Re: Democrats, dependency and illegal aliens:
Sometimes it takes a tangential, unexpected political event to reveal real, fundamental truths that some political groups want to keep hidden.
Such is the case with the current federal government shutdown that Democrats caused.
As Democrats wail about the shutdown they voted for, the dollar figures they mention rare having the unintended effect of revealing their long term strategy, angering those who until now, were blissfully unaware of the mendacious machinations of devious Democrats.
Here's what I think is happening.
For almost a century, Democrats have consistently created government wealth redistribution programs that create dependency in the general population, because people who depend on taxpayer largesse tend to want it to continue. So, they vote for Democrats.
The so-called "Great Society" and subsequent government giveaways like welfare, Section 8 housing, SNAP, Obamacare, etc. have all siphoned wealth from middle class taxpayers (makers) that Democrats have then used to buy votes from low-income welfare-dependent people (takers). This worked fine, until the crazies began pushing platform policies that many members of traditional Democrat voting blocs found repugnant, often for religious reasons.
In the last decade or so, some Democrats have come to realize that their traditionally solid demographic groups are slowly moving up the economic ladder, and the newly-minted makers found themselves averse to being taxed heavily to support the takers.
Recognizing that their traditional base was shrinking, a few Democrats began to think of ways to create a new underclass of benefit-dependent voters.
I believe that is the reason why the Autopen Administration refused to enforce immigration laws and let ~20,000,000 largely unvetted illegal aliens into the country, many of whom found ways to make themselves eligible for various Democrat wealth redistribution programs, legally or illicitly. Why wouldn't they? Numerous "charities" and NGOs (many funded by tax dollars and all of them tax-exempt) were eager to help them circumvent the law and eligibility requirements.
Lulled into a false sense of security by an overreliance on historical presidential voting patterns (the incumbent effect), a lot of Democrats complacently figured there was no way Trump could win in 2024 after their lawfare offensive, so they were confident a re-elected Biden Administration could push through amnesty and voila!: 20,000,000 new, poor Democrat voters to ensure another 50 years of Democrat dominance.
But then, that debate happened, and the Democrats were hoist by their own petard.
They had to give the pinch-hitter spot to Shamala or face accusations of racism and/or sexism.
The Cackler proved unequal to the task, despite spending so much that the Party is still in debt, and Trump won. There's one obvious reason why Shamala fell short of Autopens' 81 million vote tally that doesn't need to involve 2020 election fraud.
Looks to me as if a lot of voters might've stayed home or voted for Trump instead because Shamala was a lousy candidate.
Since he'd had 4 years to plan his second bite at the cherry, Trump and his well-prepared team hit the ground running on January 20, and it caught the Democrats off guard, I suspect.
Keeping his main campaign promise (something Democrats seem unfamiliar with) Trump immediately began rounding up and deporting as many future Democrat voters as he could.
It seems obvious to me that Democrats still want to retain as many illegals as they can, hence their unprecedented efforts to hinder ICE by any means they can muster.
They were even willing to shut down the government over providing taxpayer-funded benefits to their new constituents - illegals.
Basically, Democrats are fighting a delaying action based on their hopes of winning Congress back in 2026, (that historical voting pattern again, this time the midterm effect). They are fixated on using the power of the purse to stop Trump from deporting or disenfranchising any more illegals - whose votes they will need in 2028.
The immediate challenge they face as the minority party is to somehow save those exorbitantly expensive programs that are needed to maintain the dependency they know a new economic underclass will reward them for.
And that's where we are.
The Democrats are training to depend on the Democrats.
She is not sure what to do. Look for a job.
Here's where we are right now.
SNAP funding will not possibly be restored until Congress reconvenes on November 4, unless their captive Obamunist judge orders SNAP funding be restored immediately.
The midterms are imminent and they are hoping that by blaming Republicans for the losses, they can take control of Congress next January and either hamstring President Trump or impeach him.
SNAP's November issuance is officially paused starting the 1st, per USDA. The $6 billion contingency reserve is off-limits for regular benefits, and that's the flashpoint for the lawsuit from 25+ Democrat-led states and D.C., filed Tuesday in Massachusetts federal court.
The venue for the suit was carefully chosen. This is classic venue-shopping, and this one's got all the hallmarks.
Filing in Boston's U.S. District Court (District of Massachusetts) wasn't random; it's a masterclass in picking a friendly forum where the plaintiffs, led by AG Andrea Joy Campbell, hold home-field advantage.
With blue Massachusetts ground zero for the suit (hosting the rally, the pressers, and a governor who's been vocal about the "inhumane" fallout), it's no surprise they anchored it there under 28 U.S.C. § 1391(e) for suits against federal agencies.
The hook? Venue's proper in any district where a plaintiff resides, and with the Mass. AG as lead, that box is checked, while dodging circuits like the D.C. or Fifth, which might lean more skeptical of aggressive APA (https://guides.library.cornell.edu/citing_us_gov_docs/lawsStatutes) challenges.
The assignment to Judge Indira Talwani? That's the cherry on top. An Obama appointee (confirmed in 2014), she's got a track record on administrative law that's Democrat-plaintiff-friendly.
In the District of Massachusetts, cases are randomly assigned, but the pool is heavily comprised of Democrat appointees. The odds of drawing a judge sympathetic to mandatory spending arguments? Much higher than in, say, the Northern District of Texas.
Democrats are pushing hard for an emergency injunction by week's end, arguing the funds must flow under the Food and Nutrition Act—echoing precedents you likely navigated in past cycles. A favorable ruling from Judge Talwani could override the Congressional reconvene deadline and keep those EBT cards loaded, thereby avoiding any stigma they'd otherwise face for "starving the hungry".
- Holding agencies to strict APA compliance
- Rejecting arbitrary delays in benefit programs
- Granting preliminary injunctions in emergency entitlement cases
The blue team is gunning for an emergency TRO by Friday (November 1), citing the Food and Nutrition Act's plain text on contingency funds for "program operations" during lapses, citing precedents like the 2019 shutdown where courts forced WIC continuity.
The complaint cites 2018–2019 shutdown cases where courts (including in D. Mass.) ordered USDA to tap contingency funds for SNAP and WIC. Talwani herself has ruled against federal agencies for procedural overreach, giving plaintiffs a credible path to a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) by November 1.
Boston is a Democrat-dominated media hub. A ruling forcing USDA to release the $6 billion contingency reserve would dominate national headlines, framing the administration as defying law, while a loss would be buried by the Democrat's willing media shills.
The government will likely move to transfer to D.C. (arguing it’s the “real” seat of agency action), but courts rarely grant such motions when plaintiffs have a statutory hook and irreparable harm is imminent (42 million people losing food benefits qualifies).
