On September 4, the Trump regime’s Department of Homeland Security launched the largest immigration worksite raid in its history.

It was not on a cartel safe house or clandestine sweatshop, but at the centerpiece of its own flagship foreign investment win. Hyundai’s $7.6 billion electric vehicle factory that is under construction in Georgia.

Federal agents swarmed the 3,000-acre project like it was a crime scene, not a corporate showcase. Four hundred seventy-five workers were detained. The majority were South Korean nationals flown in by contractors to accelerate the buildout of the factory that Trump himself has repeatedly hailed as proof that “America is open for business again.”

No charges were filed. No human trafficking uncovered. No threats to national security cited. Just rows o

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