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Home » Archives for D.A. King » Page 8

Why Are the Charities Enabling Illegal Immigration Still Tax-Exempt?

May 10, 2024 By D.A. King

A 501(c)(3) designation isn’t a license to break the law.

The American Conservative
Lewis M. Andrews
Apr 28, 2024

 

As the extent of America’s illegal immigration problem under President Biden has become clearer, so has the role played by many of the country’s best-known nonprofits, including Catholic Charities, the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, the Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service, the Red Cross, and United Way. While ostensibly funded to help overwhelmed personnel at Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) process the influx of self-declared asylum seekers, these and scores of lesser-known charities have instead worked to increase the number of illegal border-crossers dramatically.

We now know, for example, that as far back as 2019 the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) was using the messaging service WhatsApp to update Central American migrants on the safest routes through Mexico to the U.S., the best places to obtain food and water, and how to contact their families. The ICRC was also identifying shelters and help centers along the way to the southern border.

More recently, it has been revealed that few of the charities funded to help legally screened migrants reach their desired destinations in the U.S. ever bother to determine whether the people they transport have actually been processed. “Let’s face it,” said former Department of Homeland Security advisor Charles Marino, “they [the nonprofits] help whoever they encounter. And that includes those that are gotaways, where there are no records of them with CBP [Customs and Border Protection] at all.”

By March 2023, even the Department of Homeland Security had to admit that many of its nonprofit subcontractors were giving just as much assistance to illegal immigrants as they were to those who had been vetted at the border. Two months later, House Committee on Oversight and Accountability Chairman James Comer of Kentucky, Subcommittee on National Security, the Border, and Foreign Affairs Chairman Glenn Grothman of Wisconsin, and Rep. Jake LaTurner of Kansas jointly condemned the degree to which taxpayer funded charities had become responsible for so many “overwhelmed American communities, from Yuma and El Paso to Martha’s Vineyard and New York City.”

To be clear, there is no problem with any nonprofit expressing sympathy for foreign nationals who want to come to the U.S. or for policies which would help them realize their desire. Under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, which clarifies what tax-exempt organizations are legally permitted to do, educating the public on the pros and cons of almost any policy is considered a legitimate activity, no matter which side of the argument the nonprofit itself comes down on.

Nor, interestingly, does the U.S. tax code prevent a nonprofit from violating the laws of another nation. It has long been recognized that a charity which seeks, say, to care for children in a war-torn or impoverished country might have to bribe certain officials in order to fulfill its mission.

At the same time, there is no special exemption which allows an employee of an American tax-exempt organization willfully to ignore his own country’s laws, as increasing numbers have been doing since Biden’s election. This is true no matter how well-intentioned that nonprofit staffer might imagine himself to be. Or even if, as appears to be the case, that staffer has been collaborating with other nonprofit workers who share the same progressive justification for their illicit behavior—namely, that an open border compensates foreigners whose ancestors were once oppressed by American colonialism.

There is also nothing in the tax code which grants charities the right to perform what they believe to be a humanitarian service, if by doing so they inflict serious pain or loss on third parties who have not agreed to the sacrifice. Much has already been written about the drug smuggling, human trafficking, and crime which accompany the current migrant influx, but this is only part of the unwanted suffering American citizens are being forced to endure.

According to a January 11 report to the Immigration Integrity, Security, and Enforcement Subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee, the net cost of assimilating the average illegal immigrant—welfare, education, and medical care minus whatever he or she may ultimately give back in taxes—is $68,390. Multiply that number by just the 1.7 million gotaways known to have entered the country during Biden’s presidency, plus the 2.7 million “inadmissible aliens” who have nevertheless been released over the same period, and the fiscal burden on U.S. taxpayers is over $300 billion. Adjust further for ICE’s estimate of all gotaways, and the country’s involuntarily assumed liability (at a time when both Social Security and Medicare desperately need more funding) jumps to half a trillion.

