Evidence Without Agenda

Evidence Without Agenda

by FactsOverFeelings.org
The Insurrection Act of 1807 Explained
AI
Episode Description: In this episode, we strip away the political rhetoric and media spin to examine the actual legal mechanics of the Insurrection Act of 1807. Often cited but rarely understood, this two-century-old law grants the President of the United States the extraordinary authority to deploy the federal military on American streets. Relying on strict legal definitions from the U.S. Code (Titles 10 and 18), historical analysis from the Congressional Research Service, and framework from the Brennan Center for Justice, we objectively analyze what this law actually allows, when it has been used, and the constitutional guardrails that surround it. Key Topics Covered: The Posse Comitatus Act of 1878: Understanding the foundational law that generally prohibits the U.S. military from acting as a domestic police force, and why the Insurrection Act is its primary exception. Insurrection vs. Martial Law: A critical breakdown of why invoking the Insurrection Act is not the same as declaring martial law. The Three Statutory Triggers: The specific legal conditions required for a President to send in troops:State Requests (e.g., The 1992 Los Angeles Riots) Enforcing Federal Law (e.g., The 1894 Pullman Strike) Protecting Civil Rights (e.g., The 1957 Little Rock school desegregation) The "Obstruction" Loophole: How a completely non-violent protest, such as a massive physical blockade, could technically trigger federal military intervention if it paralyzes federal law enforcement. Defining "Insurrection": Why the legal definition of an insurrection focuses on the intent to nullify government authority and federal sovereignty, rather than just the scale of violence or property damage. Whether it is being used to protect civil liberties or enforce federal mandates, this episode provides the factual baseline for understanding the balance of freedom, order, and executive power in the United States.
Border Security in Numbers: What the Data Really Shows
AI
In a media landscape dominated by binary claims of "open" versus "closed" borders, we rely on empirical operational metrics to establish the factual baseline. This episode strips away the political rhetoric to examine the math behind border enforcement, tracking total encounters, actual repatriation rates, and contraband trends from 2017 through early 2025. We examine how the Department of Homeland Security calculates border integrity and look at the real-world factors driving recent policy shifts from the post-pandemic migration waves to the massive drop in encounters following the June 2024 executive actions. Key Metrics Covered: The Interdiction Equation: Why the mathematical effectiveness rate of the U.S. Border Patrol has remained remarkably stable at approximately 80% across both the Trump and Biden administrations. Enforcement Volume vs. Paradoxes: A deep dive into the 4.4 million repatriations carried out by mid-2024, the highest absolute volume of any presidential term since 2008, alongside the recidivism impacts of Title 42. The Fentanyl Trafficking Reality: An analysis of CBP drug seizure data revealing that over 90% of illicit fentanyl is seized at legal Ports of Entry—not between them—and that over 86% of those convicted of trafficking are U.S. citizens. The Bipartisan Bill: An operational audit of the stricter border security regulations proposed in the 2024 Emergency National Security Supplemental Appropriations Act and why it failed to pass Congress.