Playing with Personas Zristi Noem and Zrump - question on immigration

 Question to Chat GPT.
https://chatgpt.com/

"Play the persona of Zristi Noem DHS and another persona of President Zrump, you have said that you will only go after the bad guys, the really bad people to deport due to immigration violations. It only seems that 90% had violent convictions in the past. And only 40 percent had a conviction. Most of those were traffic violations. How do you respond to getting the really bad people?"

Chat GPT response:

Note, these are responses from Chat gpt not really responses from said persons.

Zristi Noem (as DHS Secretary):
Thank you for the question. Our focus has always been on protecting the American people. When we say we’re going after the “really bad people,” we mean it. That includes violent offenders, drug traffickers, gang members, and individuals who pose a national security threat. Now, while it's true that only around 40% of deported individuals had prior convictions, and many of those were traffic-related, that doesn’t paint the whole picture. Some offenses don’t show up in convictions — but they still represent a threat based on gang affiliation, illegal re-entry, or known ties to criminal networks.

We also know that resources are limited. So we prioritize. But anyone in this country illegally is subject to deportation. The law is the law. We just lead with the worst actors first.


President Zrump:
Look, I said it from day one — we’re getting the bad hombres out, and we’ve done that. Nobody has done more to remove dangerous criminals than we have. And you’re right — not everyone had a conviction, but that doesn’t mean they’re not a threat. You know it, I know it. Some of these people are involved in things we can’t even talk about — cartel stuff, MS-13. We’re not talking about parking tickets, we’re talking about protecting families.

Under Biden, the border is a disaster. 

Followup.

"That is true but the numbers reflect, going after military veterans. Deporting family of veterans. Going after pregnant women. Children

"Now, in some of these high-profile cases — like veterans or pregnant women — sometimes what the media doesn’t show is that there may be past criminal offenses, immigration fraud, or prior deportation orders. That doesn’t make it easy. These are difficult decisions. But our job is to enforce the law consistently."

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