Author Topic: Homeland Security, Border, sabotage of energy, transportation, environment  (Read 1084821 times)


Crafty_Dog

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« Last Edit: May 10, 2023, 11:36:26 AM by Crafty_Dog »



Crafty_Dog

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G M

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Crafty_Dog

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Should it come, it could very well be.


G M

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Should it come, it could very well be.

It is coming.

It is unfolding right in front of us.

Crafty_Dog

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Which is why IN ADDITION TO WORKING TO RESTORE ELECTORAL INTEGRITY, PERSUADE OUR FELLOW AMERICANS, AND BY SO DOING WIN THE ELECTIONS, we should also be preparing to protect ourselves from other developments.

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Which is why IN ADDITION TO WORKING TO RESTORE ELECTORAL INTEGRITY, PERSUADE OUR FELLOW AMERICANS, AND BY SO DOING WIN THE ELECTIONS, we should also be preparing to protect ourselves from other developments.

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2023/05/bidens-open-borders-invasion-illegal-alien-tracking-map-shows-movement-of-the-masses-of-illegals-across-the-us-71-end-up-in-republican-districts/

Just a coincidence!

G M

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Collapse is a choice
« Reply #2815 on: May 18, 2023, 01:59:24 PM »





G M

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Re: MY: China plans to hit American Homeland
« Reply #2820 on: May 27, 2023, 08:36:18 AM »
https://michaelyon.locals.com/upost/4062601/important-talk-this-morning-before-we-hit-the-wall-webinar-kinetic-war-on-the-u-s-home-front

5,000 Special Operations Troops waging irregular warfare CONUS would cause this country to grind to a halt.

It would be devastating.

Crafty_Dog

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Hell, look at what the DC Sniper and sidekick accomplished all by themselves.

G M

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Hell, look at what the DC Sniper and sidekick accomplished all by themselves.

Exactly.

Crafty_Dog

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Shot 38 times on Reservation on the border
« Reply #2823 on: May 29, 2023, 10:26:21 AM »
https://www.theepochtimes.com/tribe-demanding-answers-justice-for-member-shot-38-times-by-us-border-patrol-agents_5297058.html?utm_source=News&src_src=News&utm_campaign=breaking-2023-05-29-2&src_cmp=breaking-2023-05-29-2&utm_medium=email&est=ueCTozBBcqWfr9qzYyITdSmi%2BUIXab8e4%2BnA%2BWhZT2uWHsMghjuR9REz1k1yys9Hbgpi


Tribe Demanding Answers, Justice for Member Shot 38 Times by US Border Patrol Agents
Conflicting narratives paint different pictures of Tohono O'odham Nation member's death in Arizona
Mattias family spokeswoman Ofelia Rivas stands while propping a sign with a picture of Ray Mattia, who was shot and killed by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents on May 18, 2023. The photo was taken during a protest in front of the Ajo Border Patrol Station in Why, Ariz., on May 27, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)
Mattias family spokeswoman Ofelia Rivas stands while propping a sign with a picture of Ray Mattia, who was shot and killed by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents on May 18, 2023. The photo was taken during a protest in front of the Ajo Border Patrol Station in Why, Ariz., on May 27, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)
Allan Stein
By Allan Stein
May 29, 2023Updated: May 29, 2023
biggersmaller Print

0:00
12:01



1

WHY, Ariz.—Yvonne Nevarez remembers her late uncle Raymond Mattia as a proud Tohono O’odham Nation member who always took a stand against injustice.

He was a kind, respectful, peace-loving man, she said, making his shooting death by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents even harder to accept.

“I’m angry. I can’t believe it. I don’t want to believe it. Our lives will never be the same,” Nevarez said, struggling through tears.


“He was like a dad to me. And now, he’s gone.”

Family members say that on May 18, Mattia contacted tribal police to report illegal migrants trespassing on his property in Meneger’s Dam Village, a remote southern border community of the Tohono O’odham Nation reservation about 52 miles from Ajo by car.

During a brief encounter with CBP agents, family members say Mattia was shot approximately 38 times for reasons as yet unknown.

