The Washington Post recently ran an interesting story on law enforcement tracking and deporting criminal aliens.
A Spanish-speaking Post reporter and photographer embedded with agents as they sought a criminal alien, one Damion Ariza Salinas, a murder suspect who'd fled across the border.
"We don't want a bunch of criminals in our community," said one, while another speculated on the source of the criminality: "Honestly, I think it's all the drugs over there."
Of the criminal aliens the team was tracking, "There were eight accused of drug trafficking, two of murder and one of pedophilia," the story reported.
One of the officers had pictures on his phone of all the criminal aliens he'd nabbed, "Like a digital trophy gallery," in the reporter's words.
Among the criminal aliens on their list is one Baldomero Barrientos Banuelos, wanted for stabbing his wife, who's been at large in the country for 29 years.
The sole woman on the team used to want to visit across the border but, as the reporter put it, "Is it possible to arrest a nonstop procession of [foreign] criminals without feeling a little less enthusiastic about their country?"
It's becoming increasingly difficult to discern fact from fiction, and unfortunately the media has a strong bias. They spin stories to make conservatives look bad and will go to great lengths to avoid reporting on the good that comes from conservative policies. There are a few shining lights in the media landscape-brave conservative outlets that report the truth and offer a different perspective. We must support conservative outlets like this one and ensure that our voices are heard.
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