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July 5, 2025 - InfoWars Special Reports
05:06
Alex Jones - The day Trump signed the BBB he announced his administration is worki... #1
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Trump gave a speech at the Iowa State Fairgrounds yesterday that I'll post right beside this video in the same post here on X where he said, Well, we got to do something about all these farm workers and hospitality workers that have been coming here for decades working illegally that are now being, quote, viciously thrown out of the country by Tom Holman that they've super-escalated the deportations.
Now the Supreme Court's totally green lit as constitutional, what we always knew was constitutional, and overridden these out-of-control administrative Article III courts.
Well, this is good cop, bad cup stuff that Trump's doing.
And I want to lay this out.
But first, people like Nick Fuentez criticizing Trump, saying, look at this sellout, basically.
And Trump has no excuse now with all these deportation powers to take action.
I also get Nick's perspective.
And yes, I believe we need a total moratorium on all immigration for at least 10 years because we've been totally overwhelmed by it.
The left has created an anti-Americanism.
They still have their mechanisms in place to brainwash these migrants, these illegals.
It's all part of the UN replacement migration, the ADL, the global is planning to break up the West.
We know that.
That said, I'm born and raised in Texas, and I know South Texas and Southwest Texas very, very well.
And I can tell you, people say, you know, the liberals always say, well, you know, the illegals here to pick the fruits.
And we know that 97% of them aren't involved really in agriculture.
But Trump's talking about the 3% that aren't.
And let me tell you something.
Down in the South Texas and all those areas, there is nobody down there but U.S. citizens, about 90% Hispanic, and then the illegal aliens.
And it's mainly the Hispanics that own the farms and stuff, Hispanic citizens, but it's illegals who for generations their families come across and go right back across the border.
And you get opportunities here.
They don't want to move to the U.S., but they work here.
If you look at the statistics, 97% of the illegals that are in this country aren't in agriculture.
Trump's talking about the 3% that are.
Now, it is causing an issue in those areas.
And I'm telling you, you're not going to have a bunch of U.S. citizens from, say, Austin, Texas that don't know how to skin a buck or run a trot line go down there and take those jobs.
So that's an issue.
And so I understand why Trump is doing it.
And he always said that we'll kick you out if you're illegal.
We'll create a mechanism if you weren't a criminal and your job was needed and you weren't replacing an American's job, a citizen's job, to bring you back quickly.
So Trump's not breaking a promise here.
It's what he always said he would do.
They need to go after the criminals.
They're all criminals, but the ones that have committed a bunch of crimes on top of it, they need to go after the human traffickers, the smugglers, the missing kids.
That'd be the priority.
So I think this is really a much do-about-nothing other than Trump has supported more of these skilled visas, which definitely driven down wages and deindustrialized the country and screwed a lot of Americans that went and got engineering jobs and electrical engineering jobs, computer programming jobs.
We saw Microsoft lay off, what, 3,000 people last week and then bring in or file the visa for 6,000 Indians to be brought in.
Again, I'm not against Indians, but this is not the place for Indians to come and get jobs at the expense of Americans.
We've got enough Indians here for now, let me tell you.
Here in Austin, Texas, it's Indians everywhere.
They're nice people and hard work and everything, but Americans need jobs.
And big corporations are undercutting the paychecks that everybody from auto workers to engineers should get.
And so we need a moratorium, except in very special cases for like super scientists and things that are top of their class that we need.
So there can be national security, you know, visas, special technology visas, things like that.
But this whole thing of just bringing in the whole world and then at America's expense.
And I understand the argument, we've always been the brain drain.
We've always brought the smart people here from around the world.
But it's been out of control.
It's part of a larger globalist agenda to have a permanent voting block to outvote the Indigenous population, to reapportion Congress, get more blue seats.
It's a do or die situation.
Plus the crime waves, all the murders, the drunk driving, the illegals being above the law.
It's got to be done.
And so if Trump said, no, we're going to kick all the farm workers out too, even though it hurt agriculture.
If that made the country basically survive at the end of the day, but we go through some pain, I'm fine with it.
So I'm open to super extreme action, which is, I think, needed by Trump, or for what he's doing, moderating it.
I mean, it's a very small percentage.
What do you think?
I'm going to invite Nick on to debate this on the weekday show this week, Nick Fuentes.
But right now, I think Trump's doing a great job on this issue and I understand exactly what he's doing.
And it's causing a lot of issues for American farmers and others.
Trump's always brought in skilled people for some of his companies.
He's brought in unskilled at his hotels.
This is just what goes on.
It needs to be cut back, it needs to be curtailed, but there needs to be some special allowances for folks that have already been here, and we're doing a good job.
That's my view.
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