“It was literally at his doorstep,” Nevarez told The Epoch Times at a protest gathering near the Ajo Border Patrol Station in Why, Arizona, on May 27.

Epoch Times Photo
Protesters at a rally for Raymond Mattia flash placards at a passing Border Patrol vehicle in Why, Ariz., on May 27, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)
Tribal members and supporters held another demonstration in Tucson on the same day.

“We feel that how they took his life was unjust. There’s no justification for it,” Nevarez said.

The family released a statement calling the shooting a “grievous” incident as “it is apparent what happened.”

“Raymond called for help and, in turn, was shot down on his doorstep. Raymond’s rights were violated by the authorities whom we trust to protect our Nation. Improper and unprofessional actions of the agencies involved were witnessed by family members present near the crime scene.

“Loved ones sat in agony, not knowing of Raymond’s condition until they were told that he had passed away hours later. Raymond lay in front of his home for seven hours before a coroner from Tucson arrived.

The statement added, “In our eyes and hearts, we believe Raymond was approached with excessive and deadly force that took his life. He was a father, brother, uncle, friend, and an involved community member. Raymond always fought for what was right, and he will continue to fight even after his death. This is not an isolated incident, but it should bring awareness of the oppression our people live through.”

Epoch Times Photo
A nephew of Raymond Mattia holds a sign during a protest in Why, Ariz., on May 27, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)
The family has launched a GoFundMe page to raise $10,000 in legal defense fees.

So far, the effort has garnered $2,954.

CBP Responds
On May 22, CBP issued a statement detailing the events leading to Mattia’s death.

The statement said that at 9:04 p.m., the U.S. Border Patrol Tuscon Sector Tactical Operations Center notified the Ajo station that the Tohono O’odham Nation Police Department had requested assistance responding to a report of shots fired near Mattia’s property.

At least 10 CBP agents met with tribal police at the local recreation center to coordinate a joint response.

At 9:32 p.m., a tribal police officer and several CBP agents arrived near Mattia’s residence and “spread out while searching for the man.”

“The officer and agents encountered an individual approximately 103 meters (about 337 feet) northwest of their parked vehicles, outside a residence, at approximately 9:03 p.m.”

At that point, Mattia allegedly “threw an object” at the police officer as they approached.

The object landed “a few feet” from the officer.

“Shortly after the individual threw the object, he abruptly extended his right arm away from his body, and three agents fired their service weapons, striking the individual several times.”

“The individual fell to the ground, and the officer and agents slowly approached the man,” according to the statement.

The statement made no mention of whether Mattia was armed or whether warnings were given before he was shot down.

Epoch Times Photo
An unattended sign with the image of Raymond Mattia in Why, Ariz., on May 27, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)
Resuscitation Efforts Fail
Agents began administering CPR after they could not detect a pulse and requested emergency medical services.

However, there was no air life evacuation available due to bad weather. The agents continued administering CPR without success.

Mattia was pronounced dead at a Pima County hospital at 10:06 p.m. The medical examiner’s office took custody of the body pending an autopsy on May 19, the statement added.

The agents involved in the shooting will remain on administrative leave according to standard practice while authorities investigate the “use of deadly force.”

“All three agents who discharged their weapons and seven additional agents activated their body-worn cameras during the incident.”

The statement added the CBP is “committed to the expeditious release of the body-worn camera footage of this incident as soon as is appropriate to do so without impacting the ongoing law enforcement investigation.”

The Tohono O’odham Police Department and FBI are currently investigating. CBP said the agency’s National Use of Force Review Board would review the incident following the investigation.

Tohono O’odham police referred the matter to the department’s public information officer Matt Smith, who did not return a phone call or text requesting comment from The Epoch Times.

At the May 27 protest in Why, family spokeswoman Ofelia Rivas said tribal members have reported many negative encounters with an “aggressive” Border Patrol in the past.

“This has been going on for quite a while,” Rivas told The Epoch Times. “The Border Patrol claims to have supreme authority on the reservation.”

