Khalid ibn al-Walid
247 posts

Khalid ibn al-Walid
@NEGRIL_INC
West side is the best side
Katılım Şubat 2018
534 Takip Edilen29 Takipçiler

@bryanrbeal It’s $30 per way from palm beach to Miami. That’s getaway prices not commuting life
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This was one of the most logical high-speed rails in the country, and it STILL can’t make money. Nobody wants to ride on trains.
NewsWire@NewsWire_US
Florida's High Speed Rail Operator Brightline Seeks Rescue to Avoid Potential Bankruptcy
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🚨✅ 𝗟𝗘𝗔𝗞𝗘𝗗: The official Liverpool home jersey has been leaked. This is how it will look.
📸: @Footy_Headlines @KamilBerberler




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Jamaica’s total spending on imports in 2025 was valued at US$7,523.7 million, while earnings from total exports trailed way behind at just US$1,652.2 million.
jamaicaobserver.com/2026/05/02/jam…
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@davidmullings Some people don't realize how serious this is
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This is a MASSIVE blow to airlift in the #Caribbean and there is no guarantee that other airlines will fill the void of those seats.
Many small islands PAY airlines for the airlift that brings in tourism revenue.
Some will say that Spirit customers were the cheap ones who didn't spend much money per day in a country as a tourist but it's possible that they penny-pinched on the flight in order to SPEND MORE on the trip which means a larger multiplier effect across the economy.
- food
- transport
- excursions
- entertainment
- arts and crafts
Spirit Airlines@SpiritAirlines
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@BreezeAirways please take over FLL-MBJ from @SpiritAirlines
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Khalid ibn al-Walid retweetledi

@Rich_Cooper Prenup does not cover child support after the divorce, even though kids are not his he will be liable based on his income for 3 past years. So marriage to a woman with 2 kids and low net worth may turn out to be a financial suicide regardless of prenap.
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@JBS22059 @TheJFreakinC Something doesn’t smell right because someone is lying
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Bryan Jose Morales Garcia was given a voluntary departure to Mexico. That’s not a deportation. IF he is truly a U.S. citizen, born in Denver. He can obtain his documents, go to the border and present them at entry. He can also go to the embassy/consulate and prove his alleged citizenship. Also, Mexico would have challenges in taking him if he was NOT a Mexican citizen. Which is why I know he wasn’t formally deported. To be deported, one must obtain travel/ID documents from the receiving country. Non citizens must FIRST receive permission from the receiving country before being released to that country.
If he proves such, then, file a lawsuit. However, the story is too sensationalized to hold credibility in my eyes and based on my over 25 years experience in border enforcement, asylum, citizenship adjudication, and criminal investigation.
A little critical thinking goes a long way before making snap judgements.
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🚨ICE deported a U.S. born citizen.
Brian Morales is a U.S. citizen, born in a hospital in Denver, Colorado, with documentation to prove it…
And yet, after a traffic stop in Texas, he was taken into custody and deported to Mexico with no charges, no conviction, and no due process.
Morales repeatedly told officers he was a citizen and had proof, but instead of verifying that, he was threatened with fraud charges, and prison time, if he didn’t comply.
He was ultimately pressured into signing removal paperwork out of fear… which is coercion, and illegal.
There is no law in the United States that allows the government to deport a U.S. citizen.
Citizenship is not something ICE can ignore because they don’t believe you, and it’s not something that can be stripped through intimidation.
If you are born here, you belong here… period.
DHS claims he admitted to being undocumented… even though he had proof he was not… and we’re expected to accept that version without questioning how that “admission” was obtained in the first place.
This also didn’t happen at the border, it happened after a routine traffic stop in Texas, which means the standard here wasn’t immigration enforcement at the border, it was treating citizenship like it’s conditional, and revocable, on the spot.
If citizenship can be ignored, if proof can be dismissed, and if people can be threatened into signing away their rights, then due process is being bypassed entirely… and if this can happen to Brian Morales, it can happen to anyone.
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