The Department of Justice sued Texas Republican Governor Greg Abbott on Monday over a floating barrier erected on the Rio Grande to prevent migrants from crossing into the United States from Mexico. It’s like a wall, only it floats.
The complaint requests that a judge order Texas to remove a 1,000-foot (305-meter) line of bright orange, wrecking ball-sized buoys, which the Biden administration claims raises humanitarian and environmental issues. The suit also argues that Texas illegally erected the barrier near the border city of Eagle Pass without permission.
If you ever questioned the motive of this administration to allow as many illegals to come into our country as humanly possible, then this takes away the mystery. The Biden administration will stop at nothing to allow the invasion of third-world paupers from coming into our country. And they don’t care about the human suffering, the misery, or the resources that it costs to owe these people a living because all they care about are their votes in the future.
The buoys are the newest addition to Texas’ border security program, which already includes razor-wire fencing, trespassing arrests, and busloads of asylum-seekers being sent to Democratic-led cities in other states.
In advance of the case, Abbott wrote to President Joe Biden on Monday, defending Texas’ authority to build the barrier. He said that Biden was putting refugees’ lives in danger by not doing enough to stop them from coming to the U.S.
“Texas will see you in court, Mr. President,” Abbott said in the letter.
VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNELAccording to the Biden administration, illicit border crossings have decreased dramatically since new immigration laws went into force in May.
In a letter sent last week, the DOJ told Texas that if it didn’t take down the wall by Monday, it would be sued. According to the letter, the buoy wall “poses a risk to navigation, as well as public safety, in the Rio Grande River, and it presents humanitarian concerns.”
The buoys were placed without alerting the International Boundary and Water Commission or the United States Army Corps of Engineers. Mexico’s secretary of state requested federal intervention, claiming that the barrier breaches international accords.




















