Adrian Sol
Daily Stormer
April 4, 2018
Careful there, Jeff. You might break your “do absolutely nothing” streak at this rate.
Right now, the biggest bottleneck in the deportation process is in the courtrooms; each foreigner the government needs to kick out of our country has to be processed by a judge, and that takes time.
These judges are probably dragging their heels, too.
Not for long.
The Trump administration just announced judges will now have yearly quotas that they’ll need to meet.
The Trump administration will pressure U.S. immigration judges to process cases faster by establishing a quota system tied to their annual performance reviews, according to new Justice Department directives.
We need to make the justice system into a well-oiled, efficient machine.
We’re talking “deportation factories” here.
With some planning, we could get a beaner in and out of the courtroom (and then, the country) in less than a minute.
The judges will be expected to clear at least 700 cases a year to receive a “satisfactory” performance rating, a standard that their union called an “unprecedented” step that risks undermining judicial independence and opens the courts to potential challenges.
700 per year?
wat.
Are you telling me the judges are doing even less than that now?
Do they have white mages casting “slow” up in there, non-stop?
Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions has promised to stiffen immigration enforcement partly by moving more aggressively to clear a backlog of more than 600,000 cases pending before the Executive Office of Immigration Review, the federal court system that adjudicates immigration cases.
Okay, Jeff, I guess it’s a good first move.
But I have a hard time even understanding why this isn’t merely an administrative procedure, rather than needing to be seen by a judge.
Even so, how can it possibly take more than 30 seconds to determine if someone needs to be deported? It could just go like this:
Judge: Ok, Pedro, show me the official document from the American government that gives you the authorization to be living and working in the United States.
Pedro: Ehh, Señor, I don’t have any.
Judge: Then you get deported. Take him away.
Then the fun begins.
Am I missing something, here? Everyone in America has either citizenship, or a visa, green card or whatever giving them the authorization to live and work here for a specified amount of time. Doesn’t the government already have a database of all the visas they give out? How long does it take to just check up on that database?
It’s quite clear that whoever designed this current system had only one goal in mind: make it as hard as possible to get rid of illegals. Because this shit ain’t rocket science.
Each official should be deporting 700 beaners a day, not per yeah.