Topic of the Day | Page 62 | Barking Hard

Topic of the Day

Tesla moving out of California to Texas. others have moved to lower tax states. this was more in the news years ago when we had more mfg.
there was a catchphrase the media used, but I can't think of it now. will post when the thought returns(I hope ?)

many more companies. just like people are moving away from California, New York, and Illinois.
 
Last edited:
That's all I was looking for. I remember Tesla leaving California due to their Gestapo State EPA buffoonery.
It looks like more of a California & New York thing as opposed to a nationwide change.
 
It's been going on for 50 years that I know of. starting in the 70s northern companies moving south. my Dads last job his company moved out of Cleveland to near Buffalo in 1990 or 91 they got a local deal there, off they went.
Growth you need to expand more room and workers. as a owner you shop around. a buddies machine shop just did this last year. they got a deal to stay in NC and not move out of state.
 
#1 never thought you were a hand over more money to the feds type guy. plus that would not change city, county & states from competing for jobs/business to come to their areas.

The truth about taxes is only people pay them. they are ALWAYS just passed on to you & me. thus fuck taxes every chance you get. :cool:
 
:ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO::ROFLMAO:
DA = Dumb Ass
Embarrassed Breaking Bad GIF


Do not ever ask that again.
😬
 
A Missouri Town Was Solidly Behind Trump. Then Carol Was Detained.
For 20 years, Carol Hui has served waffles, raised her children and embraced the small town of Kennett, Mo. Her detention and pending deportation to Hong Kong has hit the community hard.
May 29, 2025
The first sign of trouble came early this month when Carol didn’t show up for her shift at John’s Waffle and Pancake House.

She was as reliable as the sun rising over rice and melon fields in her adopted hometown, Kennett, Mo., a conservative farming hub of 10,000 people in the state’s southeastern boot heel, where “Missouri” becomes “Missour-uh.”

In the 20 years since she arrived from Hong Kong, she had built a life and family in Kennett, working two waitressing jobs and cleaning houses on the side. She began every morning at the bustling diner, serving pecan waffles, hugging customers and reading leftover newspapers to improve her English.

“Everyone knows Carol,” said Lisa Dry, a Kennett city councilwoman.

That all ended on April 30, when federal immigration officials summoned Carol, 45, whose legal name is Ming Li Hui, to their office in St. Louis, a three-hour drive from Kennett. Her partner, a Guatemalan immigrant, had voiced suspicion about the sudden call. But “I didn’t want to run,” Ms. Hui said in a jailhouse phone interview. “I just wanted to do the right thing.”

She was arrested and jailed to await deportation.

Ms. Hui’s detention has forced a rural Missouri county to face the fallout of President Trump’s immigration crackdown, which was supported in theory by many residents in this Trump-loving corner of an increasingly red America.

Many are now asking how you can support Carol and also Mr. Trump.

“I voted for Donald Trump, and so did practically everyone here,” said Vanessa Cowart, a friend of Ms. Hui from church. “But no one voted to deport moms. We were all under the impression we were just getting rid of the gangs, the people who came here in droves.”

She paused. “This is Carol.”

Adam Squires, a onetime candidate for mayor of Kennett, saw it differently. He did not bear any ill will for Ms. Hui, he said, but he voted for Mr. Trump, as did 80 percent of voters in Dunklin County, and he was glad to see the deportation campaign reach home.

“They vote for Trump, and then they get mad because the stuff starts happening,” he said of his neighbors. “We’ve got to get rid of all the illegals. This is just a start.”

Ms. Hui said the call she received from immigration authorities ordered her to appear in St. Louis without any explanation. At the office, she said, an immigration officer called her into a secure area and initially told her the authorities would help her get a passport. Then she was told that she was being detained for overstaying a tourist visa that had expired long ago, and that she would be deported.

Now, as Ms. Hui bounces from county jail to county jail, her name has popped up on prayer lists at local churches in Kennett. Her absence was felt, residents said, when she was not in the baseball stands to watch her younger son pitch, nor at the eighth-grade graduation to see her older son receive an agricultural science award.

Ms. Cowart was her religious sponsor when Ms. Hui converted to Catholicism earlier this year, learning the Gospels from her Chinese Bible. She became a regular at Sunday morning Mass, as was her partner and their three American-born children: a daughter, 7, and two sons, 12 and 14.

Ms. Hui was keenly interested in early Christian martyrs, Ms. Cowart said: “She’d smile and say, God will take care of us.”

According to the government, Ms. Hui does not have a blameless past. In court records, the government said she arrived in the United States from Hong Kong in February 2004, and paid an American citizen $2,000 to enter into a sham marriage with her sometime around 2005. She had hoped the marriage would allow her to get permanent resident status and permit her to travel to Hong Kong to see her dying grandmother and return to the United States afterward, according to court records.

Her lawyer, Raymond Bolourtchi, said Ms. Hui was young and desperate in those days, and she acknowledged that her actions were wrong. “Not a day goes by that she doesn’t feel remorse,” he said.

Ms. Hui was never criminally charged for the fake marriage, which ended in divorce in 2009. Court papers indicate that she has no criminal record.

Nonetheless, she was working, which people who enter as tourists are generally not allowed to do, and her tourist visa had lapsed. Her status in the country became a matter of dispute.

Many people in Kennett expressed outrage that a hardworking mother had spent the past month jailed by immigration authorities.