If the U.S. government cannot bring itself to stop charities from subverting immigration law, it should at least provide citizens with a clear enough picture of what is really happening at the border to make better informed decisions about their personal giving. As Mike Howell, director of the Heritage Foundation’s Oversight Project, has observed, “A lot of people who donate to these organizations don’t full well know what their money’s going towards.” Many “do a lot of good in certain places,” he adds, “but this is a big bad.”

And yet the Biden administration has gone out of its way to keep such information as hidden from the public as possible. According to Howell, the billions which the charities facilitating illegal immigration get from Washington are filtered through so many federal agencies that an accurate accounting of what each does and how much it spends is almost impossible. Indeed, says Marino, it’s difficult to know even how many are operating along the southwest border.

* The role of nonprofits in fostering illegal immigration is further obscured by channeling their funding through various United Nations agencies under the guise of “foreign aid.” The latest of these UN-camouflaged schemes, as reported by Center for Immigration Studies, aims to “dole out $1.6 billion in cash, debit cards, food, clothing, medical treatment, shelter, and [transportation]” to millions of U.S.-bound immigrants in 2024 alone.

It is only because of the IRS requirement that all tax-exempt groups make public their annual income statements that we have any idea of the extent to which many have become a part of what the Heritage Foundation’s Lora Ries has dubbed the “illegal immigration industrial complex.” A recent analysis… please read the entire essay here.

 

Filed Under: Recent Posts

Republican Kasey Carpenter censured by his District GOP officials

May 9, 2024 By D.A. King

Republican Rep Kasey Carpenter.

The 14th Congressional District Georgia Republican Party censured State Rep. Kasey Carpenter (R-Dalton), according to the Dalton Daily Citizen News.

The Georgia 14th Congressional District Republican Party at its annual convention in Rome recently censured state Rep. Kasey Carpenter, R-Dalton, for being the sole Republican in the state House of Representatives to vote against the Georgia Criminal Alien Track and Report Act.

That bill, which requires local law enforcement agencies to cooperate with federal immigration authorities, passed both the state House and Senate and was recently signed into law by Gov. Brian Kemp.

In March, Carpenter was censured by the Whitfield County GOP at its annual convention for his vote on that bill as well as speaking out in support last year for a 10-year intergovernmental agreement between Whitfield County, Whitfield County Schools and the city of Varnell that allows a tax allocation district to help fund high-end commercial development at Patterson Farms.

The resolution censuring Carpenter by the district Republican Party calls the Georgia Criminal Alien Track and Report Act “a modest bill” and notes that Carpenter was the only Republican in the state House to vote against it. It calls Carpenter “wildly out of touch on the illegal immigration issue with most voters in the 14th Congressional District.” That district includes Whitfield and Murray counties.

“I think we ought to support our sheriffs and police officers, not penalize them for not being immigration experts,” Carpenter said in March after being censured by the county GOP. “I’m also concerned as a person who represents a 52% minority district that Hispanics and other people of color could be profiled.”

Carpenter does not have an opponent in the May 21 Republican primary, and no Democrat qualified to run against him in November.

Filed Under: Older Entires

Retired immigration agen Robert Trent: GA Lawmakers double-dealing on immigration – SB 354

May 2, 2024 By D.A. King

Opinion

May 2, 2024                

“I can’t help but wonder what Laken Riley’s family thinks about this travesty.”

Lawmakers double-dealing on immigration

  • UPDATE: May 3, 2024. GA Gov Brian Kemp (R) signed SB 354 on May 2 thus continuing the business-first push for dismantling long-standing law  (OCGA 50-36-1) designed to stop illegal aliens from accessing occupational licenses in Georgia.  As a state Senator, Kemp passed OCGA 50-36-1 out of committee as Chairman of the Senate Public Safety committee in 2006 and voted for the host legislation on the floor for final passage.

