCREENSHOT/X/VIA SECTION 27A OF THE COPYRIGHT ACT)

→ Why are the yoga ladies so angry?!: Yoga moms held a protest at the Minneapolis studio they patronize over the fact that it took down an anti-ICE sign from the window (which they heard about via gossip). The video of the protest is incredible: “Give us answers, let’s go. . . let’s hear it—why are you being silent?” one woman says from behind the camera, as a crowd gathers around two young staffers. The crowd is lean, sinewy, with perfect yoga posture and expensive compression leggings. I can tell it’s a great studio. They are holding their rolled-up yoga mats, and they know how to use them. They don’t screw around in there; they are pulsing in five, six, seven, eight, and then they are making weeknight sheet pan dinners for their families afterward. Look at those back muscles. I would do whatever this crowd says.

I love this. I love all of these ladies and their righteous indignation as they scream at some woman who probably gets paid minimum wage to check them in and spray their mats with disinfectant. Is the yoga studio the biggest political enemy I would choose? No. But is this a nice activity for them? Absolutely yes. (Read our great story about this.)

Here’s a video:

→ Please pretend to be sorry: A Kentucky judge reduced the sentence of a 24-year-old man convicted of robbery, kidnapping, and sexual assault on account of America, in general, being racist. The best part, though, is that before cutting his prison time in half from what the jury recommended, she tried to prompt the guy into showing how sorry he is for what he did.

The judge: “If you come in here and you show the court—”

The convict: “I don’t have sympathy for you, the victim, the victim’s family.” Hmm.

She tries to coax him: “If you were to come in here, and instead of being hurt and angry, which is what this court hears, right? As a 20-year-old African American male that has been, you know, experienced this society, etc., and you would show that, yes, okay, this is the situation. This is who I am. I don’t want to be this person anymore. I don’t want to be in jail forever.”

The convict wasn’t having it: “That’s what y’all trying to make me say.”

Looks like someone forgot how to “yes, and.” I’m surprised his prison sentence wasn’t a three-week beginner course at Upright Citizens Brigade Improv. Make your scene partner look good! Don’t deny their reality!

No matter; his jail time was cut in half. Certainly he has learned from his mistakes.

*Russian dissident and human rights activist Alexei Navalny, you may recall, was poisoned in 2020, and fell deathly ill on a flight within Russia. Recovering in Germany after a long while, he vountarily decided to return to Russia to continue his work, whereupon he was arrested and sentenced to 2½ years in a labor camp. Soon thereafter, his sentence was extended to 19 years.  He fell ill and died in 2024, and his body was returned to his mother. Now, according to a recent toxological report, it was determined that Navalny was killed by toxin from a poison frog. Poisoned twice!

Russian dissident Alexei Navalny was almost certainly killed by a poison derived from a rare frog toxin in an Arctic prison colony two years ago, several European governments said Saturday.

A joint toxicological investigation concluded that Navalny, who died while serving a sentence on what his supporters and Western governments said were trumped-up charges, was most likely poisoned with epibatidine—a highly potent toxin derived from South American poison dart frogs. The substance doesn’t occur naturally in Russia.

“Navalny died in prison, meaning the Russian state had the means, motive and opportunity to administer this poison,” the governments of the U.K., France, Germany, Sweden and the Netherlands said in a joint statement.

The Kremlin didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Navalny, the most prominent domestic critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin, appeared in good health and high spirits in video footage recorded days before his death at the notoriously harsh penal colony known as “Polar Wolf.” Officials said the symptoms he reportedly experienced—paralysis, acute pain and respiratory failure—are consistent with epibatidine poisoning.

Biological samples from his body were obtained by Navalny’s family and associates and shared with authorities in the participating countries for independent analysis.

“Vladimir Putin is a murderer,” Navalny’s widow, Yulia Navalnaya, wrote on X. “He must be held accountable for all his crimes.”

Navalny had been held in solitary confinement after a trial widely condemned by Western governments and human rights groups as politically motivated. For more than a decade, he exposed alleged corruption and embezzlement among senior Russian officials.

He survived a previous poisoning attempt in 2020, when he was airlifted to Germany and treated in Berlin with the assistance of the German government. German authorities and the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons later confirmed that he had been poisoned with Novichok, a Soviet-era military nerve agent.

Putin has to go. Say what you will about America, we don’t—nor would we be so dumb as to poison anti-government prisoners. Nor do people go to jail for simply criticizing the government.  Poisoning Navalny TWICE is simply too much. Will we increase sanctions on Russia? Probably not this time.

