The recent immigration control operation by the State of Texas has been a major success.
Crossings in the Eagle Pass region have declined from some 2,400 illegal aliens a day to just 750.
Additionally, most of those illegals that do make it across are arrested by the Texas Department of Public Saftey, and many are subsequently pushed back over the border into Mexico.
A panel of Federal judges also ruled that Texas is allowed to keep its floating razor-wire border barriers in the Rio Grande river, thereby securing even more lengths of the US border.
Texas could and should expand the Eagler Pass operation to as much of the border as it can. Unlike in California, Arizona or New Mexico, the border in Texas is owned privately, or by agencies of the State, not the Federal government.
Other states should, can and must join in, supplying Texas with resources and manpower to secure as much of the border as possible.
You can read more about how states can take the lead on fighting the Great Replacement here on our Substack.
IN 2006, RESEARCHER CLEVE BACKSTER — THE MAN WHO INVENTED THE CIA'S LIE DETECTOR PROTOCOLS — PUBLISHED 36 YEARS OF EXPERIMENTS PROVING THAT PLANTS, BACTERIA, AND HUMAN CELLS IN PETRI DISHES RESPOND INSTANTANEOUSLY TO HUMAN THOUGHT AND EMOTION — EVEN AT DISTANCES OF HUNDREDS OF MILES. THE SIGNAL IS FASTER THAN LIGHT. IT DOES NOT DIMINISH WITH DISTANCE. IT IS NOT ELECTROMAGNETIC.
In 1966, Cleve Backster was the world's foremost expert on polygraph technology. He had developed the interrogation techniques used by the CIA, FBI, and U.S. military. He understood galvanic skin response — the electrical conductance of biological tissue — better than anyone alive.
One morning, on a whim, he attached polygraph electrodes to a Dracaena plant in his office. He watered it and watched the tracing. Then he thought: "I wonder what would happen if I threatened this plant." He decided to burn a leaf with a match.
The instant he formed the intention — before he moved, before he lit the match, before any ...
Kennedy Starts a Push to Help Americans Quit Antidepressants
Federal health agencies announced a new national effort to reduce psychiatric overprescribing, informed consent, and expanding access to nondrug mental health approaches like psychotherapy, nutrition, and physical activity. https://bit.ly/4vqyFJB