- We Will Make America Great Again -
The 'Deep State' Super Emboldened - 'Forgotten Men & Women' Totally Abandoned
A sudden and unexpected disconnect occurred between Trump regime and MAGA movement, resulting in a brutal dramatic flip against the entire movement. Experts currently on the scene work to restore connection. We will keep you posted!
"Noticed: thanks to Trump's administration, the "Chinese Communist Party" will no longer be in charge of the USA government. It is official: the "Mafia" has gained full control. You can't fight City Hall"
A show of force never results in a positive outcome. Nevertheless, the Trump administration reminds us of the Titanic ship captain!
A show of strength is not a show of force, and a show of force is not a show of strength. Strength is not force and force is not strength.
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"Supporting Luigi's actions, equals criminalizing CEOs systematic murder. Decrying Luigi's actions, equals approving condoning CEOs systematic murder"
- Ben Friedman, Monroe NY, (Tell 845-782-7830) -
Our Goal And Mission:
Free Luigi And “We the People” From The Corporate Greed, Power, And Murder
Expose the plot of the most brutal betrayal and sabotage of Luigi Mangione's right to a fair trial and to the voice of "We the People," plotted by criminal activist Kathy Hochul and vicious Keren Friedman Agnifilo
Your feedback is appreciated. You may leave your comments below at the Blog section
BLOGMANIFESTO
United is the [indecipherable] largest company in the US by market cap, behind only Apple, Google, Walmart. It has grown and grown, but as our life expectancy? No the reality is, these [indecipherable] have simply gotten too powerful, and they continue to abuse our country for immense profit because the American public has allowed them to get away with it.

"A system designed to murder, or to deflect human value by infecting society with addictive advanced technology, advanced AI, etc, is not the best way to 'Keep America Great'"
Why Do We Consider Luigi A Hero?

THE CORPORATE COMPLEX PLOT
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Ben & Yoel Friedman speaking at the Blair County Pennsylvania Courthouse
Steve Bannon on Luigi Mangione—And Avoiding Violent Revolution in America
Steve Bannon at the World Economy Summit, commenting on populist nationalists, Bannon warned the alternative was someone like Luigi Mangione.“He is treated like Robin Hood,” Bannon said. “That should scare you to the marrow of your bones, because that’s the alternative if the system keeps going like it is. The populists nationalists offer something you’re not gonna love, but you’ll be able to live with.”
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Can We Make America Healthy Again And Fix The Health Insurance Crisis Once And For All?
RFK Jr. backs work mandates, waivers for food benefits program in red state as part of MAHA mission
By Charles Creitz - March 28, 2025 - Fox News
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Make America Great Again
"Cruelty: can never ever be justified; is NOT a solution; is unacceptable!"
“A show of strength is not a show of force, and a show of force is not a show of strength.
Strength is not force and force is not strength.”
A show of force never results in a positive outcome!
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Amid ICE arrests, Latino sports group pauses game activities - Watch on YouTube
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Story # 46 Cincinnati 2025 high school grad detained by ICE, facing deportation to Honduras
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New ICE Tactics Story #G - Watch on YouTube
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A Mother Took Her Sons to an ICE Check-In. She Never Saw Them Again. No criminal records. Pursuing green cards. Under Trump, it doesn’t matter
Alma Lopez Diaz Cooperated. ICE Deported Her Sons Anyway.

