1. President Donald J. Trump's Deportation Of Unemployed U.S. Citizens
Today I was surfing around on YouTube, and I stumbled across a video in which a YouTuber who goes by the user name of Farron Balanced claimed that President Donald J. Trump was threatening to deport each and every unemployed United States citizen. I don't know how true this same video is, because he didn't show a clip of President Trump specifically stating that he planned to carry out this same action. In any event, here is that same video below.
YouTuber Farron Balanced Claims That President Trump Will Deport All Unemployed U.S. Citizens
Well, YouTuber Farron Balanced? If what you're saying is true, President Trump won't have to worry about deporting any American citizens inasmuch as many of them are leaving the United States for good on their own volition. Watch the video below, and you'll see what I mean.
Americans Are Leaving The United States In Record Numbers
I am someone who doesn't particularly like it whenever anyone puts down President Trump or badmouths him. He has done good things for the United States. Also, this exodus of Americans from our nation all started back when Joe Biden was in the White House, because many people knew that he was going to screw everything up with our economy and everything else; and he did.
Nonetheless, if President Trump is really contemplating deporting unemployed Americans, then there is a constructive way that he could go about it. Registered sex offenders ("registrants") are constantly dealing with unemployment and even homelessness inasmuch as many employers won't hire them once they see their face and information on the proverbial list.
Most of these registrants would like the opportunity to leave the United States and start out fresh somewhere where they will feel welcome. If President Trump really wants to do a good deed, he should fund the expatriation of these same registrants and send them to nations of their choice. Plain and simple.
2. A Promised Land For Registered Sex Offenders
Let's face it. There are way too many people on the sex-offender registry here in our nation that don't belong on it.
You have these Romeo-and-Juliet couples in which the husband got into trouble with the law when he was 19 years old for having pre-marital sex with his wife when she was 17 years old. The authorities in that same event decided to treat this man no differently from a serial child rapist merely because he and his wife were each on opposite sides of the legal age line at the outset of their sexual involvement, even though he and his wife were watching Sesame Street together back when they were both toddlers.
These same registrants and their families are often struggling on $11,000-a-year incomes in a nation in which the cost of housing and living is becoming unfeasible for even people that are not on the sex-offender registry. These people direly want a way out of the United States.
State and local elected officials are doing virtually nothing to clean our sex laws up so that we don't have this problem here in the so-called land of milk and honey. They cater to all these special-interest groups instead that couldn't care less about the greater good.
There is a gentleman named Steven Robert Whitsett over in Germany who has a YouTube channel named "Common Sense Laws," and he is starting a program to assist American registrants to get established over in Germany and in other European nations. The major obstacle for this program is that many registrants in our nation simply don't have the financial means to move abroad.
Instead of randomly deporting unemployed Americans, President Trump should start a program in its place that would offer registrants funds to expatriate from the United States so that they could seek the assistance they need from Good Samaritans like Mr. Whitsett to find a better way of life in Europe or even elsewhere. Over in Europe, they can find decent employment and decent housing. Here in our nation, they continue to be marginalized. The video below shows how desperate this situation has become.
Gail Colletta Describes How Upside Down American Sex Laws Are. Even Diehard Child Advocate Ron Book Disapproves Of Registrants' Substandard Living Conditions
Gail Colletta is the president of the Florida Action Committee. Fact has it that many of the adults on the sex-offender registry have been convicted of doing things that would have been perfectly legal for a teenager interacting sexually with another teenager to do.
Police officers have also been known to tunnel into people's computers and plant illegal pornographic material there merely to jack up their arrest and conviction numbers. This same injustice could have just as easily have happened to Ms. Colletta's son.
Self-proclaimed child advocates and other self-righteous do-gooders will harp about how they don't want convicted sex offenders anywhere near them. Then they shouldn't have a problem with President Trump sending registrants to foreign countries to start their lives all over again.
Some of you are going to argue with me that victims of sex crimes don't get to start their lives all over again and, therefore, registered sex offenders should not be granted that same opportunity at the taxpayers' expense. I agree that you do present a fair argument, and I completely get it.
Nevertheless, I'm not encouraging President Trump to fund the expatriation of violent rapists and serial child molesters who target toddlers and other little kids under the age of eleven. However, as Ms. Colletta said in the video above, how does it make any sense for the law to treat a 19-year-old young man who had sex with his 15-year-old girlfriend no differently from a 50-year-old man who sexually molested an 8-year-old girl? It doesn't, even though both offenses are two different things.
If President Trump were to fund the relocation of registrants from our nation to places of their choice like Germany, Austria, Spain, France, and other industrialized nations, many of these registrants could use their skills and education to secure the types of jobs abroad that they once had here in the United States before their brushes with the law. If they don't have such skills and education, they would only need to learn how to operate a forklift; and they'd be quickly hired in whatever nation they choose to reside.
3. Final Thoughts
The United States has some of the most ludicrous sex laws in the world. Our statutory-rape laws leave so very much to be desired. These laws actually send minors to jail on contempt-of-court charges for refusing to cooperate with prosecutors who force them to take the witness stand against their older sex partners in these types of cases. How does any of that make any sense?
Many registrants and their families want out of this prison that our nation has become. They have greener pastures waiting for them. If President Trump has the resources to deport any American who is unemployed, why doesn't he deport unemployed Americans who want out of this nation to the nations of their choice? Those unemployed Americans are mostly registrants.
Many registrants are barely scraping by to pay their rent and survive with the very limited income they do earn whenever they are lucky enough to find work from someone willing to hire them. Vigilantes put their lives and the lives of their families in danger.
Many of these registrants never truly victimized anybody, but self-righteous do-gooders are too narrow-minded to see their situation from a bird's-eye view. These self-righteous do-gooders trust every piece of garbage that the press and the media feed them.
President Trump has the ability to get these same registrants and their families out of harm's way. All he has to do is sign an executive order to fund their expatriation to nations that will receive them with open arms. If all these self-righteous do-gooders hate them so much, then they shouldn't miss them if and when President Trump does deport them to nations of their choice.
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