The 47th president of the United States is leaving all the principles of the states far in the rear-view mirror. The latest late night alien is a foreigner’s Thanksgiving post on his social media platform, Truth.
From the very first sentence, Trump sarcastically wished happiness for his fellow Americans “who have been too good to allow our country to be divided, disrupted, carved up, killed, beaten, beaten, hugged and laughed at… when it comes to immigration.” He strangely claimed that “the vast majority” of foreign nationals in the United States are on welfare “or in prisons, mental institutions, gangs or drug cartels.” The president later described “this refugee burden” as “the greatest cause of social instability in America.”
Trump Targets “Somali Gangs” in Minneapolis The city has been the focus of the right-wing media ecosystem due to Somalia’s welfare fraud scandal.
The governor of Minnesota, 2024 vice presidential candidate Tim Walls, has been blurted out as “seriously outdone.” Trump then moves on to Minnesota Congressman Ilhan Omar, who is of Somali descent: “Maybe she came to the U.S. illegally that you’re not allowed to marry your brother” (repeating a plot that’s basically the same as the 2025 Obama certificate story).
More seriously, perhaps, Trump promised some drastic policy changes, including a “permanent freeze” on immigration “from all Third World countries.” He also promised exile for various reasons, saying that “[o]Blue reverse migration can completely fix this situation.
Legally impractical and vaguely comical, perhaps, but Trump’s antics are nonetheless far from uncertain.
Just last week, the US State Department posted on X: “Mass migration is an existential threat to Western civilization and undermines the stability of key US allies. Today the State Department directed US embassies to report on the human rights implications and public safety impacts of mass migration.”
The position follows Vice President JD Vance’s Munich comments in February. The Venice speech painted immigration and legal restrictions on discriminatory speech as Europe’s biggest security threat, and was interpreted as the start of a “transatlantic divorce”.
Sign up to our free newsletter