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Alma, 38, was alarmed. It had always been her custom to go as a family to the boys’ ICE appointments since they came from El Salvador in 2016 and after being denied asylum. She didn’t see why they should be targeted now, given neither had a criminal history — not even a school disciplinary record, says their lawyer. In their pastor’s “heartfelt plea” to immigration authorities, he described the brothers in writing as “free from vices.”
Yet at this check-in, the situation was different from in years past. An officer told Alma that Jose and Josue were now detained: “They are not going to be returning.”
Alma corralled Mateo and held the small black-and-orange wallet. She had not even said anything final to her two eldest. The room was full of moms and children. She tried to look behind a curtain through which the brothers had gone, but they were no longer there.
Such scenes have become more common all across America. Donald Trump has struggled to fulfill his campaign promise of deporting millions of people, with a Brookings Institute analysis finding total daily removals below Biden-administration levels. At the same time, the enforcement mechanisms of the new administration have been unleashed, as federal agents make high-profile arrests and triple down on partnerships with local law enforcement.
They are also ensnaring individuals with no criminal records and some who show up at ICE offices as required. Both of those were true for the Trejo Lopez brothers. The check-in can be an easy way for the agency to juice deportation numbers, says Camille Mackler, the CEO of Immigrant ARC, a collaborative of legal-service providers in New York. She also notes that lawyers are seeing more immigrants without criminal histories being detained. “When they can deport, they’re deporting,” she says.
In another merciless aspect of the new deportation regime, immigrants can be at risk even while they seek other forms of relief. The brothers were pursuing green cards under what’s known as Special Immigrant Juvenile Status, granted to those under 21 who have suffered abuse, abandonment, or neglect by a parent. Their father had seen them exactly once since they were toddlers in a brief encounter at a barbecue. In March, after they were detained, New York Family Court found that they had been abandoned and neglected by their father and that it was not in their “best interests” to be returned to El Salvador, according to court filings. Yet they remained in custody.
While there was no guarantee of success, a different administration typically “would have agreed to wait and see what happened with the decision in the case,” says Mackler.
“They’re becoming very aggressive with detaining individuals now,” says Ala Amoachi, the Trejo Lopez brothers’ attorney. Gone are the days when immigrants could mostly expect discretion from federal officials if they lived quiet lives. To make matters more chaotic, the detention decisions are being made “kind of arbitrarily,” she says, “like it really depends on when you check in, who’s the supervisor of the day. You may be picked up. You may not be. You may be given an ankle bracelet.”
Jose and Josue were unlucky. They were now faced with the prospect of returning to a country so foreign to them that their mother told me through a translator, “I don’t know who they would be staying with.”
The boys were born into poverty in El Salvador: Their father sent hardly enough money to cover milk and diapers, forcing them to rely on nearby family for food, Alma would later write in an affidavit. When the children started school, she began scratching out a living selling chips and soda but was soon being extorted by gang members who threatened violence. Pregnant with Mateo, she and her 10- and 11-year-old boys undertook the long trip to the U.S. in search of asylum. They were apprehended at the border in 2016 and placed in removal proceedings but released into the country.
After arriving in Georgia, they found a close-knit mix of family and community. Jose became an active member of Monte Sinai Lawrenceville, a Christian church, helping with photography and videos for events. His younger brother taught in the flock’s children’s ministry in addition to volunteering as an usher, “always greeting everyone with warmth and a servant’s heart,” Pastor Juan Granados wrote in his letter of support for the brothers.
The asylum claim had been denied not long after arrival, but the family stayed out of custody as appeals continued. They attended regular immigration check-ins and appointments, sometimes seeming to come as often as every few months. Alma and her sons would pray before leaving the house because the family often had close calls. Once, officials asked Alma if a relative could pick up the kids — the understanding was that she was about to be deported. Other times, they were told they had 30 days to leave the country or that the youngest, Mateo, could actually be cared for just as well by doctors in El Salvador. They would talk to a lawyer, file a petition, and keep deportation at bay.
Around the same time, Alma began a long-distance relationship with a childhood friend who lived in New York. In 2024, her boys decided to move in with the man they considered a stepfather, and Alma visited them once a month. The brothers shared a room and worked on securing their immigration status, dutifully logging their new Long Island address with the federal government.
After Trump’s election, they heard rumors about ICE showing up unannounced, so Jose took to peering through the window at loud noises. There were stories about people being detained at their check-ins, and the brothers couldn’t avoid theirs in Manhattan in early March. They actually showed up for their original appointment and were told to go home until two days later because of how crowded it was. But even that preliminary encounter had been unsettling to the boys, if not to their mother: An officer processing their entry into the facility had told them “Good luck.”
Inside the ICE waiting room, Alma says she was told that the officers weren’t going to arrest her, “because I was with Mateo.”
Josue and Jose were soon en route to a federal detention center in Buffalo, where they were given blue uniforms as noncriminal detainees. In the weeks they were there, Josue became something of a tour guide for new arrivals, explaining things and giving ESL classes, says Amoachi. Officers even used the brothers as informal translators. Weeks later, they were transferred on a 16-hour journey to a facility in Louisiana. They were shackled for so long that their lawyer says they recounted phantom pains even after their limbs were released. (ICE did not respond to requests for information about the brothers’ cases or treatment in custody.)
Last Tuesday, they were denied a stay of removal and their deportation was scheduled for that coming Friday, just two weeks shy of when Josue was supposed to attend his high-school graduation ceremony. “Don’t worry about your graduation,” an official talking to him about his mental health said. “Don’t worry about that stuff. Just put your mind to El Salvador. You’re not from here anymore.” Early the next morning, Alma was told that her sons were going to be removed that same day — her birthday.
Still, the young men held out hope even upon being loaded into the plane. Officials had taken a couple people off at the last minute, and the brothers wondered if they could be next. Then the door closed. “Is this really happening?” Jose remembers thinking. “I wanted to cry, but I wasn’t able to.”
Not long after they arrived in San Salvador, people in uniforms called out names, many for detainees with tattoos, including one man the brothers had met in the Louisiana facility who told them there were many things he regretted and that he’d become a Christian a few years earlier. He expected to be sent to CECOT, the now-infamous prison.
When they were finally released, a friend of the family, an older man, was waiting outside the airport and took them to his home. When we spoke a day later, they were still there and were not sure how long they would stay or what else they would do. “We don’t have another place or another family member that we could go,” says Jose, “because all our family is in the U.S.”
They called their mother. At one point, Mateo picked up the phone, connected by video, and saw their faces. “He was literally happy for a minute and then he realized that something was not right,” says Josue. “He started crying.”
The child’s horrified reaction has spread to the rest of the family. In Georgia, Alma set up a GoFundMe for her sons, “Stranded and Seeking Hope.” She says she can’t leave Mateo, a U.S. citizen, behind. That suggests a severed link to the older brothers. “I don’t know what would be the next time that I would be able to see them again,” she says. “It would probably have to be many years.”
'Makes no sense': Tulsa Co. mom facing deportation over decade-old misdemeanor
TULSA, Okla. — A Green Country hairdresser, wife, and mom is facing deportation over a decade-old misdemeanor.
By Mark Chiusano – May 9, 2025 – 2 News Oklahoma

