@vasc___: 😮‍💨💅🏻✨

Luana Vasconcelos
Luana Vasconcelos
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Region: BR
Thursday 21 May 2026 02:49:14 GMT
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sol_viana2
Sol🎀 :
Claro que sim 😍
2026-07-03 01:23:48
0
layanedelima
Layane de Lima :
Achei que meu algoritmo tinha me traído
2026-06-08 18:33:32
5
helenzz20
helen :
2026-06-08 21:16:56
1
milenabatista430456886
milenaBatista6496780 :
HAHAHAHAHAHA
2026-06-19 23:11:58
0
_asilvaaxc_
انتصار :
sim
2026-07-03 16:14:51
0
rebeccasaldanha
Rebecca Saldanha :
Eu 😂😂😂
2026-05-23 23:31:42
2
itsme_bruu
Bruna Haag :
Toda vez q vem essas moda eu lembro das atrizes americanas q se amam e são lindas sendo naturais. (Eu sei q face lifting é tbm um procedimento estético mas me referi a silicone e enchimentos), daí passa toda essa pressão da minha cabeça.
2026-05-22 09:04:41
1
raellius
webdiva :
eu
2026-05-21 05:05:18
1
jamiresmelotrin
jamires :
Kkkkkkk
2026-06-08 20:43:56
1
mariabel212
bebel :
😍😍😍😍😍
2026-05-22 00:34:13
1
lorena.silvaaa0
Lorena silvaaa :
😂
2026-05-29 18:08:07
1
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President Trump campaigned on a promise of mass deportations. More than a year into his second term, the White House has taken a sweeping approach to curbing illegal and legal migration. Ximena Bustillo, NPR's immigration policy correspondent, breaks down the five strategies that make up the administration's mass deportation policy. They include providing historic funding for immigration enforcement agencies, stripping legal pathways, reshaping previously little-known immigration courts and expanding the infrastructure focused on increasing the number of those detained and deported. It's a strategy that limits immigrants' options for arguing for permission to stay in the U.S., and eliminates previous pathways to legal status. Over the past year, judges as high up as on the U.S. Supreme Court have weighed in on the measures taken. In some instances, district court rulings have barred some of the strategies, including ordering federal officers to stop making arrests in immigration courts. Other efforts have been upheld by the courts, including the Supreme Court's most recent ruling allowing the administration to end temporary protected status (TPS) for Haitians and Syrians and a policy that allows border officials to turn migrants away before they physically cross to claim asylum. The Court on Tuesday weighs in on a landmark executive order that sought to end birthright citizenship. Bustillo travels to Arizona, California and New York to break down this strategy — and the impacts on the agency, federal workers and immigrants going through these complicated systems. Relying on over a year of reporting, policy memos, data and ultimately dozens of interviews, the Trump administration's strategy becomes clear.
President Trump campaigned on a promise of mass deportations. More than a year into his second term, the White House has taken a sweeping approach to curbing illegal and legal migration. Ximena Bustillo, NPR's immigration policy correspondent, breaks down the five strategies that make up the administration's mass deportation policy. They include providing historic funding for immigration enforcement agencies, stripping legal pathways, reshaping previously little-known immigration courts and expanding the infrastructure focused on increasing the number of those detained and deported. It's a strategy that limits immigrants' options for arguing for permission to stay in the U.S., and eliminates previous pathways to legal status. Over the past year, judges as high up as on the U.S. Supreme Court have weighed in on the measures taken. In some instances, district court rulings have barred some of the strategies, including ordering federal officers to stop making arrests in immigration courts. Other efforts have been upheld by the courts, including the Supreme Court's most recent ruling allowing the administration to end temporary protected status (TPS) for Haitians and Syrians and a policy that allows border officials to turn migrants away before they physically cross to claim asylum. The Court on Tuesday weighs in on a landmark executive order that sought to end birthright citizenship. Bustillo travels to Arizona, California and New York to break down this strategy — and the impacts on the agency, federal workers and immigrants going through these complicated systems. Relying on over a year of reporting, policy memos, data and ultimately dozens of interviews, the Trump administration's strategy becomes clear.

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