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Right Wing Activist Laura Loomer shows Nancy Pelosi why we need a wall

by jumping over a fence and proving that walls don't even keep right wing snowflakes out, much less determined evil gangster rapist Mexicans (<--- sarcasm, of course).

https://www.newsweek.com/right-wing-activist-laura-loomer-nancy-pelosi-house-1291083

Physical barriers do work! And that has been proven many times in San Degio.

San Diego Fence Provides Lessons in Border Control
April 6, 2006

https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5323928

Before the fence was built, all that separated that stretch of Mexico from California was a single strand of cable that demarcated the international border.

Back then, Border Patrol agent Jim Henry says he was overwhelmed by the stream of immigrants who crossed into the United States illegally just in that sector.

"It was an area that was out of control," Henry says. "There were over 100,000 aliens crossing through this area a year."


Today, Henry is assistant chief of the Border Patrol's San Diego sector. He says apprehensions here are down 95 percent, from 100,000 a year to 5,000 a year, largely because the single strand of cable marking the border was replaced by double -- Today, Henry is assistant chief of the Border Patrol's San Diego sector. He says apprehensions here are down 95 percent, from 100,000 a year to 5,000 a year, largely because the single strand of cable marking the border was replaced by double -- and in some places, triple -- fencing.and in some places, triple -- fencing.

The first fence, 10 feet high, is made of welded metal panels. The second fence, 15 feet high, consists of steel mesh, and the top is angled inward to make it harder to climb over. Finally, in high-traffic areas, there's also a smaller chain-link fence. In between the two main fences is 150 feet of "no man's land," an area that the Border Patrol sweeps with flood lights and trucks, and soon, surveillance cameras.
 
Physical barriers do work! And that has been proven many times in San Degio.

San Diego Fence Provides Lessons in Border Control
April 6, 2006

https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5323928

Before the fence was built, all that separated that stretch of Mexico from California was a single strand of cable that demarcated the international border.

Back then, Border Patrol agent Jim Henry says he was overwhelmed by the stream of immigrants who crossed into the United States illegally just in that sector.

"It was an area that was out of control," Henry says. "There were over 100,000 aliens crossing through this area a year."


Today, Henry is assistant chief of the Border Patrol's San Diego sector. He says apprehensions here are down 95 percent, from 100,000 a year to 5,000 a year, largely because the single strand of cable marking the border was replaced by double -- Today, Henry is assistant chief of the Border Patrol's San Diego sector. He says apprehensions here are down 95 percent, from 100,000 a year to 5,000 a year, largely because the single strand of cable marking the border was replaced by double -- and in some places, triple -- fencing.and in some places, triple -- fencing.

The first fence, 10 feet high, is made of welded metal panels. The second fence, 15 feet high, consists of steel mesh, and the top is angled inward to make it harder to climb over. Finally, in high-traffic areas, there's also a smaller chain-link fence. In between the two main fences is 150 feet of "no man's land," an area that the Border Patrol sweeps with flood lights and trucks, and soon, surveillance cameras.

Did Trump build the fence in San Diego? Or is it possible that we've been building walls where they make sense for a long time before Trump?

There are places where a wall makes sense. Most of those places already have walls and fencing. A giant wall everywhere doesn't make any sense.
 
This stunt is ok but showing up to a restaurant crosses the line?
 
Activists Jump Nancy Pelosi’s Mansion Wall With Illegal Immigrants, Demand Entry To Her Home

Can't buy comedy this good!!


Activists Jump Nancy Pelosi’s Mansion Wall With Illegal Immigrants, Demand Entry To Her Home


Right-wing activists stormed the security wall surrounding House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s California mansion and demanded access into the building Monday.

The group was led by Laura Loomer, an activist who has been at the center of many stunts, including interrupting congressional hearings and chaining herself to the doors of Twitter’s New York offices.

Loomer was joined by a small group of alleged illegal immigrants from Guatemala. Loomer and her accomplices carried a large banner with the faces of notable Americans who have been killed by illegal immigrant crime over the recent years attached to its surface.








https://dailycaller.com/2019/01/14/activists-pelosi-mansion-wall/
 
Re: Activists Jump Nancy Pelosi’s Mansion Wall With Illegal Immigrants, Demand Entry To Her Home

Well good to know that the right-wing has no respect for the laws either.
 
Physical barriers do work! And that has been proven many times in San Degio.

Did Trump build the fence in San Diego? Or is it possible that we've been building walls where they make sense for a long time before Trump?

There are places where a wall makes sense. Most of those places already have walls and fencing. A giant wall everywhere doesn't make any sense.

Exactly. I have not seen anyone seriously discussing the issue ever denying that walls work near highly populated areas, and San Diego is a good example. But simpleton Trumpkins pretend or indeed do not understand that there could be differences from place A to place B along the border, where different security measures are most appropriate and cost-effective.

Hey, Trumpkins, maybe we should also build a wall along our shorelines. You know, Mexicans DO know how to make ships and even submarines, so why not protect all our shorelines with walls too?
 
by jumping over a fence and proving that walls don't even keep right wing snowflakes out, much less determined evil gangster rapist Mexicans (<--- sarcasm, of course).

https://www.newsweek.com/right-wing-activist-laura-loomer-nancy-pelosi-house-1291083

Loomer waltzed right onto Pelosi's property, yet, but a dozen days ago, two DP Trumpkins dissembled, in absolute contravention of reality, to claim that she has "massive high walls" around her home and based on that supposedly being so, in turn, conclude that the alleged fact of Pelosi's having such walls makes her "two-faced."