*In his Weekly Dish column called “The President of the 0.000001 percent,” (subtitled “Time to end the new Gilded Age, the way we did the last one” , Andrew Sullivan ponders the possibility of eating the “Epstein class” of the rich and entitled. He’s not optimistic.

What’s going on now in Washington is on a wholly new scale — an open, shameless exercise by those in power to benefit personally and massively from the leverage that comes with public office. In the words of Ann Coulter: “This is the most corrupt presidency in U.S. history. I mean, it is so blatant it’s right in front of our eyes.”

Worse than the “Biden Crime Family?” Yes. Andy McCarthy notes that the total amount of dirty money accrued by the Bidens over the years was claimed to be around $27 million. And the GOP nearly launched an impeachment over it! But the Trump family? Start with $2.5 billion in bribes from the United Arab Emirates — funneled into a company called World Liberty Financial. Add a $400 million 747 airplane from Qatar, and we’re talking real money.

How did the Trumps pull this off? The incomprehensible bullshit called crypto currency (i.e. WLF) induces a coma in most voters; and the ethical conflicts are “resolved” by having the failsons of TrumpHoward Lutnick, and Steve Witkoff “run” the businesses while their dads direct government policy. Here’s nepo-baby Zach Witkoff at a crypto conference in Dubai last year announcing the deal with WLF, sitting next to the heir-spare Eric Trump:

We really need to take a page out of His Highness’s and the Emirates’ book. They are just an amazing example of how you can lead with innovation while also maintaining your family values.

Ah yes, those famous Trump family values: money, power, rape. And once the money landed in the Trump crypto accounts, of course, government policy changed. Trump gave the UAE rare and advanced AI chips, brought the UAE into the US Stargate AI project — along with an ownership slice of TikTok — and pardoned the sleazy billionaire felon, Changpeng Zhao, who had helped seal the deal with WLF. Not just corruption, but possibly at the expense of our national security, if those UAE chips make it to the CCP.

This is the real Epstein class: utterly amoral networkers and nepotists with no loyalties to anything but their absurd bank balances and party invitations. And this is their administration. From the dime-store Versailles that Trump is constructing on the rubble of the East Wing, to the Gaza wasteland where Jared Kushner is now preparing to cash in after the slaughter, this is a kleptocracy notable for its callousness as well as its insatiable money-lust.

. . . . This is a moment for a sane, non-fake populist on either the right or left to seize. You don’t need a gimmick like a 5 percent billionaire tax. But you can reverse Trump’s tax cuts for the rich to fund childcare and Obamacare subsidies; and you can lower prices instantly if you commit to repealing the tariffs. These seemingly “left” moves are actually conservative in a way, since they are designed to rescue capitalism from this statist, crony version, and to provide ballast for the middle class — the essential component for a liberal democracy to thrive.

And if the Dems win in November, we can also have hearings. Bring in the corrupt nepo-babies for a grilling; expose their privilege and ill-gotten gains; and make the case for an economy built on markets not access, excellence not parentage, and an economy built on middle-class values for middle-class protection.

We don’t have to resign ourselves to this level of corruption and inequality. We really don’t. If this new Gilded Age has any silver lining, it may be that it becomes a prompt for the very kind of reforms the old one did.

Well, it looks as if Sullivan has become a Democrat, at least in name. But he’s right about all this, and when Ann Coulter criticizes a sitting Republican President, you know they’ve lost America.  As for me, well, I’ve never understood crypto currency either, but it sure seems that the UAE has tried to bribe Trump, and succeeded, at least in terms of making him richer.

*Palmerston, the the Chief Mouser of the Foreign Office (and a nemesis of Larry the #10 Cat), has died in Bermuda. (h/t Pyers and Matthew).

Palmerston, a rescue cat who became the chief mouser of the Foreign Office, has died in Bermuda.

The cat, adopted from Battersea Dogs & Cats Home, retired in 2020 after four years of service in Whitehall.

In February 2025, a post on a popular social media account in Palmerston’s name said he had come out of retirement in order to start work “as feline relations consultant (semi-retired) to the new governor of Bermuda”.

Announcing his death, a post on Palmerston’s X account read: “Palmerston, Diplocat extraordinaire, passed away peacefully on 12 February. “Palmy” was a special member of the government house team in Bermuda, and a much-loved family member, it added.

