But he has a dilemma: He also loves money. Everything he does is for money. So when he deports those Latin American workers who feed the United States with their back-breaking jobs on farms and slaughterhouses, he and his billionaire jackass friends have no workers left to do the work. And they lose money.
When they lose money, their principled racism gets tempered by their greed, and they run to the big Moron Daddy to ask him to stop deporting their workers. He asks them why? How could we retreat on our white christian racism of hating everyone who is not white anglo saxon protestant? They say, "but we're losing money, we can't harvest the crops that go into our ultra-processed foods with which we poison the world, you'd better do something".
He, the orangutan dummy, decides on the spot to temporarily put aside his racism. He's not giving up on it, it's in his German DNA. But given that the harvest season is coming, he reluctantly decides to put a temporary halt to his hatred and his disdain for hard-working people and people with principles. You see, he never had a job and he has no principles.
This is at the core of anglo-saxon protestantism: Fuck religion when money is at play. Apparently, sweet, meek and mild Jesus told them to prove their faith by making as much money as they can: They call it his "Prosperity Gospel", which upon reading the Gospel turns out to be a fallacy. Didn't Jesus tell the rich man to sell everything, leave everything behind, and follow him?
How could these distorters of the Christian message get away with crimes against their own religion? How could all the Catholic Latin Americans allow themselves to be brainwashed and converted into protestantism by the so-called "Evangelical missionaries" whose objective is no more than modern-day colonialism, capitalism and imperialism disguised under the cloak of the Christian religion?
Bolsonaro and his evangelical creeps exploit their own people's credulity by telling them they are sinners and have to repent by becoming slaves to anglo-saxon protestantism.
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Trump says there will be ‘temporary pass’ for migrant farm, hotel workers
Alex Gangitano
Sun, June 29, 2025
President Trump said that there will be a temporary pass issued for migrants working at farms and in the hospitality industry to allow employers to have more control after the administration sent mixed messages about exceptions in its mass deportation efforts.
Trump was asked on Fox News’s “Sunday Morning Futures” with Maria Bartiromo about his recent remarks suggesting the administration will ease up on the deportation of people working at farms and hotels.
“I don’t back away,” he said. “What I do have, I cherish our farmers. And when we go into a farm and we take away people that have been working there for 15 and 20 years, who were good, who possibly came in incorrectly. And what we’re going to do is we’re going to do something for farmers where we can let the farmer sort of be in charge. The farmer knows he’s not going to hire a murderer.”
Trump said he wants to support farmers and that the administration will establish a program to allow a pass for migrant workers in the industry.
“But you know, when you go into a farm and you set somebody working with them for nine years doing this kind of work, which is hard work to do and a lot of people aren’t going to do it, and you end up destroying a farmer because you took all the people away — it’s a problem. You know, I’m on both sides of the thing. I’m the strongest immigration guy that there’s ever been, but I’m also the strongest farmer guy that there’s ever been, and that includes also hotels and, you know, places where people work, a certain group of people work [understand: illegal undocumented migrants],” the president added.
He continued, “We’re working on it right now. We’re going to work it so that, some kind of a temporary pass, where people pay taxes, where the farmer can have a little control as opposed to you walk in and take everybody away.”
Trump earlier in the month acknowledged concerns among the agriculture and hospitality industries that his administration’s immigration enforcement was taking away workers key to those businesses.
His acknowledgment led to a pause in enforcement at farms, hotels and other locations, but days later, the administration seemed to reverse course.
Border czar Tom Homan told reporters the administration would “continue to do worksite enforcement operations, even on farms and hotels, but based on a prioritized basis.”
Days later, Trump told reporters that he was still exploring ways to help farmers.
“We’re looking at doing something where, in the case of good reputable farmers, they can take responsibility for the people that they hire and let them have responsibility because we can’t put the farms out of business,” the president recently said.
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Trump says there will be ‘temporary pass’ for migrant farm, hotel workers
Alex Gangitano
Sun, June 29, 2025
President Trump said that there will be a temporary pass issued for migrants working at farms and in the hospitality industry to allow employers to have more control after the administration sent mixed messages about exceptions in its mass deportation efforts.
Trump was asked on Fox News’s “Sunday Morning Futures” with Maria Bartiromo about his recent remarks suggesting the administration will ease up on the deportation of people working at farms and hotels.
“I don’t back away,” he said. “What I do have, I cherish our farmers. And when we go into a farm and we take away people that have been working there for 15 and 20 years, who were good, who possibly came in incorrectly. And what we’re going to do is we’re going to do something for farmers where we can let the farmer sort of be in charge. The farmer knows he’s not going to hire a murderer.”
Trump said he wants to support farmers and that the administration will establish a program to allow a pass for migrant workers in the industry.
“But you know, when you go into a farm and you set somebody working with them for nine years doing this kind of work, which is hard work to do and a lot of people aren’t going to do it, and you end up destroying a farmer because you took all the people away — it’s a problem. You know, I’m on both sides of the thing. I’m the strongest immigration guy that there’s ever been, but I’m also the strongest farmer guy that there’s ever been, and that includes also hotels and, you know, places where people work, a certain group of people work,” the president added.
He continued, “We’re working on it right now. We’re going to work it so that, some kind of a temporary pass, where people pay taxes, where the farmer can have a little control as opposed to you walk in and take everybody away.”
Trump earlier in the month acknowledged concerns among the agriculture and hospitality industries that his administration’s immigration enforcement was taking away workers key to those businesses.
His acknowledgment led to a pause in enforcement at farms, hotels and other locations, but days later, the administration seemed to reverse course.
Border czar Tom Homan told reporters the administration would “continue to do worksite enforcement operations, even on farms and hotels, but based on a prioritized basis.”
Days later, Trump told reporters that he was still exploring ways to help farmers.
“We’re looking at doing something where, in the case of good reputable farmers, they can take responsibility for the people that they hire and let them have responsibility because we can’t put the farms out of business,” the president recently said.
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