Do any of the rest of you recall that sophistry? If not, here are two posts from one such thread:
Those Trumpkins, of course aren't the only persons singing that refrain. They are echoing their eponymous leader's remarks. Have they not sussed that he is but a "box of rocks" who lies more than he speaks the truth? It'd seem they have not. One wonders: will they in this thread attempt to reprise the refrain? At some point, one must be held to account for the BS one utters, be one Trump or a Trumpkin.


Red:
I recently created a thread to show Trumpkins' abject idiocy; however, I hardly need do so. To wit, one of Loomer's crew members, per the rubric article, remarked, "It's legal to jump the fence." Jump? What fence? This is Pelosi's "fence":


Pelosi-Zinfandel-Lane-gate-1024x423.png



Pelosi-Zinfandel-Lane-wall-1024x427.png



Small animals maybe jump her "fence." everything and everyone else just walks over it.
 
Physical barriers do work! And that has been proven many times in San Degio.

San Diego Fence Provides Lessons in Border Control
April 6, 2006

https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5323928

Before the fence was built, all that separated that stretch of Mexico from California was a single strand of cable that demarcated the international border.

Back then, Border Patrol agent Jim Henry says he was overwhelmed by the stream of immigrants who crossed into the United States illegally just in that sector.

"It was an area that was out of control," Henry says. "There were over 100,000 aliens crossing through this area a year."


Today, Henry is assistant chief of the Border Patrol's San Diego sector. He says apprehensions here are down 95 percent, from 100,000 a year to 5,000 a year, largely because the single strand of cable marking the border was replaced by double -- Today, Henry is assistant chief of the Border Patrol's San Diego sector. He says apprehensions here are down 95 percent, from 100,000 a year to 5,000 a year, largely because the single strand of cable marking the border was replaced by double -- and in some places, triple -- fencing.and in some places, triple -- fencing.

The first fence, 10 feet high, is made of welded metal panels. The second fence, 15 feet high, consists of steel mesh, and the top is angled inward to make it harder to climb over. Finally, in high-traffic areas, there's also a smaller chain-link fence. In between the two main fences is 150 feet of "no man's land," an area that the Border Patrol sweeps with flood lights and trucks, and soon, surveillance cameras.
LOL they just tunnel under it. Or fly over. Or boat around. That fence is utterly irrelevant.
 
Physical barriers do work! And that has been proven many times in San Degio.

San Diego Fence Provides Lessons in Border Control
April 6, 2006

https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5323928

Before the fence was built, all that separated that stretch of Mexico from California was a single strand of cable that demarcated the international border.

Back then, Border Patrol agent Jim Henry says he was overwhelmed by the stream of immigrants who crossed into the United States illegally just in that sector.

"It was an area that was out of control," Henry says. "There were over 100,000 aliens crossing through this area a year."


Today, Henry is assistant chief of the Border Patrol's San Diego sector. He says apprehensions here are down 95 percent, from 100,000 a year to 5,000 a year, largely because the single strand of cable marking the border was replaced by double -- Today, Henry is assistant chief of the Border Patrol's San Diego sector. He says apprehensions here are down 95 percent, from 100,000 a year to 5,000 a year, largely because the single strand of cable marking the border was replaced by double -- and in some places, triple -- fencing.and in some places, triple -- fencing.

The first fence, 10 feet high, is made of welded metal panels. The second fence, 15 feet high, consists of steel mesh, and the top is angled inward to make it harder to climb over. Finally, in high-traffic areas, there's also a smaller chain-link fence. In between the two main fences is 150 feet of "no man's land," an area that the Border Patrol sweeps with flood lights and trucks, and soon, surveillance cameras.

The US Mexico border fence looks like what DHS has decided it was going to look like in that area.

a-worker-chats-with-residents-at-a-newly-built-section-of-the-us-mexico-border-fence-at-sunland-park-us-opposite-the-mexican-border-city-of-ciudad-juarez-mexico-january-26-2017-reutersjose-luis-gonzalez.jpg
 

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Physical barriers do work! And that has been proven many times in San Degio.

San Diego Fence Provides Lessons in Border Control
April 6, 2006

https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5323928

Before the fence was built, all that separated that stretch of Mexico from California was a single strand of cable that demarcated the international border.

Back then, Border Patrol agent Jim Henry says he was overwhelmed by the stream of immigrants who crossed into the United States illegally just in that sector.

"It was an area that was out of control," Henry says. "There were over 100,000 aliens crossing through this area a year."


Today, Henry is assistant chief of the Border Patrol's San Diego sector. He says apprehensions here are down 95 percent, from 100,000 a year to 5,000 a year, largely because the single strand of cable marking the border was replaced by double -- Today, Henry is assistant chief of the Border Patrol's San Diego sector. He says apprehensions here are down 95 percent, from 100,000 a year to 5,000 a year, largely because the single strand of cable marking the border was replaced by double -- and in some places, triple -- fencing.and in some places, triple -- fencing.

The first fence, 10 feet high, is made of welded metal panels. The second fence, 15 feet high, consists of steel mesh, and the top is angled inward to make it harder to climb over. Finally, in high-traffic areas, there's also a smaller chain-link fence. In between the two main fences is 150 feet of "no man's land," an area that the Border Patrol sweeps with flood lights and trucks, and soon, surveillance cameras.

It's ironic that Trump's religous right followers ignore the most famous walls of all. Jericho.
 
Exactly. I have not seen anyone seriously discussing the issue ever denying that walls work near highly populated areas, and San Diego is a good example. But simpleton Trumpkins pretend or indeed do not understand that there could be differences from place A to place B along the border, where different security measures are most appropriate and cost-effective.

Hey, Trumpkins, maybe we should also build a wall along our shorelines. You know, Mexicans DO know how to make ships and even submarines, so why not protect all our shorelines with walls too?

Mexico does not send up any product. There is no demand for drugs in the US

cargo_t600.jpg
 
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