On his retirement in 2020, a letter to Sir Simon McDonald, permanent under-secretary at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, read that the cat would like to spend more time “away from the limelight” after enjoying “working from home” during the coronavirus pandemic.

“I have found life away from the frontline relaxed, quieter, and easier,” the letter signed in Palmerston’s name read. “My 105,000 Twitter followers show that even those with four legs and fur have an important part to play in the UK’s global effort,” Palmerston’s letter said.

Poor Palmerston! He was only 11 or 12 years old—in the prime of cat life. But I doubt that Larry will miss him, as they didn’t really like each other:

But on Larry’s website (there were animated balloons yesterday for his 15th anniversary at Downing Street), the #10 cat has a generous tribute to Palmerston:

Meanwhile in Dobrzyn, Andrzej and Hili have a chinwag and a selfie:

Hili: I need to write a report on the condition of the world.
Andrzej: Many have had ambitions like that.
Hili: I would rather follow in the footsteps of Herodotus.

In Polish:

Hili: Muszę napisać raport o stanie świata.
Ja Wielu miało takie ambicje.
Hili:  Raczej pójdę śladami Herodota.

*******************

From America’s Cultural Decline Into Idiocy:

From CinEmma:

From Cat Memes:

From Masih:  Here is the English translation:

“This is Borujerd, and this is the moment when the security forces, after shooting a citizen with a pellet gun and causing him to fall to the ground, surrounded him like a pack of hyenas and brutally beat his wounded body.”

The person who sent the video says: “After the savage beating, they took this injured young man away with them, and I have no information about what happened to him afterward.”

These are documents of crime that the world must see and understand: with a regime like ISIS, there can be no negotiation — they must be eliminated.

They are absolutely brutal, kicking and beating a defenseless protestor.

Colin corrects a misconception:

From Williams Garcia. But see the one below that, from 2000:

From Malcolm; yawning or surprised?

One from my feed. I love it! Notice the elephants trumpeting when they stop the trucks (sound up). It’s a toll, Jake!

One I reposted from the Auschwitz Memorial:

This Polish Jewish girl, age 11, arrived with her mother at Auschwitz; both were gassed within hours of arrival.

Jerry Coyne (@evolutionistrue.bsky.social) 2026-02-15T11:05:50.689Z

Two from Professor Cobb.  First, Valentine’s Day for water snakes:

Celebrates Valentine’s Day with snakes mating? Why not? Snakes are awesome This was a pretty incredible thing to come across on a spring walk#herps 🌿 🧪

Get To Know Nature (@gettoknownature.bsky.social) 2026-02-14T16:33:41.726Z

This is really interesting: most common dreams by country. Funny: I’ve never dreamed of teeth falling out.

25 thoughts on “Sunday: Hili dialogue

  1. For the quote of the year I prefer Bondi’s “The Dow is over 50,000!” though taken together with Kennedy’s remark the words paint an accurate and ugly picture of American leaders today.

  2. I sometimes think Andrzej looks like Robert Trivers! (big fan of both of them).

    (sigh) I do understand crypto (in a general retired Wall St’er sense) and I agree with the late Charlie Munger who described it as “trading turds” and… from the other end, the (PRC) Bank of China who called it casino tokens.
    There’s really no “legitimate” use for it other than wild, almost random speculation.
    Except if you want to bribe a first family of course.

    D.A.
    NYC/CT

    1. Thanks David. This is the type of lucid expertise driven commentary that I appreciate from this site and its readers!

    2. Crypto allows one to bypass banks, who keep records. Crypto is heavily used by crooks and money launderers. Great for bribes, too.

    3. I am not a big fan of crypto (to say the least). However, that crypto does appear to fulfill a basic human want. That is a desire for a currency that governments can’t conjure up (fiat currencies) as need be. Gold used to fulfill this basic human want. For various reasons, crypto has replaced (too some extent) Gold in this realm.

  3. Nellie may love Junior Kennedy’s quote, but Louis Pasteur, Robert Koch and Joseph Lister are spinning in their graves.

    1. Yes, Mr. Hempenstein, like the 80 Samoan children who died of measles after his adventure in vaccines there. Before he got the big job!

      He is the most dangerous American citizen, a super empowered crank-crackpot.
      D.A.
      NYC/CT

  4. Am I surprised to see a picture showing Israeli President Isaac Herzog superimposed on pictures of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell? Of course not. Am I surprised that a journalist would think (or pretend) that it’s real? Of course not. This is the stuff they dream about.

