Did some digging on that and it's a bigger story than you think.
These people are literally at ground-zero for the invasion, and are sick and tired of it.
The thing they don't mention is - it appears that Rockland County is one of the places where they dumped like 300,000 Hatians.
That were just about to be removed by ice because trump ended the TPS status. The one where the judge just temporarily blocked it from like two days ago.
So this place is like ground zero right now. And I think they'r. worried that trump will win the appeal, so the corrupt democrats are trying to get some anti-ice laws on the books before then so they can keep the hatians from being sent home.
So this is wild stuff. Wish somebody with a big voice would look closer at the situation there. Nice shirley where a\re ya? Any other young journalists looking for a huge story?
Anybody else with info or research feel free to dump it in the comments here.
Effective immediately, processing of all immigration requests relating to Afghan nationals is stopped indefinitely pending further review of security and vetting protocols.
The protection and safety of our homeland and of the American people remains our singular focus and mission
Hope I don’t ruffle too many feathers with this one but I would like to post some feedback to whoever is modding this weekend - there maintains a stickied post which is clearly AI slop and non-accurate hopium. This makes the whole place look like and actually be like a fake and gay site and I hope that we are better than that.
I’ve said it again and I’ll say it before, if the post turns out to be Fake and Gay it’s your duty to mark it SHITPOST.
Thank you for your attention to this matter!
From BraveAI:
The North Carolina House of Representatives passed House Bill 307, known as "Iryna's Law," on Tuesday, September 23, 2025, sending it to Governor Josh Stein for his consideration. The bill, named after 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska who was fatally stabbed on a Charlotte light rail train on August 22, 2025, aims to reform the state's criminal justice system by eliminating cashless bail for certain violent offenders, imposing stricter pretrial release conditions, mandating mental health evaluations, and expediting death penalty appeals. Key Provisions of Iryna's Law: The bill creates a new "violent offense" category requiring secured bond or house arrest with GPS monitoring for first-time offenders and mandatory house arrest with monitoring for second-time offenders. For defendants with three or more prior convictions in the past decade, a secured bond with house arrest and monitoring is mandatory. It mandates mental health evaluations for defendants charged with violent offenses who have a history of involuntary commitment or show signs of a current crisis, with commitment proceedings required if they are deemed a danger. The bill also includes death penalty reforms, requiring appeals to be heard within two years and hearings to occur in the county of conviction, while adding committing a capital felony on public transportation as an aggravating factor. Legislative Passage: The North Carolina Senate passed the bill on Monday, September 22, 2025, by a 28-8 vote, and the House approved it on Tuesday, September 23, by an 82-30 vote, with Republican leaders calling it a "bipartisan, veto-proof majority". The bill now awaits Governor Stein's decision on whether to sign it into law or veto it.