Chris Summers
3.4K posts









You had ONE job, you worthless hack.


🚨 BREAKING: Senator Mike Lee is calling on Senate Republicans to keep the SAVE America Act on the floor until it secures enough support to pass. The legislation would: Require documentary proof of U.S. citizenship (e.g., passport, birth certificate, or naturalization papers) when registering to vote in federal elections. Mandate Voter ID for casting ballots in federal elections. Directs states to establish processes for removing non-citizens from voter rolls and adds federal penalties for knowingly registering non-citizens. It builds on the earlier SAVE Act (which passed the House in prior cycles but stalled in the Senate). The updated version, reintroduced in January 2026 by Lee and Rep. Chip Roy (R-TX), incorporates President Trump's emphasis on Voter ID. Understand that both democrats and RINOs need criminal illegal invaders to continue voting in our elections in order to stay in power, and please their globalist corporate donors, who desperately need an enormous low-wage workforce. Transport and contract delivery work has quietly become one of the most exploitive and opaque zones for illegal labor in the entire U.S. economy. It bridges the formal economy (visible corporations) with the informal labor chain (off‑the‑book workers), and most people have no idea how deep it runs. The modern logistics system — from Amazon packages to produce freight — is not one integrated network but a web of subcontracted tiers: Top tier: the giant corporate brand (e.g., Amazon, FedEx Ground, regional wholesalers, or freight brokers). Middle tier: third‑party logistics contractors who hold the actual delivery or trucking contracts. Bottom tier: small operators (“independent contractors”) who often lease vans/trucks from the middle tier and hire their own teams. It’s this bottom layer where illegal non‑citizen labor (and tax cheating) overwhelmingly occurs. Next is crop harvesting, fruit/vegetable picking, meat trimming, and poultry processing. Roughly 40–50% of hired farmworkers nationwide are estimated to be unauthorized, according to USDA and Department of Labor survey data (though these numbers likely undercount). Farmers often depend on this labor force because large agribusiness lobbying has successfully pressured Washington to look the other way for decades. Followed by the construction industry, i.e., roofing, framing, drywall, concrete, and masonry. Nearly 15–25% of workers in some Sunbelt metropolitan construction markets are illegal non‑citizens. Contractors exploit their vulnerability for lower wages and to avoid payroll taxes or workers’ comp premiums. Then there is the hospitality and food service, from housekeepers, dishwashers, kitchen prep staff, hotel cleaning crews, to landscaping. Low-wage, unregulated environments where identity verification is cursory at best. EXAMPLE: Major hotel chains outsource to subcontractors who never run E‑Verify. Manufacturing and warehousing (Light Industrial), particularly in meatpacking, textile, and logistics distribution — jobs Americans once held before deindustrialization and post‑NAFTA wage compression. Employers rely on illegal workers because immigration enforcement in these sectors has shifted from business liability to political theater. Lastly, there is domestic labor: nannies, caretakers, gardeners, and handymen. A cash economy, nearly impossible to track without intrusive audits, has long been protected by the upper‑middle class who hire them. The bottom line is that detection of non-citizen or fraudulent voting is low because oversight mechanisms are weak, fragmented, and non-transparent. Security is about prevention, not post-facto discovery, and every other sector recognizes this. Until we have full national roll validation, strict ID verification, restricted mail-in voting, and transparent audits using independent oversight, claims that ‘fraud is rare’ are merely assurances built on systemic blindness. Low Detection Isn’t Proof of Integrity — It’s Proof of Blindness.