Epoch Times Photo
A man wears a “Justice For Ray Mattia” camouflage shirt during a rally outside of the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol station in Why, Ariz., on May 27, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)
On her blog site, Bren Norrell, a journalist with Censored News, wrote that Mattia had voiced concerns about alleged Border Patrol collusion with Mexican drug cartels during an interview about a decade ago.

“Raymond told me that he had evidence that U.S. Border Patrol agents in the area were working with the cartels and were involved in drug running,” Norrell wrote.

“Mattia had video evidence that disappeared after he made an official report.”

Rivas corroborated Norrell’s statement anecdotally, saying tribal community members reported observing many interactions between Border Patrol agents and cartel members on Tohono O’odham land.

“Border Patrol would escort the cartel vehicles through the village to wherever they were going through the reservation. Everybody witnessed that. Everybody in the community witnessed that,” she said.

CBP spokesman Robert Daniel did not respond to an email requesting comment from The Epoch Times.

Untold Story
Rivas said she believes “absolutely” that much about Mattia’s fatal encounter with Border Patrol has yet to be explained.

Like his family, she’s awaiting the investigation results, including the body camera footage.

“He’s been a victim for everything he tried to advocate for the community because he is a ceremony person. There’s retaliation—absolute retaliation from the Border Patrol, especially in the border area where you don’t have any help.”

Michelle, a Tohono O’odham Nation member who works in Ajo, spoke of strained relations between the Tohono O’odham Nation and Border Patrol.

“There’s a lot of stuff that happens out there that’s fishy with Border Patrol,” Michelle told The Epoch Times.

“I’m angered and saddened by [Mattia’s death]. I mean, come on—38 shots at one person?”

“From what I’ve seen with the Border Patrol, they’re strict with our tribal members. Excuse my language; they’re kind of [expletives] with us. Some of them are OK. They treat us with respect. Others, they don’t.”

Michelle said illegal migrants trespassing on tribal land happens “all the time” and often goes unchallenged.

“They have illegals coming into yards, trying to steal vehicles. They come and knock on doors asking for water, or they’ll open the door and help themselves in.”

Michelle told The Epoch Times she knows some tribal members who receive money from the cartels helping usher illegals across the reservation.

“It is a big problem,” she said. “I would say tribal members—the young kids—get into it. They get paid [by drug cartels] to cross them over. They get pulled into that. They see the money—fast money. Even the older people are getting into it.

“The cartels pay money. Some of them get pulled deep into it. If they make a mistake … not good.”

Epoch Times Photo
The U.S. Customs and Border Patrol Ajo Border Patrol Station on May 27, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)
Michelle said she couldn’t see why Border Patrol agents had to shoot Mattia 38 times to subdue him.

“For throwing a rock, it doesn’t make sense,” she said. “I can see 38 shots if he had an Uzi or something. From what I’ve heard, he was very well-respected in the community. He helped people.”

‘Frustrating and Sad’
“It’s just like anything else in the world with police officers pulling their guns,” said Wanda, a restaurant server in Ajo. “Out of the seven [agents], not one of them saw he did not have anything in his hand? It’s frustrating—and it’s sad.”

“Do we have a lot of that stuff happening here? No. Am I nervous about it? No. Everybody in Ajo knows the residents and the people who come and visit. It’s almost like we watch out for each other.

“It’s upsetting. How much is a rock going to do? They’re supposed to de-escalate situations, not escalate them,” said another tribal member who did not want to be identified.

Epoch Times Photo
A protester makes a sign in support of shooting victim Raymond Mattia during a protest in Why, Ariz., on May 27, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)
According to CBP data, there have been two fatal shootings and a total of 157 use-of-force incidents in the Tucson Sector in fiscal 2023 to date.

In fiscal 2022, there were three use-of-force incidents involving firearms and 196 total incidents.

Ariella Walker, a humanitarian advocate from Why, said her reason for attending the May 27 protest was to to show her support for the Mattias family.

“It’s just the [CBP] response we’re focusing on,” said Walker, who believes that CBP agents are “trained to dehumanize.”

