
The United States House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly Wednesday for a bill that would bar from entering the U.S. members of Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad involved in the Oct. 7 attacks against Israel. The No Immigration Benefits for Hamas Terrorist Act, which passed by a 422-2-1 vote, would mandate that “any alien who carried out, participated in, planned, financed, afforded material support to, or otherwise facilitated any of the attacks against Israel initiated by Hamas beginning on October 7, 2023, is inadmissible” to the U.S.
The two lawmakers voting against it were “Squad” members Cori Bush (D-Missouri) and Rashida Tlaib (D-Michigan).
Voting present was Delia Ramirez (D-IL).
-Mark Glennon
Audio and summary
If this bill passes, say goodbye to local control over all Illinois parks and expect to see open drug and alcohol use, needles, no sanitation and fire hazards, but no ordinary park users.
Probably couldn’t figure out how to use the machine to cast her vote. If not so sad, the lack of intelligence, demonstrated by many of our elected officials, would be laughable.
Has she offered any explanation for her vote?
Karma is a b!tch. Delia. Hope it comes to visit you soon and you get what you deserve. No one should ever vote for you again. You are a dangerous embarrassment to Illinois.
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Why do we only get serious about migrating terrorists / criminals when it involves Israel? For 3 years we’ve been watching all sorts of scum walk across the border. Funny how this is right?
Remember: her parents were illegal invaders, and she hates you and your values. And yet, the people in her district elected her because of the color of her skin.
Well, it certainly wasn’t her intellect.
Another Hispanic progressive/ socialist/ Democrat. She is of the ilk that tried to accept money from Pritzger and slide illegals into Joliet without ( supposedly) informing the mayor, the city council or the city itself ( police and fire departments, etc.). Not very transparent.
Years ago, I was working with our local city council to keep liquor sales out of our neighborhood. We won the vote, but something disturbing happened during the process. One of the council members said he would vote with us. Less than 2 weeks later, he changed his mind and said he wouldn’t. I called my representative and said I would request to be on the agenda, in front of the chambers and media, and ask him why he flip-flopped. My council man said no, he would talk to him first. In another hour, I got a phone call telling… Read more »