  5. Never dreamed of teeth falling out?! That seems down-right unAmerican.
    (I have.)

    Elephants are smart, and I wonder what would happen if the driver didn’t stop. Maybe Asian elephants are different, but I saw some massive, aggressive elephants in Tanzania. I wouldn’t care to be between them and a sugar craving.

    1. I assume it has something to do with the Brits (and apparently their former empire) having stereotypically bad teeth. Maybe propaganda from national rivalries, like “Dutch Courage”, “the French pox”, etc. etc.

  6. The real issue (DHS, Yoga, etc.) isn’t masking, numbered badges, or deaths in Minnesota, The actual issue is immigration itself (really illegal immigration). Long before Trump/Minnesota one faction was calling illegals ‘undocumented’ and bluntly stating ‘no one is illegal’. Biden abandoned the border. Trump ran on a platform that included immigration enforcement. One measure of this is the existence of ‘sanctuary cities’ where the police (and others) are forbidden to work with Federal immigration authorities. Support for illegal immigration is very much a highly educated-upper class fetish (hence Yoga). Opposition to illegal immigration is very much a working-class concern. Historically, no less than Cesar Chavez was bitterly opposed to illegal immigration. The AI Overview should make the point.

    “Cesar Chavez, particularly in the 1960s and 1970s, strongly opposed undocumented immigration, viewing it as a tool for growers to break strikes and depress farmworker wages. He demanded strict immigration enforcement, calling on the government to act against the “green card” commuters used to undermine UFW labor organizing efforts.”.

    Going even further back we have Samuel Gompers. Quote

    “America must not be overwhelmed. Every effort to enact immigration legislation must expect to meet a number of hostile forces and, in particular, two hostile forces of considerable strength. One of these is composed of corporation employers who desire to employ physical strength (broad backs) at the lowest possible wage and who prefer a rapidly revolving labor supply at low wages to a regular supply of American wage earners at fair wages. The other is composed of racial groups in the United States who oppose all restrictive legislation because they want the doors left open for an influx of their countrymen regardless of the menace to the people of their adopted country.”
    (Letter to Congress, March 19, 1924)

    1. When it actually mattered that foreign workers not take opportunities away from domestic workers, there were strict border controls, visas etc. Now that jobs can simply be exported wholesale or made obsolete by automation, the whole concept was abandoned. It is not jobs governments are worried about but economic stagnation, because we set everything up to only work well when growth is happening – and population is dropping. Economic feedback mechanisms amplify this effect. Since Europeans are no longer emigrating, people from other continents are on the welcome mat now. It’s the business of ensuring the economy works, and the whole ideological thing that goes with it is secondary. When you see ideology going against the grain of public opinion, the driver is something more important.

      1. If your theory was even vaguely correct, we should expect the nations of Asia to be the leaders in immigration. The do have the lowest birth rates. They also have the strictest immigration laws and enforcement is tough. For example, there were 12,373 asylum applications in Japan. Japan approved just 190 of the applications.

        1. Having lived there before I came here I (still) watch Japanese immigration very closely. Amnesty (successful) is even rarer than you write.

          But they’re eff’d b/c at the current rate the very last Japanese citizen will be born 600 years hence. The 30 year decline in pop has effected the country greatly. It has been a daily topic of conversation there for 25+ years that I noticed, more and more on each trip there (used to be regularly).

          This new election is responsive to a Japan that isn’t happy about too many more gaijin (who unlike me, don’t speak Japanese and cause trouble). There’s a push back against Kurds, Turks and what they see as rapacious (P.R.) Chinese.
          D.A.
          NYC

          1. The problem here in North America and much of Europe, Japan, Korea and Australia, is that the economy is mature AND the population is dropping. I would rather see the economic system adjusted so that it can continue to prosper while in population decline, but I have no idea if it is even possible. It would mean a wholesale change to the incentive systems, basically dare I say, a revolution. And the problem with revolutions is their outcomes can’t be predicted. We simply have no way to find out how people would act under the new system.