“I don’t think the [body camera] footage needs to be released for people to be outraged. Just the fact that it happened is enough,” Walker told The Epoch Times.

“We know we’ve seen cases with Border Patrol who have colluded with cartel members assisting in drug running.”

Walker said she fears the shooting incident will disappear in the news cycle.

“We’ve already seen the pattern where something atrocious happens, there’s an outrage. The family is hurt. The country sparks up in arms. Eventually, it’s co-opted and dies slowly in the political system.”

Epoch Times Photo
Raymond Mattia’s first cousin, Tina, raises a fist during a protest outside the Ajo Border Patrol Station in Why, Ariz., on May 27, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)
“Hurt. Disgusted,” is how Tina described her reaction to her first cousin Ray Mattia’s death. “He was just an all-around great guy. He was a peaceful person,” Tina said.

“I believe a story is out there—I don’t know what it is. The truth is out there.”

Niece Nevarez said Mattia’s death has all the outward appearances of an “execution.”

“I feel like it could have turned out differently, but because it was Border Patrol … none of it makes any sense,” she said.



Crafty_Dog

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Crafty_Dog

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« Last Edit: June 10, 2023, 07:30:45 PM by Crafty_Dog »

G M

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Accident?
« Reply #2828 on: June 11, 2023, 09:02:01 AM »
https://www.theburningplatform.com/2023/06/11/somebody-call-mayor-pete/

As Michael Yon said previously that he was taught in SF training to always use fire rather explosives whenever possible when destroying enemy infrastructure.

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Re: Accident?
« Reply #2829 on: June 11, 2023, 09:57:01 AM »
https://www.theburningplatform.com/2023/06/11/somebody-call-mayor-pete/

As Michael Yon said previously that he was taught in SF training to always use fire rather explosives whenever possible when destroying enemy infrastructure.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/roadway-gone-tanker-explosion-destroys-bridge-i-95-bridge-philadelphia


Crafty_Dog

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So that is how they are doing it now , , ,
« Reply #2830 on: June 11, 2023, 06:19:07 PM »

G M

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Re: Accident?
« Reply #2831 on: June 11, 2023, 06:53:51 PM »
https://www.theburningplatform.com/2023/06/11/somebody-call-mayor-pete/

As Michael Yon said previously that he was taught in SF training to always use fire rather explosives whenever possible when destroying enemy infrastructure.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/roadway-gone-tanker-explosion-destroys-bridge-i-95-bridge-philadelphia

https://www.cnn.com/2023/06/11/us/philadelphia-i-95-collapse-fire/index.html

See if they report a decedent found in the cab. Who reported the fire? How did the fire start? Who did the truck belong to? Any camera footage? Why did the truck stop?

https://www.fireengineering.com/hazmat/firefighter-training-gasoline-tanker-close-call/



Crafty_Dog

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I-95 in Philadelphia and solution
« Reply #2832 on: June 13, 2023, 01:52:53 AM »
https://www.theepochtimes.com/repairs-of-collapsed-i-95-in-philadelphia-could-take-months_5326845.html?utm_source=News&deep_link_sub1=article&source_caller=api&shortlink=8eac1v2s&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=breaking-2023-06-12-2&src_src=News&deep_link_value=5326845&src_cmp=breaking-2023-06-12-2&est=HjIWJqlm3pf6FMYwkksRVM1B409L+vb6B3O9bdNbfa0lJ66AkI+sJmDPS1ylWliM7HIb

===================
===================

How to Rebuild Fast After the Interstate 95 Collapse
Incentives for speed are the key. California showed the way after the 1994 Northridge earthquake.
By John FundFollow
June 12, 2023 6:23 pm ET



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The aftermath of the collapse of a part of I-95 highway in Philadelphia, June 11. PHOTO: BILLY KYLE/BILLY KYLE VIA REUTERS
Frustrated by your commute? Unless you’re in the Philadelphia area, it could be worse. A Sunday tanker-truck fire in the city’s northeast caused an Interstate 95 overpass to collapse, closing a stretch of the heavily traveled road and subjecting some drivers to 43-mile detours. Gov. Josh Shapiro says reopening the freeway will take “some matter of months.”