Supporters described her as an ideal addition to a rural town where the population is declining and the only hospital has closed.

“She’s exactly the sort of person you’d want to come to the country,” said Chuck Earnest, a farmer. “I don’t know how this fits into the deportation problem with Trump.”

Celena Horton, a waitress at a local steak house, said she and Ms. Hui would give each other huge tips when they ate at one another’s restaurants. Ms. Horton said she loved almost everything that Mr. Trump was doing in his second term. Ms. Hui is the reason for the almost.

“I can’t believe they’re doing this to her,” Ms. Horton said.

The sentiment reflects a stirring unease nationally over Mr. Trump’s handling of immigration, his most potent political issue. Though most Americans in a recent New York Times/Siena College survey said they still supported deporting undocumented immigrants, a majority of respondents disapproved of how Mr. Trump was carrying out his immigration policies.

In Kennett, some residents said they had implored state and national Republican lawmakers representing the area to intervene to stop Ms. Hui’s deportation, but had gotten mostly cursory responses. Kennett’s own leaders have not officially weighed in.

Ms. Hui’s church organized a prayer vigil for her and meal deliveries for her family. Her bosses at the waffle house held a “Carol Day” fund-raiser that brought in nearly $20,000. Petitions to bring Ms. Hui home, which have been signed by hundreds of local residents, now sit on every table, next to the jelly packets and ketchup.

“This lady has the biggest heart in the whole world,” said Liridona Ramadani, whose family runs John’s Waffle and Pancake House. “Democrat, Republican, everybody was there for Carol” on “Carol Day,” she said.

Well, not everybody.

When an article about her detention was posted by The Delta Dunklin Democrat, the local newspaper, it was deluged with 400 reader comments. Most of them expressing sympathy, but not all.

“If you’re here illegally, expect to be removed,” said one. “This is the consequence of being in a nation with laws,” said another. One commenter simply wrote “Bye.”

The online debate got so nasty that the owners of the waffle house implored people to keep their political comments to themselves.

From jail, Ms. Hui expressed surprise that her arrest had galvanized so many people in Kennett.

Only a few people in town speak Cantonese, she said, so when she settled there she started to go by the English name she had chosen for herself as a girl back in Hong Kong, when it was still under British rule.

She started a family with her partner, who also works at restaurants around town. (He declined to comment for this article, and his immigration status is not clear.) Ms. Hui bought a house in Kennett, and her front yard is decorated with “Student of the Month” signs.

She made an application for asylum in 2009, saying that her mother in Hong Kong had beaten her and threatened her because Ms. Hui was a girl, and that she was afraid to return, according to court records.

Her claim was denied in 2012, and an immigration judge ordered her deported. Despite multiple legal setbacks, though, she managed to stay in the United States by getting temporary government permissions known as orders of supervision, according to her lawyer, Mr. Bolourtchi.

Ms. Hui’s most recent order of supervision was valid through August 2025, records show. But on the day that Ms. Hui was arrested, she was told that the order was being terminated, Mr. Bolourtchi said.

ICE officials did not respond to a request for comment about Ms. Hui’s case.

Ms. Hui said she had been blindsided by her arrest, which was one of many the Trump administration has been carrying out at mandatory immigration check-ins.

She said she spends her days shuffling between her bunk and meals, and waiting for chances to video chat with her children. She frets over how she would ever see them again if she is deported to Hong Kong. Her lawyer recently filed a legal motion to reopen Ms. Hui’s immigration case.

Ms. Hui said that being separated from her family was the hardest part. Her 14-year-old son was upset that she missed his middle-school graduation. Her daughter told her that one of her school friends offered to adopt Ms. Hui, so she could stay in the country.

During one call, her children tried to cheer up Ms. Hui by telling her about “Carol Day.” She said she was stunned to learn about the outpouring of support.

“I didn’t know they loved me,” she said.


not what I voted for
 
If people need their emotional support dogs, do it.
Otherwise, she's an illegal alien and gets deported for violating immigration laws. Of course she's been a model citizen. If you are a spy in this country illegally you know damn well not to do stupid shit.
 
They can't pick n choose who they go after all the time. :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO: :ROFLMAO:
Like only get the rapists first? Or pedos first? Or murderers first? Or maybe just the Sinaloa Cartel members first.
SSsshhhiiiiiittt.

They often follow up on people tipping them off that there are multiple immigrants in an area. The "good" felons are still felons who have not followed the rules like my grandparents did and my wife's grandparents. They have to abide by our laws and guess what happens if they do not?
 
I've been on theses planned raids. It's hardly to the second. We're lucky to get there all at the exact same time.

Usually, one of us is like "let's get some coffee first. I haven't had any yet. Where from? Idk any place but McDonald's. WTFuck man!! Fuck that we're going to McDonald's. You get your coffee and let's go they're waiting for us. Jesus H Christ!" 10 minutes later we are at the scene.

"What the fuck happened?!!" Me:" He wanted some coffee?" Then everyone else is like; "Where's mine? Did you bring some for everyone else?" You know. Typical buffoonery and fuckery from the guys.

Then we get to work 30 minutes later than we planned. Once we start, we fucking nail it.

Your "poor lady" is a felon and you fell for it hook line and sinker, by God. You might be easily influenced by MSM.

Here's a thought. Immigrate to this country and do it legally. You will avoid future problems. I didn't hear any legal immigrants go to jail. Did you?
 
Back
Top Bottom