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Her friends say it’s unfair, so they’re advocating on her behalf.
“I believe she’s being treated unfairly,” said Susan Ingram.
“It’s hard to comprehend and makes no sense,” said Lindsay Burns.
This Facebook post sent friends of Michelle Rementeria Diaz into a frenzy this week. Lindsay Burns has known the Broken Arrow mom since they were walking the halls at Jenks High School.
“She’s been here since she was 13 legally,” said Burns. “She pays taxes. She has a business. She has a family. She hasn’t done anything, and still she is sitting in a cell right now.”
Burns lives in Seattle, and even 2,000 miles couldn’t come between their friendship.
“I am still just dumbfounded that they can do this to a person like her,” said Burns.
In March 2025, Michelle, her husband Matt, and their 2-year-old daughter Marlee went to her home country of Chile for a visit. Matt came back first, Michelle and Marlee followed later, but they didn’t make it out of Houston’s airport.
“My heart breaks for her now because she described how awful it was,” Burns. “They had no windows. There was no clock on the wall. She didn’t know what time of day it was, and she had her 2-year-old with her.”
Matt had to pick up their little girl. Michelle was detained for three days. She was finally allowed to come back home.
After a court hearing in Oklahoma City on May 7, she was detained again until she faces an immigration judge in June.
“I believe that she’s being treated unfairly, and out of anyone that would come to this country, she’s the type of person we would expect and want to be here,” said Susan Ingram.
Susan Ingram has known Michelle for years. They worked together at a salon in Tulsa and grew close during that time.
She says it doesn’t make sense that she’s facing deportation as a green card holder who’s spent decades in the Tulsa area.
Court documents show that in 2016, Michelle had a misdemeanor charge for marijuana possession. Court records show she paid all the fines and was even in the process of getting it expunged, but just didn’t show up for the hearing in March of 2020.
“You’re going to split up a family over this?” asked Mark Williams. “I just felt like the process needs to be looked at harder. They need to dig deeper and see who these people really are.”
Mark Williams and his wife, Andrea, considered Michelle family. She dated their son for years and stayed close even after they broke up.
“Why was it important for you all to talk on her behalf?” asked 2 News.
“Because she’s one of the best people I know,” answered Andrea Williams.
They’ve reached out to U.S. Senator James Lankford on Michelle’s behalf, hoping to get help to keep her in the country.
“Hope that maybe he could have some kind of pull,” said Mark Williams.
2 News reached out to his office, and a spokesperson said, “We are aware of the situation.”
The Williams’ say that while immigration is a hot topic right now, Michelle, a hardworking hairdresser, mom, and wife, shouldn’t be caught up in this.
“I always thought that this was pertaining to people that were violent criminals, that had broken the law numerous times, that were taking from the government, but not the ones that were contributing back to society and that were decent people,” said Andrea Williams.
2 News did reach out to Michelle’s husband to make sure he was comfortable with us telling her story. He said while his attorney advised him not to speak on camera, he’s fine with friends advocating for his wife.
‘A hard-working man in pursuit of the American Dream’: Danish man living in Mississippi detained by ICE at naturalization meeting
A Danish man living in Mississippi for a dozen years has been imprisoned in Louisiana for more than a month
By Emily Wagster Pettus – May 20, 2025 – Mississippi Today

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