ICE told to get the eff out

  • Thread starter Thread starter JP_
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Perhaps you can explain how an illegal immigrant with no right to work, pay taxes, acquire health insurance etc. can live, pay bills and become a useful member of society?
Take them all out of Texas and Florida and then see what happens. They serve a very useful purpose there. (y)
 
Take them all out of Texas and Florida and then see what happens. They serve a very useful purpose there. (y)
What would happen to your business if I enabled a whole bunch of illegals to work your neck of the woods safe in the knowledge that the authorities would turn a blind eye.

£80 a day cash no questions where as you have to pay £150-300 + taxes. Etc.
 
What would happen to your business if I enabled a whole bunch of illegals to work your neck of the woods safe in the knowledge that the authorities would turn a blind eye.

£80 a day cash no questions where as you have to pay £150-300 + taxes. Etc.
You mean if I lived in a massive farming or motel county that could not survive without the useful members of the illegal immigrant community?

Absolutely sod all. If you took them away however, there would be uproar......"send those ICE agents away, to Minnesota, quick!..."
 
You mean if I lived in a massive farming or motel county that could not survive without the useful members of the illegal immigrant community?

Absolutely sod all. If you took them away however, there would be uproar......"send those ICE agents away, to Minnesota, quick!..."
I didn’t think you’d know the answer
 
Take them all out of Texas and Florida and then see what happens. They serve a very useful purpose there. (y)
And MBK, using his favourite deflective waffle tactic, introduces irrelevance to the thread - yet again.

  • Undocumented immigrants fill essential labor needs in key industries, often taking jobs with high labor demands and in sectors experiencing shortages. In Florida, they account for large shares of workers in agriculture (60%), construction (23%), and building/maintenance (18%), while in Texas, they are concentrated in agriculture (54%), construction (28%), and landscaping services (51%).
  • Tax Contributions: Undocumented immigrants pay billions of dollars annually in federal, state, and local taxes, including sales, excise, property, and income taxes. In 2022, they paid an estimated $4.9 billion in state and local taxes in Texas and $1.8 billion in Florida.
  • Economic Growth and Spending Power: These individuals drive economic activity as consumers, with undocumented immigrant households nationwide having nearly $300 billion in spending power in 2023. Studies have found that the overall economic benefits of undocumented immigrants in Texas outweigh the costs to the state.
MBK thinks these folks are not useful contributors to American society.
 

Press ReleasePublished: Jan 7, 2026

Hearing Wrap Up: Minnesota Governor Walz and Attorney General Ellison Ignored Rampant Taxpayer Fraud and Silenced State Whistleblowers


WASHINGTON—Today, the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform held a hearing titled “Oversight of Fraud and Misuse of Federal Funds in Minnesota: Part I.” Criminals in Minnesota have stolen an estimated $9 billion in taxpayer funds intended to feed children, support autistic children, house low-income and disabled Americans, and provide healthcare to vulnerable Medicaid recipients. Members of Congress and the Minnesota state lawmakers who testified described how many of these schemes were concentrated within the Minnesota’s Somali community, with some taxpayer dollars diverted to terrorist networks overseas. State lawmakers testified that Governor Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison failed to take action to address this widespread fraud and have retaliated against whistleblowers who raised concerns. As the Trump Administration continues its efforts to hold those responsible accountable, Congress must also pursue legislative solutions to better protect American taxpayers.

Key Takeaways:

Fraudsters stole an estimated $9 billion from Minnesota’s social services system, yet Governor Walz, Attorney General Ellison, and Minnesota Democrats ignored warnings, failed to act, and retaliated against whistleblowers.
 
The true figure is more like $250m over seven years and is smaller than many other states.
 
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