NOTES BETWEEN PRINTED EDITION
Does Anyone Have a Spiderman Suit For Mayor Wu?
By Alice Giordano
An open letter to Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, who insists on harboring violent illegal immigrants in direct contradiction to her own sentiments when it came to her insistence on enforcing laws against homeless U.S. citizens.
Dear Mayor Wu, Have you ever heard of The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). Likely so since it has an office — District 11 — on Sudbury Street right down the street from your Government Center office at 1 City Hall Square — a two block walk actually and to boot, practically across the street from the A-1 precinct of the Boston Police Department. Americans in fact spent $265 million a year alone on this agency — the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. Of that $145 million went to administering refugee programs, as in turning illegal immigrants into legal migrants, a process that assumes they were NOT U.S. citizens until they completed the program.
Why then have you deputized yourself as a naturalizer of immigrants? And for that matter, why should the U.S. Citizenship and Immigrations Services even exist; why are American taxpayers paying more than a quarter million dollars for an agency we apparently don’t need since the ability to walk across the border is qualification enough for citizen status, at least apparently in your world.
End of open letter.
This notion that everybody who sets foot in America is automatically protected by the same constitutional rights as a U.S. citizen flies in the face of the very process of becoming a U.S. citizen. It’s offensive to Americans, especially frankly to all those who went through the process of become — an American.
Specific to Wu’s status as a walking contradiction — last May — in 2024, when Wu ordered that the tents where homeless people — American homeless people — be taken down and removed from public property, she cited a state law that she and I’ll quote her — was “meant to protect public health and safety.”
Words of wisdom that reveal ever so explicitly that Wu does understand law and how it works and that she actually believes in it. Let’s break it down.
First three — meant to protect. Yup. That’s right Mayor Wu, that is what laws are designed for.
Last four (with emphasis on public safety.) Can she be that clueless that she doesn’t understand that her own words, her own professed understanding of laws is exactly the same legal precept for enforcing deportation and detainer laws.
If Michelle Wu wants to engage in vigilante justice — she should give up her $250,000 annual salary, get herself a super hero suit and learn how to fly on cobwebs from building to building. Because frankly under her inane rule, we would need a cape crusader to fulfill the “meant to protect” laws of public safety from the violence perpetrated by the very criminals she so hotly seeks to protect, that is, as long as they are NOT U.S. citizens.
As the lower courts and liberalized federalized courts continue to interpret the constitution with activism rather than law as their guiding principle, We The People will be nothing more than an outdated patriotic colloquialism ranked right up there with the ergo days of a rainbow actually once being nature’s reminder of the innocent beauty that can rise up between a rain storm and ensuing sunny skies. It’s soooo time to take away the unbridled judicial immunity uniquely enjoyed by judges.
In the meantime, I for one would be all for footing the bill for school field trips to Ellis Island where students can learn about the tribulations and triumphs that truly built America’s melting pot working class, instead of the handouts and passes that built a toxic stew of entitled foreigners, some of who have been taught by the likes of Wu that raping children and women are a sanctioned, government-fundeded hobby.
Alice Giordano’s commentaries can be heard daily on Newsweek’s Voices of The Day. She is also an investigative reporter for Newsmax Magazine and a regular columnist for Boston Broadside. Previously, Alice covered national stories including the 2024 presidential race for The Epoch Times, was a political correspondent for the Associated Press and news reporter for The Boston Globe. Her work has also appeared in The New York Times and The Western Journal.
What you get when high rents and high crime drive out longtime residents. Wu thinks that talking in riddles and putting a bike lane down the middle of a traffic clogged street is the way to go. Dear old Boston is now San Francisco east.
According to the Herald, Wu spent $650,000 on legal counsel to prepare for her Congressional hearing testimony. She went to Harvard. She proclaims to be passionate for her views. Yet she needed $650,000 in tax dollars to be trained to answer simple yes or no questions. In todays Herald she is praised for her religious beliefs and family values by Peter Lucas. She is a great Catholic? She is extremely pro-abortion. She thinks it good to not cooperate wth federal authorities to get criminals off the streets. She carts her newborn around like a brief case. That’s good to some misguided folks. Looks pretty foolish to many others