A Substack Exclusive: ICE Finally Going After The Alien Dominated Treason Bar
It starts with an Indian shyster. The Treason Bar is filled with the likes of him. It seems to be the only area of law they can practice with their foreign accents. Clients are too stupid to notice.
The Treason bar is filled with shysters fresh off the boat with unintelligible English. Only normal Americans notice this and avoid the lawyer with an accent, it signifies low intelligence, especially for the practice of the law. With immigration law being the least prestigious and profitable law practice, illegal aliens with desperate cases seldom have the money to afford a good lawyer and they get what they pay for.
However, most Treason Bar shysters are either cheating their clients or in the employ of those ideologically committed to open borders. Indian shysters are the worst of both worlds, too dumb for words, unintelligible, and dedicated to open borders.
For example, the Indian and jewish shysters at the Treason Bar are so stupid they always refer to “aliens” as “non-citizens.” That is not legally accurate nor is it in statute. For ideological reasons, the Treason Bar shysters routinely mislead the public about the law, which is a violation of whatever Bar Association they are members of or licencees of. A national of the United States may be a non-citizen, as all persons born or naturalized in American Samoa and the Swains Islands are only nationals of the United States, not citizens. Aliens are defined in Federal law as any person not a citizen or national of the United States.
Here is a jewish immigration attorney referring to “aliens” as “non-citizens.” That is lying to the public and just plain stupid.
Here are a street shitting Indian Treason Bar shyster and a jewish Treason Bar shyster constantly referring to a Non-Immigrant Visa (NIV) as a “visa stamp.” One would think two attorneys practicing immigration law would know that the U.S. Department of State (DOS) stopped using a stamp of a visa in an alien’s passport in the mid 1990s. In the 1990s the DOS stopped using visa stamps, an imprint of a image recreated in ink on a piece of paper, in this case the page of a passport, replacing it with a polymer adhesive sheet placed in the passport containing information about the alien granted the visa and the details about the type of visa.
The old stamped visas, commonly called Burroughs Visas, were stamped in ink on a passport page. Here is an example.
All such visas were revoked by the DOS on February 1, 1995, to be replaced with what was called the Machine Readable Visa (MRV), commonly called a visa foil because of its construction of polymer and plastic sheet, originally security paper, with an adhesive backing, the placed on a passport page.



