You’ve got to let a state take care of daycare and they should pay for it too! They have to raise their taxes. DJT
Apr 03, 2026
But we gotta take care of the Jewish Sicarios and Rapists and Murderers and Neuroperverse:

This video features an interview with Daniel Klein, a former student of the Mechina Bnei David preparatory program in Israel. The discussion explores the nature of Zionist indoctrination within the military preparatory academies (mechinot) and how these systems shape the worldview of young recruits.
Know the truth about why Israeli society is so blood thirsty and savage.
+—+

Family Values for Jews: If you want a better understanding of the American regime, for the first time, the U.S. Army tested a PRSM missile in Malard, Iran. A weapon that detonates mid-air, releasing thousands of deadly fragments. And as a result, 21 Iranian teenagers who were simply playing in their neighborhood lost their lives…

Jewish Family Values: There are also books in the library by those who killed, destroyed, and committed genocide against us; those who usurped our land, murdered our ancestors, and built cities over their bodies. You are a people who feed off the Holocaust that happened a hundred years ago, using it as a pretext to justify the genocide you have committed against us.



The U.S. and Israeli regimes have assassinated our leaders, killed schoolchildren, and attacked hospitals, universities, energy facilities, and desalination plants. They have now struck the Pasteur Vaccine Institute and key road bridges. They openly threaten to bomb our power infrastructure and “return Iran to the Stone Age.” It seems these realities do not reach Australian and EU officials, or they are unwilling to condemn them. Instead, they criticize Iran’s self-defense. The world and history will judge you. Do not stand on the side of Nazis.

He’s a Calfironication Incel Nazi:

Glosser-Miller, a product of that worldview of hate and bigotry: He coulda been raised in Is-RAW-HELL.
1. Architect of Family Separation
Miller was the chief architect of the Trump Administration “zero tolerance” immigration policy, which led to the forced separation of thousands of children from their parents at the southern border. According to Vanity Fair, “Stephen actually enjoys seeing those pictures at the border.” His own words on the policy? He called it a “simple decision.”
Even now, hundreds of children remain separated from their families. The policy was condemned by the United Nations and numerous human rights organizations as cruel, unnecessary, and a violation of international law.

2. White Nationalist Ties
During Trump’s first term, leaked emails revealed that Miller frequently shared white nationalist talking points and publications, including content from VDARE and the Camp of the Saints – a notoriously racist and anti-immigrant novel embraced by far-right extremists.
The Southern Poverty Law Center characterized Miller’s communications as “open white nationalism.” Over 100 members of Congress called for his resignation; however, Trump stood behind him along with many of the GOP.

3. A Career Built on Bigotry
Before entering the White House, Miller worked under Senator Jeff Sessions, helping craft policies aimed at rolling back civil rights, weakening voting protections, and targeting marginalized communities. His work in government has consistently targeted people of color, immigrants, and LGBTQ+ Americans.
In 2023, Miller’s legal group, America First Legal, filed a complaint accusing Kellogg’s of “politicizing and sexualizing its products” simply for releasing a Pride-themed Pop-Tarts box and featuring RuPaul’s image on Cheez-Its. That’s the kind of manufactured outrage Miller uses to push his far-right agenda. His rhetoric directly fuels discrimination and violence against already vulnerable groups.
4. Ethical Conflicts with Anti-Immigration Groups
During his first term in the White House, Miller routinely collaborated with anti-immigration hate groups like the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) and the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS), both of which have deep ties to white nationalist ideologies.
Miller elevated their ideas into national policy, blurring the line between governance and extremist ideology, resulting in sweeping deportations and a normalization of xenophobia at the highest levels of government.

5. Long History of Harmful Rhetoric
Miller’s inflammatory tone isn’t new, it dates back to his days at Duke University, where he penned right-wing columns attacking diversity, tolerance, and liberalism. In one article, he mocked Duke’s efforts toward inclusion, calling the school’s climate a “shameful deficiency.”
That same combative style carried into his work for Trump, helping shape speeches and policies that escalated racial and cultural divides. His influence isn’t just about policy– it’s about poisonously reshaping the national conversation.
Stephen Miller is a central figure in shaping the Trump Administration’s agenda. From enabling state violence against immigrant families to promoting white nationalist rhetoric in government, his career is a warning of what happens when bigotry gains institutional power.

