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Trump warns that a “crime -rich nation in the third world” will be without deportation

US President Donald Trump escalated his hard rhetoric on Sunday with the Hardline immigration and claimed that the United States had “penetrated” the Ushyzed Immigrants and warned that the nation was the risk of “crime -ridden nation in the third world” if there are no deportations.

“Our country was expressed by 21,000,000 illegal extraterrestrials, of which many murderers and criminals are at the highest level,” Trump wrote on his social truth platform.

“If we are not allowed to remove it because of a radicalized and incompetent court system, the United States quickly and violently become a criminal nation in the third world in order to never see the size again.”

He further asked his legal team to raise this claim to the US Supreme Court:

“Our lawyers should indicate this fact if they go to the United States's highest court and all other courts.”

“I was chosen in a landslide, won all seven swing countries, 312 election college votes, won 2750 to 525 districts and easily won the referendum. I have to do the work for which I was chosen. If not, we will no longer have a country,” he added.

The explanation comes days after Trump's high -ranking consultant Stephen Miller has revealed that the campaign has been considering the suspension of Habeas Corpus – a fundamental legal protection against arbitrary detention – in order to accelerate deportations.

“The constitution is clear … The privilege of the Habeas Corpus could be suspended during the invasion,” said Miller on Friday and spoke to reporters in the White House.

“This is an option that we actively look at. A lot of it depends on whether the dishes do the right thing or not.”

Habeas Corpus, protected in Article I, Section 9 of the US constitution, ensures that prisoners can question the legality of their detention from a court. It should not be suspended “if public security requires this in cases of rebellion or invasion.”

Trump and Miller use the term “invasion” to the current influx of migrant-sowohl undocumented as well as visa-hasting-as reasons to avoid the proper procedure.

“The courts are not only in the war against the executive. The courts are in the war, these radicals, villain judges with the legislative of politics,” added Miller.

The administration has suffered repeated legal defeats in efforts to deport migrants, including international students Rumeysa Ozturk and Mahmoud Khalil, who successfully used Habas Corpus to question the distance arrangements that were tied to earlier pro-Palestinian speech.

There is no independent review for Trump's figure of 21 million undocumented migrants.

Most estimates provide the number of 10 million to 11 million.

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