Dear editor

Conservatives who are thrilled with the state legislature for passage of HB 1105, the Georgia Criminal Alien Track and Report Act should be aware of another bill passed in the just-ended session. SB 354 is legislation that begins a process of disassembling an entire system designed to make life difficult for illegal aliens in Georgia.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp

Because sorting out and rejecting illegal aliens in the process of issuing occupational licenses is a package deal, ending the licensing process also eliminates the check for illegal immigration status. SB 354 does exactly that for some low skilled workers in cosmetology and barbering industry. Sponsored by Sen. Larry Walker (R-Perry) and pushed by the usual “We want more workers!” suspects in the state Capitol, this business-first legislation will result in more illegal immigration into Georgia. Obedient Republican lawmakers passed SB 354 with only two of them voting against it. Neither of them represents Coastal Georgia. Not many Republican voters want Georgia to be a great place for illegals to “live, work and raise a family.” I can’t help but wonder what Laken Riley’s family thinks about this travesty.

Sadly, nobody should be surprised if Gov. Kemp proudly signs Walker’s dangerous bill into law while assuring us that it’s “good for business.” But it is well worth the effort to ask Kemp to veto this one. SB 354 should be a cause of great shame for Republican voters if they remain silent. Kemp’s Capitol office phone number is 404-656-1776

Robert Trent

St. Marys   (here)

(Note from D.A. – Mr. Trent is a DIS friend and a retired Senior Special Agent of the former Immigration and Naturalization Service (USINS). He served on metropolitan area drug, and organized crime task forces for many years and supervised special agents assigned to the Joint Terrorism Task Force. In addition, he spent ten years as a uniformed Border Patrol agent assigned to both the northern and southern borders. Mr. Trent’s final career assignment was as the Assistant Director, Enforcement Training, U.S. Immigration Officer Academy, Federal Law Enforcement Training Center, Glynco, GA. )

 

Filed Under: Older Entires

An Anti-Enforcement Mexican Marxist in Georgia: Adelina Nichols says “NO” to HB 1105, ‘The Georgia Criminal Alien Track and Report Act of 2024’ #GLAHR

April 20, 2024 By D.A. King

 

The below is from an 11 Alive TV ‘news’ video in March, 2024 on the resistance to HB 1105.

  • Translation by DIS board member, Maria Silvia Montoya

To bypass the rest of the third-world, open borders goop and see only Adelina in action, start video here

Adelina Nichols, executive director of GLAHR and BLA (Black, Latino and Asian Alliance)

“For everyone that is listening and will be viewing this video  – we oppose HB 1105. It is legislation that will be on the floor of the House of Representatives and that reflects racism and discrimination to the immigrant community in general.  We condemn that police pursue the Latino community for only racial reasons.  We also condemn that we are used as scapegoats by politicians that want to enrich their political platforms.  We will not allow this and we say enough is enough of the mistreatment of our communities.  Please join this campaign where we are asking senators to vote NO on HB 1105.  We must all come together to stop all these legislative policies that come to directly attack our community.  We are not toys, we are not pieces of cardboard that they can do whatever they want with our lives for political purposes.

Today we say NO to HB 1105 and also to 287 (g), we say NO to racism, we say NO to all laws that affect, impact, aggravate, and arrest our communities that have contributed so much to this country for more than 30 years.

We can not continue to permit that these proposals continue and take political advantage of the Latino community.  We say we are going to come out, we are going to mobilize, we are going to vote in these coming elections.  Let your voices be heard, participate, mobilize, inform yourself, educate yourself – the legislation has not passed.  It is important that you know it has not passed.  There are unconstitutional things that they do not explain.  We need to mobilize, organize, participate and search out friends that have the capacity to vote – and have them vote.  This is the only way we can remove all the legislators that only want to benefit from the anti-immigrant sentiment.  We condemn HB 1105, enough of them using the community, enough of them using us to enrich their political platforms. We condemn the racism against our community, the discrimination and the racial profiling.  Come with us, we are going to fight, we are going to the streets, we are going to mobilize, support the cause. The fight continues.  The fight continues.  Not one more deportation.”