[According to the Letter of the Law by Zuni Maud, depicting the effects of the Emergency Quota Act of 1921, which curtailed immigration to the United States. Published in Der groyser kundes,]
Ahh, 2019 article:
IMMIGRATION HAS BECOME so central to US politics today that it’s hard to remember how rarely it flickered into the national spotlight before 2016. Prior to Donald Trump’s election, both parties agreed on the need for border enforcement, with the GOP routinely accusing Democrats of being soft on “illegals” and the Democrats responding with vigorous deportation campaigns. But the explicit racism of the Trump era, with its Muslim travel ban and the daily outrages of family separation and detention, has galvanized a large-scale protest movement. Jews have been especially active in this mobilization, driven by their social liberalism, their sense of religious duty, or both. Synagogue networks sprang up to offer aid to refugees, while groups like Jews United for Justice and Jewish Voice for Peace have been a visible presence at protest rallies. The role of Trump advisers Stephen Miller and Jared Kushner has at times made the fight seem unusually personal—even familial. Miller’s uncle, a neuroscientist, has been welcomed onto the public stage for his denunciations of his nephew’s immigration policies, which the elder Miller has characterized as hypocritical: the Millers’ not-so-distant Jewish ancestors were, of course, immigrants themselves.

Writing for the panel, Judge Gould did not mince words about what the record showed: federal agents shot a protester in the head, legs, and feet with pepper balls at close range while the person was complying with orders. A member of the press was struck in the head with a rubber bullet and sustained a concussion. Another reporter was hit in the arm by a tear gas canister while retreating — diagnosed with a hematoma and treated for a burn. A fourth person was hit in the hand by a canister fired from 50 to 75 feet away, requiring stitches.
“In some instances,” the court found, “officers issued no warnings and shot individuals who posed no threat to the officers or to any other person.”

1. ICE is violating its own parental interest policies at every stage. The current Detained Parents Directive requires ICE to ask every person it arrests whether they are a parent, to ensure children are safe at the time of arrest, and to give parents facing deportation the opportunity to decide whether their children come with them or remain in the US. The report documents routine violations of all three. Parents were never asked about their children. Parents who tried to raise the issue were dismissed. One father begged to call the babysitter who was inside with his three-year-old and was refused. Parents who signed official forms requesting to bring their children were deported without them anyway.
2. The scale has changed dramatically. Data obtained through public records requests and reported by the amazing team at ProPublica shows that under the Biden administration, 264 mothers were detained and 30 percent were deported. Under the current administration, that number has jumped to 800 mothers detained, with 60 percent deported. WRC has also been tracking a significant uptick in the detention of pregnant, postpartum, and lactating women since the spring of 2025, using a detention pregnancy tracker built in partnership with Relevant Research. Zain described one case as particularly haunting: a woman who experienced a miscarriage in detention received no medical oversight for ten days, was deported in an acute medical crisis, and had her life saved only because reception center workers in Honduras rushed her to an emergency room. It’s unthinkable that this is happening.
3. There is no system for international family reunification, and one is desperately needed. There is no legal right to reunification under US law and no established DHS procedure for facilitating it. More than 400 parents sought reunification through the Honduran government in 2025 despite no formal program existing. Receiving countries lack the resources, the infrastructure, and the most basic information from the US government to make reunification work at scale. So when we think about the next 10-20-year horizon of how we respond to this massive problem, we really need to construct a cooperative system for information sharing and facilitating reunification.
We did not get enough time to discuss that last point, but I want to double down on it here because I think it is the most important long-term takeaway from the conversation. The consequences of the current administration’s deportation policies (and frankly the United States’ deportation policies for years now across Republican and Democratic administrations) mean that we are creating a long-term family separation crisis that will outlast any single presidency.

