Thanks for human rights
【USA Mail
magazine from the White House 2018-05-02a 】
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Your
1600 Daily:
The
White House • May 1, 2018
Driving the
Day
•
President
Donald J. Trump presents the Commander-in-Chief’s Trophy to
the Army college football team, which defeated Air Force and
Navy this season. Watch
live at 12 p.m. ET.
•
The
President will meet the crew of Southwest Flight 1380, thanking
them for their heroic actions following an equipment
malfunction that claimed one life two weeks ago.
•
Israel released
information yesterday about Iranian efforts to develop
missile-deliverable nuclear weapons. Read
the statement from Press Secretary Sarah Sanders.
The quiet
patriotism of our next CIA Director
Last week, CIA
Deputy Director Gina Haspel assumed the role of Acting Director
upon Mike Pompeo’s swearing-in as America’s 70th Secretary
of State. Haspel is President Trump’s choice to succeed
Secretary Pompeo at the CIA’s helm on a permanent basis.
Service in the
CIA is largely quiet, behind-the-scenes work to keep
America safe. The names of these men and women are often
unknown to the wider public, but their contributions to
national security are indispensable. Haspel’s rise within the
Agency is a testament to the crucial work of these public
servants.
Like Secretary
Pompeo, Haspel’s credentials are far-reaching. She
joined the CIA in the waning days of the Cold War and years
later, with the fight against al Qaeda heating up, she
requested a transfer to the CIA's Counter Terrorism Center. Her
first day on the job was September 11, 2001.
That
sense of patriotism is exactly what Americans deserve in a CIA
Director.
Stunning
new data on unaccompanied alien children
The costs from
America’s porous immigration system continue to rise.
At the end of April, news
broke that between October 2016 and December 2017, the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) was unable to
locate nearly 1,500 of the 7,635 unaccompanied alien minors it
attempted to reach—almost one-fifth of its file.
“I don’t
care what you think about immigration policy, it’s wrong,”
Sen. Rob Portman (R-OH) said. He’s right: A very small
percentage of the unaccompanied alien children (UAC) who
illegally enter the United States each year are ultimately
removed, creating a major public safety challenge.
Loopholes in our
immigration laws put both UACs and American citizens at risk.
Most UACs are older teens (16-17 years old) from Honduras,
Guatemala, and El Salvador. Some are MS-13 gang members who use
our immigration system to infiltrate the United States, but
UACs who are not gang members are still at risk of harm from
MS-13. This broken system is dangerous for everyone.
Learn
more about how President Trump is calling on Congress to fix
this problem.
Photo of
the Day
Official White House
Photo by Andrea Hanks
President Donald
J. Trump and President Buhari of the Federal Republic of
Nigeria | April 30, 2018
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● Here,
many foreigners are victims. You are a #MeToo
victim too.
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