When an illegal Philly tire dump caught fire on a stretch of I-95 in 1996, it merely buckled the payment and melted guardrails. The road was partially closed for six months. But it doesn’t have to be that way. In 2007 a connector on the MacArthur interchange in Oakland, Calif., where three freeways meet, melted from an exploding tanker fire similar to the one in Philadelphia. It was fully rebuilt in 26 days.

A big reason was the selection of the now-defunct contractor C.C. Myers Inc. The company’s bid of $867,000 was estimated to cover only a third of the actual cost, but C.C. Myers counted on making up the difference, since it would be paid an incentive of $200,000 a day if the work was completed in less than two months. The firm earned a $5 million bonus.

C.C. Myers was hired in part because of its legendary record of repairing fallen freeway overpasses in Los Angeles after the 1994 Northridge earthquake. Gov. Pete Wilson was told it would take 26 months to repair the bridges and reopen I-10. Mr. Wilson issued emergency orders to cut red tape, but his moves went far beyond the usual changes to government rules and enabled the freeway to open to its normal heavy traffic in only 84 days.

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Protracted public hearings, environmental-impact reports and other procedural hurdles were suspended. President Bill Clinton refused—under union pressure—to suspend David-Bacon wage rules (as President George Bush had done in 1992 after Hurricane Andrew). But Mr. Wilson did what he could and suspended union-backed limits on overtime in the private sector, among other rules.

Most important, Mr. Wilson used incentives. He told contractors their bids had to specify when work would be finished, and that they would incur a daily penalty of $200,000 if they were late. C.C. Myers won the bid and put on three shifts that worked 24/7. It hired its own locomotive and crew to haul surplus steel from Texas, and Mr. Wilson agreed government inspectors would be on site around the clock to approve the work.

Pennsylvania officials are doing what they can to reroute motorists. Brad Rudolph, the spokesman for the state’s Transportation Department, says his agency will consider “a fill-in situation or a temporary structure” near the collapsed freeway to improve access. But Pennsylvania should seize the initiative and adapt some lessons from other states. The need for speed is urgent. Traffic on I-95 peaks in August as vacation-goers and college students join commuters and truckers on the road.

No doubt the White House will send federal cash, but no one expects it to come up with imaginative solutions or suspend Davis-Bacon union wage rules. State and local officials in Pennsylvania can still follow the example of the 1994 “Northridge miracle” and get I-95 repaired faster than the experts are now predicting.

Mr. Fund is a columnist for National Review and a co-author of “Our Broken Elections: How the Left Changed the Way You Vote.”
« Last Edit: June 13, 2023, 02:31:05 AM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Fires not sabotage or global warming
« Reply #2833 on: June 13, 2023, 02:16:34 AM »
An extreme environmental event struck New York last week. The city experienced some of the worst air quality in the world—and the worst to hit the city in at least a half-century—as dense wildfire smoke surged south from the province of Quebec. Headlines suggested that the primary culprit was climate change, but these claims are inconsistent with peer-reviewed science, the observational record and our growing understanding of the meteorology associated with wildfire events.

I have published extensively on the meteorology of major wildfires, studied the effects of climate change on atmospheric circulation, and received funding from the National Science Foundation and U.S. Forest Service for research dealing with wildfire meteorology.

An unusual atmospheric circulation resulted in wildfire ignition and rapid growth, with an intense low-pressure area pushing undiluted smoke into the New York area. Global warming was only a minor player in this event.

The recent wildfires occurred in the boreal forests of northern Quebec. Fire isn’t rare in that region. The ecology of these forests relies on fire for the release of seeds and forest health. Many of the major boreal fires occur during a narrow temporal window from mid-April through early June, just after the winter snow has melted and before grasses and other small plants grow, reducing flammability. During this short window, the dead vegetation from the previous year can dry out sufficiently to burn if there is an ignition source such as lightning or errant human activity.