[U.S. citizen children board a van in early February before taking a flight from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, to Guatemala, to be reunited with parents who were deported]

[ProPublica’s reporting shows that the parents of at least 11,000 U.S. citizen children were arrested and detained in the first seven months of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown. First image: Two volunteers place a 2-year-old American child in a car so he can be reunited with his mother, who is from Honduras and awaits deportation at the Dilley, Texas, family detention center. Second image: Two American children, left, talk on the phone with their father, who is detained at “Alligator Alcatraz” in Florida after being arrested on Christmas.]

Retrograde:
Rubio this week:
“Imagine an Iran that instead of spending billions of dollars supporting terrorists or weapons, had spent that money helping the people of Iran, you’d have a much different country.”

President Donald Trump (who very clearly needs to arrange some sort of morning meeting with his staff to get their talking points down) this week:
“The United States can’t take care of daycare. We’re a big country, we have all these other people, we’re fighting wars! We can’t take care of daycare! You’ve got to let a state take care of daycare and they should pay for it too! They have to raise their taxes. It’s not possible for us to take care of daycare, Medicaid, Medicare, all these individual things. We have to take care of one thing: military protection.”

Family Values, a la War Criminal: The Karaj bridge, several kilometers west of Tehran, which was destroyed during U.S.-Israeli military operations in Iran, on April 3, 2026.



Trump celebrated a double tap strike on a highway bridge linking Tehran to Karaj on Thursday, sharing video of the attack that killed eight people and wounded 95. The second strike occurred as rescue workers responded to the initial attack, according to the Fars news agency. Iranian officials told state media the casualties were civilians who had gathered beneath the bridge and along the riverbank to celebrate Nature Day in Iran. The unfinished bridge intended to connect Tehran to the Caspian Sea.
“The biggest bridge in Iran comes tumbling down, never to be used again — Much more to follow! IT IS TIME FOR IRAN TO MAKE A DEAL BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE, AND THERE IS NOTHING LEFT OF WHAT STILL COULD BECOME A GREAT COUNTRY!”
Trump wrote on social media. Trump told Time magazine in an in

A February inspection of Camp East Montana, the nation’s largest immigration detention facility, in El Paso, Texas found 49 violations—an unusually high figure compared to a maximum of 13 found at any other facility inspected so far this year. The inspection cited the use of excessive force, the provision of medical care, security, and mental health. The facility—which houses nearly 3,000 detainees per day, the majority of whom have no criminal convictions—has recorded at least three deaths since opening last summer. Despite the 49 violations, the report rated the facility “acceptable/adequate.” Rep. Veronica Escobar (D-Texas), who has toured the facility, said the findings were “a drop in the bucket” of what is wrong there. “ICE is completely uninterested in really creating any change.”


The comments were initially broadcast live on the White House’s YouTube account before the video was made private following public backlash. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt later stated that the President’s remarks were intended to highlight the importance of “rooting out the billions of dollars in fraud” within those programs.
“The United States can’t take care of daycare. We’re a big country, we have all these other people, we’re fighting wars! We can’t take care of daycare! You’ve got to let a state take care of daycare and they should pay for it too! They have to raise their taxes. It’s not possible for us to take care of daycare, Medicaid, Medicare, all these individual things. We have to take care of one thing: military protection.”


The government cannot legally detain U.S. citizen children with their parents or deport them. According to immigration experts and current and former officials, the arrest and detention of parents of U.S. citizens often leads to a family separation, even if it’s brief.
We counted a parent as having been detained by ICE if they were booked into a facility for any length of time according to the Deportation Data Project’s detention records. In a very small minority of cases during the Trump administration, parents were released from ICE custody in less than a few days. This was more common under Biden. When we calculated the criminal history of parents arrested and detained by ICE, we relied on the criminal charges in these detention records.
To calculate that Trump has deported mothers of U.S. citizen children at four times the rate that Biden did, we calculated the total number of mothers removed under each administration in the period covered by our data and divided by the number of days each president was in office during that period. We used the period from November 2023 through mid-August 2025 to minimize undercounting at the start and end of our detention dataset. We also compared equivalent seven-month periods in 2024 and 2025, which produced a similar result. For the purposes of our analysis, we counted a small number of detained mothers who agreed to leave the country voluntarily as having been deported.

