https://revolver.news/2025/12/team-trump-cooks-up-a-new-bright-idea-to-stick-it-to-the-illegals/
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Because here's the truth: if illegal aliens aren't legally allowed to work in the United States, then every dollar they earn here is technically unlawful. And if that money is unlawful, then the government doesn't just have the right to tax it. It can seize the entire remittance.
That's the nuclear option and the lever nobody has ever touched. And if Trump's team pulls it, it's lights out for the entire scam..."
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AI GENERATED SUMMARY
"He executes justice for the oppressed…" — Deuteronomy 10:18
(I am 95% sure this answer is correct.)
Below is a tight summary and clear critique of the Revolver News article you pasted. I keep your preferred formatting (tight paragraphs, no extra spacing).
SUMMARY (CLEAN & TIGHT)
The article argues that illegal immigration drains the U.S. economy, primarily through remittances—money sent abroad by migrants. It claims that for decades illegal immigrants have used American services, collected benefits, and then wired earnings out of the country instead of spending it locally. The piece cites a 1983 CIA memo claiming illegal immigrants sent one-third of their earnings home and that Mexico depended heavily on those inflows. It claims the amounts today are far larger, quoting $56 billion in 2024.
The article then promotes the idea that President Trump and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent are preparing policy actions to block illegal immigrants from accessing money-transfer services, banking, and federal benefits. Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) reportedly issued an alert instructing money-service businesses to watch for suspicious transfers involving people working illegally.
The article claims this alert opens the door to a "nuclear option": if illegal immigrants are not legally allowed to work, then their earnings are "unlawful," and thus the government could seize 100% of their remittances rather than merely taxing them. Supporters quoted in the article believe this would lead to "self-deportation" and collapse the financial incentive structure that attracts migrants.
The piece ends by asserting that illegal immigration under the Biden administration has exploded, creating social disorder, and that Trump's proposed policies—including pausing immigration from Third World countries and revoking benefits—are necessary to reverse the trend.
CRITIQUE (CLEAR, FAIR, NON-LEGALISTIC)
The article uses strongly emotional language and is written to persuade, not to neutrally inform. That doesn't make it false, but it means the reader should separate claims from rhetoric.
1. The remittance numbers
Remittances are a large economic flow. Independent data from the World Bank shows that money sent from the U.S. to Latin America and Asia is significant. However, the article assumes:
All or most remittances are from illegal immigrants
All of those funds come from public benefits
Neither claim is proven in the article. Much of U.S. remittance volume comes from fully legal immigrants and lawful residents.
2. The CIA memo from 1983
There is a memo from the early 1980s discussing remittances. But using 1983 data to describe 2025 conditions is a stretch unless updated data is presented (the article does not). The memo does not prove today's remittance system "depends on illegals."
3. Claim that illegal immigrants collect massive benefits
The article asserts that illegal immigrants routinely receive housing, food, and healthcare benefits. In reality:
Federal law generally prohibits illegal immigrants from receiving federal welfare benefits.
They may receive emergency medical care and some local programs, depending on state laws.
The article treats all benefits received by any migrant as if they all apply to illegal immigrants specifically.
4. The "government can seize all remittances" claim
This is the boldest claim in the article. It is framed as if legally straightforward, but the article never addresses:
Due-process requirements
Proof of unlawful earnings
Distinguishing illegal vs legal workers
International banking treaties
It implies a dramatic action is legally easy when, in reality, it would face major judicial scrutiny.
5. Emotional, inflammatory language
Phrases like "milking the system," "wild Vegas jackpot," "drain our coffers," "Somalian gangs roving the streets," and personal insults toward public officials indicate editorializing, not objective analysis. A fair critique must note that this style reduces clarity and increases polarization.
6. Genuine policy kernels inside the rhetoric
Despite the tone, the article accurately reflects several real policy movements by Team Trump (as reported in mainstream outlets):
Increased scrutiny on money-transfer companies
Proposals to restrict banking access for unlawful workers
Renewed focus on remittances as a migration incentive
Federal efforts to distinguish citizen vs non-citizen benefit eligibility
But the article takes these seeds and presents them with maximal dramatic framing.
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OVERALL ASSESSMENT
This article is part fact, part speculation, and part political messaging. The facts it references—remittances, FinCEN alerts, Trump's policy proposals—are real topics under discussion. But the conclusions it draws (such as the inevitability of full remittance seizure or the collapse of illegal immigration) are opinion-based extrapolations, not proven outcomes.
If your goal is research, treat this piece as a perspective, not a neutral source. It is valuable for understanding the political argument and public sentiment, but it cannot substitute for government data, legal analysis, or nonpartisan reporting.