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PegnVA

06/19/18 9:46 AM

#281411 RE: BOREALIS #281410

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), worried the issue will hurt his re-election - A "stand-up guy" showing concern.....for himself!
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PegnVA

06/19/18 9:50 AM

#281412 RE: BOREALIS #281410

THE HEARTBREAKING PHOTO THAT SHOWS TRUMP MAY HAVE GONE TOO FAR
By Richard Cohen Opinion writer, June 18 at 5:54 PM
A 2-year-old Honduran girl cries as her mother is searched and detained near the U.S.-Mexico border on June 12 in McAllen, Tex. (John Moore/Getty Images)

John Moore may have lost the midterm elections for the Republican Party and badly damaged the reelection prospects of President Trump. Moore is the Getty Images photographer who snapped a viral picture of a crying 2-year-old Honduran girl at the U.S.-Mexico border. It’s not clear whether the girl was separated from her mother, and, in fact, she had just been set on the ground so her mother could be searched. The details, though, are unimportant. The picture, in effect, was of Trump — his cruel policy, his cold heart, his lack of empathy.

A picture is worth a thousand words, the saying goes. But this one is worth a million tweets. In political consequence, it is like the one taken of President George W. Bush surveying the devastation of Hurricane Katrina — by peering out the window of Air Force One. As Bush himself later acknowledged, the photo made him look “detached and uncaring.” It reinforced his frat-boy image.

Of course, Trump is nowhere near the crying Honduran girl. But his fingerprints are all over the picture. It was the stern implementation of his policy that separated children from their parents — “zero tolerance” in the stirring words of Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Sessions defended the policy by citing a biblical verse historically used to defend slavery — in essence, that the government is always right. Not then, certainly, and not now.

The outcry against the policy is such that it cannot last. It has been denounced by leading Republicans, most notably former first lady Laura Bush. Even the current first lady has spoken up — sort of. In keeping with a Trump family tradition, she essentially attributed the problem to “both sides” — Democrats as well as Republicans — evoking the formula her husband used to lay blame for the neo-Nazi violence in Charlottesville last year. She is wrong about that. The policy is her husband’s. When she sees him, she should ask.

[Photos | Photographer John Moore spent a decade at the Mexico border. Here is what he saw.]

Moore’s picture is of a very special category — the pain of innocent children. It is reminiscent of the one Nick Ut of the Associated Press took of a 9-year-old Vietnamese girl, Phan Thi Kim Phuc, fleeing a napalm attack in 1972. The picture summed up the horror of that war and the toll being taken on civilians.

Similarly, the plight of Syrian refugees was indelibly caught by Turkish journalist Nilufer Demir with her photo of 3-year-old Aylan Kurdi, lying facedown on the beach at Bodrum, Turkey, drowned. He and his family were trying to reach Greece when their boat capsized.

And there was the boy in the cap being rounded up by German soldiers as they cleared the Warsaw Ghetto of its remaining Jews in 1943. He is surely under 10, his hands held high in surrender, a newsboy’s cap on his head, a terrified expression on his face as he sets off to his almost certain murder. He remains unidentified, but, once seen, unforgettable.

It’s odd that Trump, who rose to the White House on the power of image, did not grasp how he would be hurt by the tears of a little girl. The picture captures both his policy and his persona. He is a man without empathy, after all. He belittled the hideous torture of John McCain, mocked the physical disability of a reporter, called Mexicans rapists, denigrated all Muslims and referred to impoverished nations as “shithole countries.” His narcissism is heroic. His sympathy, like much of his charity, is reserved for himself.

Cruelty has its selective appeal. Some confuse it with strength. Surely some in Trump’s base will see Moore’s picture and cheer. It will prove to them that Trump is serious about eliminating illegal immigration, returning America to a land of Saturday Evening Post covers, making it robustly heterosexual, white in color and culture and flag-loving in a way that he approves of. They might blame the child’s parents for her plight and castigate them as illegal immigrants who deserve no rights, even if they irreducibly have the ones we were all born with.

This time, it seems, Trump has gone too far. His White House stooges defend his policy, but we are a nation of parents. Parenthood humbles us all, makes us tremble from the immense power of tiny hugs. This — the need to comfort a child — is what we have in common with all human beings and why we are simultaneously moved by the girl in the picture and unforgiving of the man looming outside the frame.
-WASH POST, June 18, 2018

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/the-heartbreaking-photo-that-shows-trump-may-have-gone-too-far/2018/06/18/e51b2ef2-7321-11e8-805c-4b67019fcfe4_story.html?utm_term=.6300b5068860


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loophole73

06/19/18 10:12 AM

#281414 RE: BOREALIS #281410

It should be very simple for Congress to pass a bipartisan piece of legislation curing the ills we are experiencing under the existing laws. If Trump is an evil individual, then he will veto the legislation and all will know the truth. The media should be jumping on Congress to act. It is their job to act on behalf of their constituents. Selective enforcement of the law is not the answer. Of course, this is just my opinion along with most people I come in contact with on a daily basis.
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BOREALIS

06/19/18 6:47 PM

#281431 RE: BOREALIS #281410

Romney calls for ‘disturbing’ family separations to stop

by Elise Viebeck June 18 at 10:58 PM

WEST JORDAN, Utah — Republican Senate candidate Mitt Romney called on the Trump administration Monday to stop separating immigrant families at the southern border, calling the controversy a “humanitarian crisis” that requires Congress to devise a permanent solution.

Romney, the 2012 GOP presidential nominee, declined to blame President Trump or the Department of Homeland Security specifically in remarks to a group of voters at a park here. He called images of children separated from their parents “pretty disturbing” and “heartbreaking.”

“I think immediately we should go back to the setting where we’re not ripping children away from their parents, and then we expect Congress to take whatever action is necessary to fix this on a permanent basis,” Romney said.

“I believe the right answers will be held with the administration and the Congress working together,” he said.

Romney is running in the Republican primary race against state legislator Mike Kennedy; Romney is favored to win the June 26 election.

Trump has struck a defiant tone amid bipartisan criticism of his “zero tolerance” immigration policy, which has resulted in more than 2,000 children being separated from their parents at the border since May.

5:12
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/powerpost/wp/2018/06/18/romney-calls-for-disturbing-family-separations-to-stop/?utm_term=.1c7ad3a00cc3
Trump has struck a defiant tone amid bipartisan criticism of his “zero tolerance” immigration policy, which has resulted in more than 2,000 children being separated from their parents at the border since May.

Though Romney previously described himself as more conservative than Trump on immigration, the former Massachusetts governor distanced himself from the family separations earlier Monday with a tweet.

Reposting a tweet from former first lady Laura Bush calling the separations “cruel” and “immoral,” Romney wrote that “we need a more compassionate answer.”

Trump, though he is empowered to immediately stop the separations, has falsely blamed congressional Democrats for the crisis. He warned that parents illegally crossing the border could be “murderers and thieves and so much else.”

The crisis has quickly become an issue in Senate races around the country, as Republicans seek to defend their majority in November.

Another GOP Senate candidate, Florida Gov. Rick Scott, said in a statement Monday, “Let me be clear — I do not favor separating families.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/powerpost/wp/2018/06/18/romney-calls-for-disturbing-family-separations-to-stop/?utm_term=.1c7ad3a00cc3