  • See more on Adelina and GLAHR here and here .

  • And here.

 

Filed Under: Older Entires

Transcript, state Senator Larry Walker presents SB 354 to House subcommittee – and an informative note

April 18, 2024 By D.A. King

 

The below transcript is taken from the March 14, 2024 meeting of the House Regulated Industries subcommittee on occupational and professional licensing . Video here (start at 13:26). Audio below.

Note: In early February I had a lengthy email thread/exchange with Sen. Walker about the consequences of his bill on the existing immigration check for applicants for occupational licenses. After the murder of Laken Riley, Sen. Walker did not explain to the subcommittee that ending the occupational licensing requirement for workers covered in his bill also ends the verification of lawful presence immigration check mandated in OCGA 50-36-1.

  • To be clear: If SB 354 becomes law, applicants for jobs covered in the bill will no longer be required to file this affidavit.

I also note that after Sen. Walker saw his bill passed out of the House subcommittee, I twice informed the full committee chairman. Rep Alan Powell (R- Hartwell) of the fact that eliminating the occupational licensing process also eliminates the immigration verification of lawful presence. One of those communications is linked here. The other one was handed to him.

He passed the legislation out anyway – and said nothing to his committee members about the immigration component.

dak

https://newdustininmansociety.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Walker.-House-sub-sn354.m4a
  • Transcription by Rev.com. My cost: $28.00 and about two hours of my time.

 

Subcommittee chairman Rep Jason Ridley

Number 0689, is that correct?

Sen. Larry Walker on SB 354:

Yes, sir.

Subcommittee chairman

All right.

Sen. Larry Walker on SB 354:

That’s what I have.

Subcommittee chairman

Take it away.

Sen. Larry Walker on SB 354:

Uh, and as you mentioned in your intro, um, I’ve been kind of on a little mini crusade, individual crusade to try to cut red tape, streamline license and reveal licenses, that kind of thing. Um, we’ve got some of the most onerous license requirements in the country, we’ve got a workforce shortage, uh, we need to eliminate barriers to work wherever we can I feel like. And in the cosmetology field, which I know this has been attempted several times, uh, when I, when I dropped the cosmetology Bill, former Senator P.K. Martin called me and just laughed. And, uh, he, he had a, uh, bad experience, got, I think, killed over one. But this is very, very narrow. And what we’re attempting to do, I’ve got all these talking points, but I’m better at just trying to talk to you, um, like a conversation. Um, what we’re attempting to do is we’re trying to carve out shampoo, people that only do shampooing and styling of hair, and people that only apply makeup and not require them to have the $17,000 cosmetology course and the 1500 hours of apprenticeship to be able to do those things.

SE. Larry Walker presents SB 354

Um, and I feel like it’s a way for especially lower income people that can’t afford the cosmetology school to enter the field, and hopefully, you know, start earning a decent wage and possibly, possibly go to cosmetology school, uh, and get their full license if they want to. But this is a, we, we are seeing uh, and representative A. Hart can probably tell you that I think they’re called dry bars. I think that might be a brand name. But there are, uh, facilities or businesses that have popped up that, that all they do is shampoo and style hair, and it’s become a popular thing, especially with wedding parties and I guess, uh, you know, special occasions where people like, women in particular like to get together and kind of make a party of getting their hair done. Um, and I just don’t see why they would need to have all of that expensive, uh, training and uh, or course work, and the 1500 hours to be able to establish that type of business.