Many of the great Quebec fires have occurred during the spring, such as the May 2010 fire that spread massive amounts of smoke into New England and the May 1870 Saguenay fire, which spread smoke as far as the British Isles. Large boreal forest fires during the spring in Canada are neither unusual nor a sign of climate change.

The fires this month began on June 2, as hundreds of lightning strikes ignited vegetation dried by nearly a week of unusually warm weather. The weather prior to the warm spell wasn’t unusually dry, with the Canadian drought monitor showing normal moisture conditions and temperatures near or below normal.

Starting on May 27, an area of high pressure built over south-central Canada, warming and drying the area for several days into early June. With the light surface fuels, such as grasses ready to burn, all that was needed to start a fire was an ignition source, which occurred in early June with a lightning storm associated with low pressure.

The lightning ignited numerous fires and the low-pressure center’s circulation produced high winds that stoked the fires, resulting in rapid uncontrolled growth. Even worse, as the low center pushed south and intensified east of New York, it produced persistent strong winds from the northwest, moving the Quebec smoke into the New York metropolitan area.

It was the perfect storm for smoke in New York, with several independent elements occurring in exactly the right sequence. It’s difficult to find any plausible evidence for a significant climate-change connection to the recent New York smoke event. The preceding weather conditions over Quebec for the months prior to the wildfire event were near normal. There is no evidence that the strong high pressure over southern Canada that produced the warming was associated with climate change, as some media headlines claim. In fact, there is a deep literature in the peer-reviewed research that demonstrates no amplification of high- and low-pressure areas with a warming planet.

The long-term trend in Quebec has been for both precipitation and temperature to increase. Temperatures have warmed about 2 degrees Fahrenheit over the past half-century. Even assuming that this warming is entirely human-induced, it represents only a small proportion of the excessive heat during the event, in which Quebec temperatures climbed to 20 to 25 degrees above normal. The number of wildfires in Quebec is decreasing; there is no upward trend in area burned, which would be expected if global warming was dominant.

The recent intense New York smoke event is a good illustration of the underlying origins of many extreme environmental and weather events. The atmosphere is a chaotic system, dominated by random natural variability. Such variability is like a game of cards—rarely, by the luck of the draw, one is dealt a full house or a straight flush. Climate change’s effects on weather are relatively small compared to random variations inherent in a hugely complex system.

Mr. Mass is a professor of atmosphere sciences at the University of Washington.
« Last Edit: June 13, 2023, 02:30:28 AM by Crafty_Dog »

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GM:

Officials: Driver lost control of tanker before bridge collapse

Both elevated sections of Interstate 95 to be demolished

BY RON TODT, MIKE C ATALINI AND MARC LEVY ASSOCIATED PRESS PHILADELPHIA | The driver of a tractor-trailer hauling gasoline lost control on an off-ramp and flipped the tanker truck on its side in a wreck that set it afire and destroyed a section of the East Coast’s main north-south highway, Pennsylvania’s top transportation official said Monday.

In the first official accounting of a wreck that threw hundreds of thousands of morning commutes into chaos and disrupted untold numbers of businesses, state Transportation Secretary Mike Carroll said the driver was northbound “trying to navigate the curve, lost control of the vehicle, landed on its side and ruptured the tank.”

The driver was feared dead, and a relative of a New Jersey truck driver who has not been heard from since Sunday told the Philadelphia Inquirer that investigators had contacted the family in an effort to identify human remains found in the wreckage.

Pennsylvania State Police said a body was turned over to the Philadelphia medical examiner and coroner, but did not identify the remains or respond when asked if they belonged to the driver.

Interstate 95 will be closed in both directions for weeks at the start of summer travel season. The elevated southbound portion of I-95 will have to be demolished, as well as the northbound side, Mr. Carroll said. Motorists should avoid the northeast corner of the sixth-largest city in the country, transportation officials said.

The accident also disrupted the automotive route from Canada to Florida through the Boston, New York and Washington metropolitan areas, increasing Americans’ dependence on air travel and the interstate rail network.

Videos shared on social media showed a number of close calls around the accident, with people driving through the area as flames licked upward from the fire below. The National Transportation Safety Board said it was sending a team to investigate the accident.

