@FoxNews@grok@FoxNews why not seen these people back to the Country, sending them to Africa means they will be killed….Is this what American has become, using another country to kill asylum seekers
NEW: With Iran at the center of a growing international conflict, the Trump administration is preparing a deportation flight that includes sending Iranian asylum-seekers and other migrants to Africa.
The first flight could depart as early as Thursday carrying about 20 people, according to reports.
The group includes migrants from Iran, Syria, Afghanistan and a Turkish national, with the Central African Republic set to receive them.
The move is part of the administration's expanding use of third-country deportation deals for migrants who cannot easily be returned to their home countries.
@UnTamedInSD@NEWSMAX I believe that Chip Roy is sincere, but the chances of it being passed has about as much chance of survival and deliverance as a snowball stored in an oven at 400 degrees.
Rep. Chip Roy introduced legislation Tuesday that would strip congressional pay and leadership privileges from lawmakers who serve more than 12 cumulative years in the House or Senate. MORE: bit.ly/4e07HCL
During the surrender of Appomattox Court House Surrender in 1865, Robert E. Lee met with Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Court House. When Lee learned that Grant’s adjutant, Ely S. Parker, was a member of the Seneca Nation, he remarked, “I am glad to see one real American here.” Parker shook Lee’s hand and replied, “We are all Americans.”
This photograph is tied to one of the most enduring moments from the final days of the American Civil War. On April 9, 1865, during the surrender meeting at Appomattox Court House, Confederate General Robert E. Lee met Ely S. Parker, a member of the Seneca Nation who served on the staff of Union General Ulysses S. Grant.
According to Parker’s later recollection, Lee remarked, “I am glad to see one real American here.” Parker replied, “We are all Americans.” The exchange has been remembered for generations because it reflected both the complicated nature of American identity and the spirit of reconciliation emerging as the nation began to recover from four years of conflict.
Parker was an extraordinary figure beyond his role at Appomattox. Trained as a civil engineer, he worked on major public projects before joining the Union Army. At the surrender meeting, he drafted the documents that Lee ultimately signed. In 1869, he went on to become the first Native American appointed Commissioner of Indian Affairs.
Renowned for his exceptional handwriting and skill in preparing official documents, Parker was frequently entrusted by Grant with important correspondence and military paperwork. The surrender terms written in Parker’s hand became some of the most significant documents in American history, formally ending the resistance of the Confederacy’s largest army and signaling the imminent conclusion of the Civil War.
URBAN DECAY: Census data shows more than 53,000 residents left Los Angeles County between July 2024 and 2025, marking the largest decline of any U.S. county.
"Los Angeles is not the Hollywood star it once was, and I don’t think it can return to that," real estate developer Robert Rivani told FOX News Digital.