We all know what President Trump will do on day one back in office (January 20, 2025).
He will sign dozens of Executive Orders to make the border secure again.
In particular, he will reinstate Title 42 and “Remain in Mexico” to keep all future illegal invaders on the Mexican side of the border.
He will start the process of finishing the wall- and hopefully make it bigger, stronger, and higher!
I hope and pray President Trump takes my advice from many months ago and defunds the $80 billion for the IRS on day one…fires 80,000 new IRS agents…and uses the money to hire 80,000 new ICE and border agents. He’ll need every one of them to keep America safe.
Can we use some of those people and part of that money to speed up the Department of Social Security on disability claims ? After waiting almost two ( 2 ) to the day, I finally got approved for SSDI. I Should ( and I use that term loosely ) see my first check on 12/11. May take up to 120 days to receive my back pay.
( Hell, you can get your refund from the I.R.S. after about 20 days from when you filed )
All through out the disability process, I was told over and over again that S.S.A. and D.D.S. ( disability determination service ) has an extreme backlog of cases and are severely understaffed.
Mexico is the top country of origin for unauthorized immigrants in the United States, accounting for 45% of the population in 2022. Other countries with large unauthorized immigrant populations include:
El Salvador: 750,000 unauthorized immigrants in 2022
India: 725,000 unauthorized immigrants in 2022
Guatemala: 675,000 unauthorized immigrants in 2022
Honduras: 525,000 unauthorized immigrants in 2022
Venezuela: A top country of origin in 2022
Colombia: A top country of origin in 2022
Brazil: A top country of origin in 2022
The Philippines: A top country of origin in 2022
China: A top country of origin in 2022
The majority of illegal immigrants come from Mexico. Studies have shown that 40 million foreign born residents live in the US 11.7 million of that population is illegal. During the 1950s, there were 45,000 documented immigrants from Central America. In the 1960s, this number more than doubled to 100,000.
Good and interesting information. Thanks for sharing! 🙂