Um, we did have some pushback, but, but quite frankly the pushback was from people that have a vested interest and are making money by either educating with the course work, charging for the course work, or getting basically free or cheap labor for that 1500 hours. We, I had no real, uh, evidence that the states that have relaxed this in these areas, there’s no evidence that the public safety has been, you know, put at risk. There was a court case that kind of peaked my interest, uh, I think it was last year, it went all the way to the Georgia Supreme Court, it was Jackson versus Raffensperger, and I was here when we passed the lactation specialist license, and I think I voted for it, frankly.

I mean, it was a, kind of a heartwarming, one of those things on the, you know, on the floor, I think I probably voted for it. But anyway, that, the, it was challenged in court that that was a barrier to entry, and the, the state did not have a compelling interest to require a license for that. And when, and the, the court did rule in favor of the plaintiff that, “No, the state does not have, unless there’s a compelling interest of the state to, for public safety or welfare, then the state cannot under the Georgia Constitution, uh, charge you to, to work.” I mean, charge you a tax to work.

Uh, and so, this is a case where I feel like it fits right in, in that. And we, I’m happy to, to kind of try to go through the bill line by line, it’s very prescriptive what you can and cannot do, uh, and I think it’s a, you know, very, I guess I would say limited in what we’re trying to allow. And one other note is makeup artists currently have an exemption for the, if they’re working in the film industry, or if they’re working at a retail makeup counter. And I would argue that a retail makeup counter is probably more susceptible to, to germs and, and, you know, problems where you have all the public coming in and out like they do than, uh, than in a standalone salon. So to me that, that’s a no-brainer. I mean, and these are things people commonly do at their home, uh, they can buy the products over the counter, they can, you know, do their neighbor’s hair if they wanted to, and, and a license of course is not required for that.

Subcommittee chairman

All right. I tend to agree with you, sort of, kind of working construction, you don’t have to go get a general contractor license to start. You know what I mean? First thing you do, you start carrying plywood, you know, up on the roof and learn that trade-

Sen. Larry Walker on SB 354:

(laughs).

Subcommittee chairman

… And then you move on, and so I agree with you that, uh, that I think that may be a reason we’re getting a bit of shortage is, is people may, you know, you try to go through the school, you may figure out you don’t even like it before you get there, but you got this way of starting figure out, you know, exactly where you wanted [inaudible 00:05:53].

Sen. Larry Walker on SB 354:

Yes. So we heard testimony from two young African-American women that talked about what a struggle it was. One of them has now opened a salon, and I think she said she had six employees. But the student debt she had and the struggle to, to get in the field, and this is a, I think hopefully a easier pathway for folks.

Subcommittee chairman

All right, got a couple questions for you, uh, number 23.

Rep Ginny Ehrhart

Thank you so much for bringing the bill. We appreciate it. You answered one of my questions already, um, which was, um, I was gonna ask you to clarify under what circumstances we currently in the state allow for the washing and blow drying of hair and the application of makeup. And you said it’s in those commercial, like an Ulta or something, uh, where customers come in and, uh, they have makeup applied, correct?

Sen. Larry Walker on SB 354:

Yes, ma’am.

Unidentified committee member

Um, I don’t see anything in the bill, and I, I’ve read it a couple of times previously, um, ’cause I know we’ve heard a lot in the past when folks come to testify, um, about burning skin, or acid, or things that can cause harmful reactions to the skin. I don’t see anything in the bill that, um, makes reference to the use of any of these sorts of chemicals. Uh, I think of things like when people get perms, those, those uh, harsh chemicals, or when they get, uh, acid peels or things of that. Looks to me like everything included in this bill would be products that as you said can be purchased over the counter. Um-

Sen. Larry Walker on SB 354:

Yes ma’am, if you… I’ll refer you to line 36 for, for part of that, it’s, um, this would, it, the blow dry styling would exclude cutting hair, the application of dyes, bleach, reactive chemicals, Keratin treatments or other preparations to color or alter the structure of hair. Such practices are distinct from those performed by barber, hair designer, or cosmetologist. But we’re making it clear in that, that language that that is not included or contemplated in what we’re calling blow dry styling.