Mr. Carroll said the damaged I-95 segment carries about 160,000 vehicles daily. State police don’t know if the driver was speeding and no other vehicle has been found. Officials said they had been in contact with the trucking company, but they did not identify it.

Mr. Carroll said the highway span was 10 to 12 years old, had appeared sound and they blamed the damage on the heat of the fire, which took an hour to control.

Gov. Josh Shapiro signed a disaster declaration Monday, saying it gives state agencies the ability to skip normal biddingand- contracting requirements so the span can be repaired faster.

High heat from the fire or the impact of an explosion could have weakened the steel beams supporting the overpass, according to Drexel University structural engineering Professor Abi Aghayere. Bridges like the one that collapsed don’t typically have fire protection, like concrete casing, he added. It could have been coated in a fire-retarding paint, but even then the beams could have been weakened.

“It just gives you time,” Mr. Aghayere said.

Among many transportation changes across the region, the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority said it was operating three extra morning and late afternoon trains on its Trenton, New Jersey, line, and adding capacity to regularly scheduled lines during peak hours.

This section of I-95 was part of a $212 million reconstruction project that wrapped up four years ago, state Transportation Department spokesman Brad Rudolph said. PennDOT rated the 104-foot span as in “good” condition earlier this year.

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What curve?
« Reply #2839 on: June 13, 2023, 07:09:45 AM »
In the first official accounting of a wreck that threw hundreds of thousands of morning commutes into chaos and disrupted untold numbers of businesses, state Transportation Secretary Mike Carroll said the driver was northbound “trying to navigate the curve, lost control of the vehicle, landed on its side and ruptured the tank.”


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Meanwhile, at the Rio Grande
« Reply #2840 on: June 13, 2023, 01:37:15 PM »

Crafty_Dog

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« Last Edit: June 15, 2023, 07:52:25 PM by Crafty_Dog »



Crafty_Dog

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This is lower than previous numbers
« Reply #2844 on: June 22, 2023, 09:07:40 AM »
Illegal aliens in the U.S.: Recent analysis of the number of illegal aliens living in the U.S. estimates that the population sat at roughly 17 million as of 2021. The analysis was conducted by the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) and it comes in at a higher number than other immigration tracking groups that estimate 11 million illegal aliens. FAIR's report states, "This estimate is also a 2.3 million increase from our end-of-2020 estimate, meaning the illegal alien population increased 16 percent nationwide during just the first two years of Joe Biden's presidency." The report does acknowledge that no one knows "exactly how many people cross the border illegally and evade immigration authorities, nor can anyone accurately quantify overstays or gotaways." However, due to Joe Biden's de facto open-border policy, it's a good bet that FAIR's higher estimate of illegal aliens is closer to reality than the lower numbers being claimed by the Biden administration.

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https://www.theepochtimes.com/dnc-continues-to-cite-2005-number-on-illegal-immigration-studies-indicate-real-figure-likely-3-times-higher_4879007.html?utm_source=partner&utm_campaign=BonginoReport

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There was a Yale and or MIT and or Princeton study a few years back asserting 22-24M.

Can we (hint, that means you GM haha) find it?
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Reminder


Madison Warned About ‘Sanctuary’ States
He foretold their interest in ‘exaggerating their inhabitants’ to ‘swell’ their numbers in Congress.
By David B. Rivkin Jr. and John S. Baker Jr.
Aug. 2, 2020 3:32 pm ET

President Trump met wide derision last month when he issued an executive order excluding illegal aliens from the census numbers used for apportioning House seats. “Persons means persons,” Thomas Wolf of the Brennan Center for Justice told a reporter. “Everyone must be counted.” But counting is different from allocating political power, and Mr. Trump has the better constitutional argument.

Section 2 of the 14th Amendment provides: “Representatives shall be apportioned among the several States according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each State, excluding Indians not taxed.” This revises a provision in Article I that uses similar language but also includes the infamous Three Fifths Clause.