    2. The actual issue is weaponizing DHS and ICE for political purposes, expanding Executive power, lucre for political allies (mass detention centers/camps), punishing blue states, blue communities and terrorizing those populations. 59% of arrests in red states occur in jails/courts, 70% of arrests in blue states occur in the community including the arrests of American citizens and immigrants following present immigration law and without a criminal history. This is mass federal policing and federal over-reach, pure and simple. It really has little to do with illegal immigration (a civil misdemeanor) or helping America’s working-class or going after the “worst of the worst”. Trump’s immigration policies are not creating jobs or helping the middle-class- the policies have actually created labor shortages, higher prices and loss of revenue. Minneapolis alone reports a loss of over $200 million. And Trump’s poll numbers on the issue are under water and sinking. Your 2 quotes are not germane to the conversation.

      If Trump or the GOP wanted to do something about immigration they would have passed the bipartisan border bill of 2024. But Trump said NO! because it was a “gift” (his word) to Biden’s reelection campaign. So the Republicans who helped create the bill and initially supported it wouldn’t let it pass- the GOP was spineless even when Trump wasn’t POTUS. Also, the myriad immigration problems of today could be alleviated humanely with the Billion$ this Administration has thrown at DHS and ICE. But solving any problem humanely isn’t a focus of the Trump regime.

      1. From roughly 1920 to roughly 1970, US immigration laws were enforced. Real median wages rose strongly and kept pace with productivity. Since roughly 1970, productivity has continued to increase. However, real median wages have risen only modestly. The Gini has gone up a lot. Is that a coincidence? Probably not.

        As for the 2024 Biden bill, it was yet another Amnesty. Amnesty has been tried (twice actually) and does not work. Biden made the border wide open, which was one of the reasons Harris (the “Border Czar”) lost.

        1. Yes, Frank. To add to that:
          Some time around ww1 they sort of shut the gates and there was 40 years of small trickle, curated by the Immigration/Nat Act 1952. A lot of our legal architecture (methods) comes from this.

          Then in 1965 a new act came in which opened the US to a lot of the (non-white if you will) world in large numbers, emphasis on Eurasia and Latin Am/Carib. Generally for the better I think.

          The first amnesty (?) was under Reagan for El Salvadorean refugees in the mid 80s.
          The numbers have been climbing (with attendant deportation) since the 90s and under Biden became monstrous numbers.

          Immigration fights are really about “dosage”. Few want a hermetically sealed border or open season – its the extent and the type of immigrant that matters.
          D.A.
          NYC
          (immigrant)

          1. The Hon Chauncey Depew (US Senator from New York) gave the dedication oration for the Statue of Liberty. He says this very near to the end:

            “The rays from this beacon, lighting this gateway to the continent, will welcome the poor and the persecuted with the hope and
            promise of homes and citizenship.

            It will teach them that there is room and brotherhood for all who will support our institutions and aid in our development; but that those who come to disturb our peace and dethrone our laws are aliens and enemies forever. “

      2. Hi Mark.
        If mere crossing the border illegally is just a civil misdemeanour (for a first offence at least), then deportation (a civil non-punitive remedy that demands a much lower standard of due process) of all those detected and apprehended seems to fit the bill perfectly. Minor offence –> minor remedy.

        For the really bad bad guys, more aggressive criminal prosecution should be pursued, sure. And then deport them when you’ve finished punishing them, no?

      3. The reason the deportations in blue “sanctuary” cities and states happen in the community is because the local police are not allowed to assist ICE in directing agents to the jails where the criminal illegals are being held, and so instead those illegals are released into the community where ICE must track them down. The situation you describe is a direct result of blue states and cities not cooperating with ICE agents, whereas in red states they do cooperate so these problems don’t exist there. More have been deported from Texas than from Minnesota but without all the fuss.

        As for the 2024 border bill, it would have allowed up to 2 million illegals entering the country per year, essentially maintaining Biden’s open border.

  7. Those Harvard curricula from 1949 are likely similar to what most schools offered then, though I understand that those from Hah-vahd are worth more because…reasons. That was an education and though I went to school 30 years later, the curricula was very similar

    I used to believe that going to university was worth it because even if you studied microbiology but wound up working as a realtor a (dear friend’s experience) you still got an education. Which is priceless. I went to university twice (long boring story) and got degrees and made a career out of them. But I also learned a good deal about literature, history, and religion. It was required. Not any course specifically, but we were required to have a distribution of scholastic experience. And I came from a very lower middle class family but was able to pay for school with a part time job.

    I look at Harvard’s course descriptions for 2020 and the only thing that comes to mind is “indoctrination camp”. A young person today winds up saddled with a lifetime of debt and a heavy dose of brainwashing. Seems to me, unless you are going to school for STEM or maybe pre-law, it just isn’t worth it anymore.

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