Unidentified committee member

Okay, thank you for that.

Subcommittee chairman

[inaudible 00:08:11].

Rep Dale Washburn

Uh, thank you uh, Mr. Chairman. Uh, Chairman Walker, I wanna thank you for bringing this bill, and commend you for doing this. Um, I think it’s an excellent bill, it’s simple, it’s to the point. And I appreciate you bringing it, and also appreciate your commentary about licensing in general in Georgia. I’ve been given a lot of thought to this, and, uh, I’ve been in a heavy regulated in- industry for a long time, been in the real estate brokerage business and I’m not suggesting we don’t need to license real estate practitioners. But I do think we need to be looking at the whole licensure structure in our state. And your comment that we need to be making it easy for people to go to work, be able to work, and earn a living, and feed their families and pay taxes in the process is sound thinking.

Sen. Larry Walker on SB 354:

[inaudible 00:09:00].

Rep Dale Washburn

And I appreciate you doing this. And frankly I’m giving some thought to some things that might be done in the future in some other arenas, and I’d be honored to have the opportunity to work with you on some of that if that’s your thought on the senate side.

Sen. Larry Walker on SB 354:

Yeah, I would love, would welcome that.

Rep Dale Washburn

Yeah. So, thank you for the bill.

Sen. Larry Walker on SB 354:

Thank you, sir.

Subcommittee chairman

All right, I got some people who wanna speak on the bill. Um, I think everybody says they’re for the bill. Y’all wanna speak or y’all… Y’all good? Okay. All right, so what’s the will of the committee?

Committee:

[inaudible 00:09:33].

Subcommittee chairman

All right, gotta move, two pass in a second. All in favor, say aye.

Committee:

Aye.

Aye.

Subcommittee chairman

Good…

End of consideration of SB 354.

Filed Under: Older Entires

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D.A. King, 1 April 1952 – 5 March 2025

March 23, 2025 By Fred

We are sorry to inform you that D.A. King, President and founder of the Dustin Inman Society, has left us.

Donald (“D.A.”) Arthur King, 1 April 1952 – 5 March 2025.

D.A. King left this life and his work for the nation that he loved, confident that he has done his best. D.A. passed on peacefully after a private battle with cancer.

“Once a Marine, always a Marine” – D.A. was always visibly proud of his service and his honorable discharge from the U.S. Marine Corps (1970-1976).

D.A. described himself as “pro-enforcement” on immigration and borders, an issue on which he dedicated the last 21 years of his life as an expert activist, writer and public speaker.


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https://youtu.be/w6FPMn0h4fk

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Brian Kemp’s first TV campaign ad, 2018

https://youtu.be/Gx7TsHCH35w

Dustin Inman Society page A-1, New York Times

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Feb. 21, 2023 National Press Club Panel: OVERRUN – “The Greatest Border Crisis in History” From the Center for Immigration Studies

https://youtu.be/seND4qGrvxY

John Stossell: The Southern Poverty Law Center is a scam

https://youtu.be/k41PI54ExFc

The Great Terry Anderson (RIP) on illegal immigration in Los Angeles. – 2009

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dUEl8WYDDus

Terry Anderson video, part 2 – Birthright Citizenship

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6SS-5u8CMB4

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Welcoming Illegal immigration to Georgia with special treatment on college tuition

Retraction demand letter to Atlanta Journal Constitution newspaper (updated, Nov. 2, 5:55 AM)

Media request sent to Technical College System of Georgia – OCGA 50-36-1 – Employers in Apprenticeship program — Updated with response

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OLDER ENTRIES


REMEMBERING BARBARA JORDAN ON IMMIGRATION

Barbara Jordan. (Biography.com) "Those who should get in, get in; those who should be kept out, are kept out; and those who should not be here will be required to leave." - Testimony of the late Barbara Jordan, Chair, U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform on February 24, 1995.

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