When voting on the latter provision, the Constitutional Convention used the term “number of inhabitants.” The Committee on Style shortened that to “numbers,” but that linguistic change was of no import. As Chief Justice Earl Warren noted in Powell v. McCormack (1969), the committee wasn’t authorized to make substantive changes to previously voted provisions. In Wesberry v. Sanders (1964), Justice Hugo Black wrote for the court that “the debates at the Convention make at least one fact abundantly clear: that . . . in allocating Congressmen, the number assigned to each State should be determined solely by the number of the State’s inhabitants.”

The administration argues that illegal aliens don’t qualify as inhabitants, and it’s right. The definition of “inhabitant” at the time of the Founding had an important political and economic context because of the legal responsibility of localities to care for the destitute under the 1601 Act for the Relief of the Poor. An inhabitant was a person who rightfully resided in a jurisdiction, contributing to and qualifying for available benefits. Like illegal aliens today, those whose presence was unlawful were not considered inhabitants and were subject to removal.

According to the 2018 Yale study, there are at least 16.7 million, and more likely around 22.1 million, illegal aliens in the U.S. The apportionment following the 2010 census yielded congressional districts containing roughly 710,000 people each. That means the illegal-alien population is the equivalent of around 30 districts, more than any state except California (53) or Texas (36).

States inflating census numbers has been a ever-present danger to the proper functioning of America’s federalist system. In Federalist No. 54, James Madison addressed what he called states’ “interest in exaggerating their inhabitants” to bolster their representation in Congress: “It is of great importance that the States should feel as little bias as possible, to swell or to reduce the amount of their numbers.”

Millions of illegal aliens are distributed disproportionately throughout the U.S., more than enough to cause shifts in apportionment of congressional seats, which also affect the Electoral College. In an example of the kind of swelling Madison warned about, some states and localities entice illegal aliens with “sanctuary” laws promising to shield them from federal law enforcement and provide them free health care and other benefits. In the years ahead, that could make the illegal alien population become larger and more concentrated in these states.

Yet this is not simply a blue vs. red state conflict over political power. Sanctuary state California will lose representatives if illegal aliens are excluded from apportionment, but so will Texas and Florida. It is also a Sun Belt vs. Rust Belt conflict. States like Indiana, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Ohio are the ones that stand to gain (or at least not lose) in apportionment under the president’s plan.

Since only a few states lose representation after each decennial census, this gradual erosion of political power has rarely been challenged. The Supreme Court has never addressed the constitutionality of including illegal aliens in congressional apportionment and has only occasionally been asked to do so (including in a 2011 case in which we represented Louisiana). When the court rejected Mr. Trump’s proposed citizenship question on the census, it was on technical administrative procedure ground, not the merits.

That leaves it to the political branches to carry out the constitutional mandate of counting only inhabitants for reapportionment. Congress has done so, by enacting statutes giving the president wide discretion on reapportionment decisions. Mr. Trump is right to take the next step.

Mr. Rivkin practices appellate and constitutional law in Washington. He served in the White House Counsel’s Office and Justice Department under Presidents Reagan and George H.W. Bush. Mr. Baker is a visiting professor at Georgetown’s Center for the Constitution and a professor emeritus at Louisiana State University Law Center.
« Last Edit: June 22, 2023, 09:16:37 AM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

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Hotzone: The Next Attack
« Reply #2845 on: June 23, 2023, 08:23:13 AM »


G M

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Re: biowarfare / worse when title 42 ends in 6 days !!
« Reply #2847 on: July 01, 2023, 07:04:52 AM »
https://www.theburningplatform.com/2023/07/01/florida-issues-statewide-emergency-malaria-alert/

I wonder how that happened...

"CCP has weaponized Dengue and drones to dispense mosquitos. Panamanians here are now overrun with Malaria at levels they never saw until the invasion through Darien."

 :x

but we have Biden Myorkas and Harris and the Silicon shit hole.

so nothing is done of course

the border wide open
and not stating 10,000 per day will flood the US very soon
as title 42 ends May 11

yet all we hear about is Clarence Thomas
and racial themes and gay themes all day and night on MSM

 :x