Progressive filmmaker and activist Michael Moore said on Tuesday that by deporting illegal immigrants, America may be missing out on what will save the world from the next Apple co-founder Steve Jobs or Killer Asteroid. I warned about a long blog post.
Moore's work, “Our Muslim boy is wondering.” He used Jobs' origins as the son of Syrian immigrants to criticize the Trump administration's deportation efforts.
“Who's really been removed with ice tonight?” Moore asked. “A child who discovered a cancer treatment in 2046? Does this 9th grade otaku care when he stopped that asteroid (sic) that hit us in 2032?”
“I am grateful to the Muslim immigrant baby born here today 70 years ago, because if he weren't there, he might not have any of his inventions.
The filmmaker said, “Every time I heard negative words or blatant hatred towards people from far away, I paused, went down on one knee, and all I gave up on life elsewhere. I felt that we should be grateful to those who are here and be with us.”
Progressive filmmaker and activist Michael Moore wrote a lengthy blog post suggesting that Trump's deportation would stop him from smashing asteroids towards Earth in 2032. (Adam Grantzman/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
MSNBC Anchors modify her correspondent to on-air: They are “undocumented immigrants”
“If there are a few unknown Trumpstars among your family and friends who scream about building a wall or deporting anyone who can't prove they belong here,” Moore said. For some reason we may be able to show you the next list of immigrants who have arrived here, and have contributed amazing things to the rest of us to benefit.
The list includes figures like theoretical physicists Albert Einstein and Gene Simmons of Kiss to convince the ostensibly “informed Trumpstar,” but “The Theoretical Physicists” Squad also listed several far-away left numbers, such as Member Rashida Traeve and female founder Linda Sarussou.
Filmmakers provided multiple scenarios where immigrants were deported.
“Tonight, ice agents across America are knocking on the doors, removing dangerous “illicitors.” But one of them may have been the man who helped rebuild the children's playground across from town tomorrow, but he is now tied up by a military cargo plane on his way to Guatemala. Masu. ”

The immigrant caravan walks inside Mexico after crossing the Guatemala border on October 21, 2018, near Ciudad Hidalgo, Mexico. The Central American caravan is expected to eventually reach the US. (John Moore/Getty Images)
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“And then there's a young woman in Boston today,” he wrote. “If you haven't broken her guitar, then you threw her behind a government van, she was the one who could have written a sequel to the beautiful, unforgettable song “Hallelujah.” Now our souls will never hear it. ”
Moore also said that a young girl who has been deported “one day discovers a cancer treatment, snatches her from her mother's arm, takes her to a military base in Oklahoma, and now she's been lost in the system forever. He suggested he would have grown up to become a person. “And he will never see her again by her mother.”
“When I went to sleep tonight, when I was putting my head down to go to sleep, I didn't have this little girl and the potential millions of people suffering from cancer that I might have lived in about 30 years from now. We try not to think about people, and are seen as a threat to our national security.”
“God help us,” he begged. “And God blesses America – and Steve Jobs.”
In contrast, Moore has condemned native-born Americans and their culture in the past, claiming that “we are not good people,” and that Americans have led to President Donald Trump's election “Evil.” They claim to have a laundry list of actions.
Scott Whitlock of Fox News contributed to this report.
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