In a stunning 5-4 decision that left the radical left shrieking into their triple-soy-matcha lattes, the Supreme Court just reminded America why the Constitution is still undefeated.
The Court gave the Trump administration the green light to invoke the Alien Enemies Act of 1798—yes, that 1798—to deport foreign gang members, including the monsters tied to Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua cartel. And while the professional pearl-clutchers on MSNBC try to spin this as some authoritarian throwback, let’s be honest: this is how you protect a nation.What’s the Alien Enemies Act?
Don’t let the antique date fool you—this law is a sledgehammer, not a relic. Signed into law by President John Adams, it gives the president power to deport or detain nationals from hostile nations during times of war or conflict. Sounds pretty relevant today, doesn’t it? And in true Founders' fashion, the law was designed for exactly these moments: when bad actors try to hide behind legal loopholes while they endanger American lives.The Case That Sparked the Fire
This all came to a head when immigration activists tried to block deportations of foreign nationals—many tied to violent international crime networks—by judge-shopping in their favorite jurisdiction: Washington, D.C. The Trump team said “Not so fast,” arguing that those lawsuits needed to be filed in the jurisdictions where the detainees were actually being held—places like Texas, not progressive courtrooms a thousand miles away. The Supreme Court agreed. In a narrow but thunderous ruling, the justices said: go back to where the case belongs. Translation: no more legal games, no more activist judges, and no more hiding behind bureaucracy to protect foreign criminals.Why It Matters
This isn’t just about courtrooms and case law—this is about restoring order at the border and bringing the rule of law back to immigration.- Foreign gang members like those tied to Tren de Aragua don’t deserve sanctuary—they deserve a one-way ticket out.
- This ruling shuts down the Left’s favorite strategy: delay, delay, delay.
- It gives ICE and DHS more room to do their jobs without interference from soft-on-crime judges.