AOC facing expulsion from Congress, and revocation of national security clearance.

AOC, in my view, may very well be the most predominant patriot remaining in this dismantled, devastated nation.

We have 77+ million people in America
who don't, by any standard, deserve to share in the planet's oxygen supply,
and wouldn't be if it were my call--no hyperbole--
so I'll not disparage a genuinely good person when I run across one.
 
AOC, in my view, may very well be the most predominant patriot remaining in this dismantled, devastated nation.

We have 77+ million people in America
who don't, by any standard, deserve to share in the planet's oxygen supply,
and wouldn't be if it were my call--no hyperbole--
so I'll not disparage a genuinely good person when I run across one.
Hating America is not being a patriot, Nifty.
 
We have 77+ million people in America
who don't, by any standard, deserve to share in the planet's oxygen supply,
and wouldn't be if it were my call--no hyperbole--
so I'll not disparage a genuinely good person when I run across one.
I think you're being a bit too harsh on the Left and Progressives, while it's nice to see you want to not disparage the Conservative Right.
 
What is a 'banana republic', moonbat???
Dumbass ^

th
 
They have the same constitutional rights and protections as every other person in the United States.


The Constitution explicitly reserves some rights for "citizens," like voting (Article I, Section 2) or running for federal office.

Illegal aliens don’t get those.

They also face practical limits: they can be detained and deported under immigration law. Citizens cannot.

The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable searches and seizures for everyone, but border enforcement contexts often weaken this for non-citizens (e.g., Almeida-Sanchez v. United States, 1973). The Sixth Amendment’s right to a jury trial applies in criminal cases, but deportation proceedings are civil, so no jury right attaches there.

Not only do citizens have no risk of deportation, they enjoy broader access to public benefits, which illegal aliens can’t claim due to statutory restrictions (e.g., 1996 Welfare Reform Act).

Right to bear arms? Federal law (18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(5)) bars illegal aliens from possessing firearms, and courts have upheld this, arguing the Second Amendment doesn’t extend here (U.S. v. Portillo-Munoz, 2011).

So, do illegal aliens enjoy the same constitutional rights as citizens?

No.
 
The Constitution explicitly reserves some rights for "citizens," like voting (Article I, Section 2) or running for federal office.

Illegal aliens don’t get those.

They also face practical limits: they can be detained and deported under immigration law. Citizens cannot.

The Fourth Amendment protects against unreasonable searches and seizures for everyone, but border enforcement contexts often weaken this for non-citizens (e.g., Almeida-Sanchez v. United States, 1973). The Sixth Amendment’s right to a jury trial applies in criminal cases, but deportation proceedings are civil, so no jury right attaches there.

Not only do citizens have no risk of deportation, they enjoy broader access to public benefits, which illegal aliens can’t claim due to statutory restrictions (e.g., 1996 Welfare Reform Act).

Right to bear arms? Federal law (18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(5)) bars illegal aliens from possessing firearms, and courts have upheld this, arguing the Second Amendment doesn’t extend here (U.S. v. Portillo-Munoz, 2011).

So, do illegal aliens enjoy the same constitutional rights as citizens?

No.
The funny thing is is AOC didn't tell them to vote.
 
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