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Spanish Post Office Processed Mass Amnesty Requests Without Checking Criminal Records

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Imagine waking up to find your local post office isn’t just stamping envelopes—it’s rubber-stamping mass amnesty for illegal migrants, complete with a glaring loophole that skips criminal background checks entirely. That’s the absurd reality unfolding in Spain, where the national postal service Correos has been roped into handling a flood of regularization requests from undocumented immigrants. A technical glitch in the system meant no cross-referencing with police databases, allowing potentially violent offenders to slip through and gain legal status faster than you can say bureaucratic malpractice. This isn’t some backwater oversight; it’s a state-sanctioned shortcut processing thousands, exposing how governments prioritize open borders over public safety.

Dig deeper, and this Spanish fiasco is a masterclass in the perils of unchecked migration policies—ones that mirror the border chaos we’re battling stateside. Criminals with rap sheets for assault, theft, or worse now roam with papers, courtesy of a post office more concerned with quotas than justice. For the 2A community, it’s a chilling preview: when governments fast-track amnesty without vetting, they flood streets with unvetted threats, amplifying the need for self-defense rights. Think about it—Europe’s already grappling with skyrocketing crime in migrant-heavy areas, from no-go zones in Sweden to knife attacks in the UK. Spain’s post office blunder proves the point: disarm law-abiding citizens while empowering felons, and chaos ensues. Here, the Second Amendment isn’t just a right; it’s a bulwark against the inevitable fallout of such folly.

The implications scream for vigilance. As U.S. amnesty pushes ramp up—hello, DACA expansions and border surges—this story warns of the domino effect: lax vetting breeds danger, eroding trust in institutions and heightening risks for everyday folks. 2A advocates must hammer this home—highlight how nations abandoning sovereignty invite predators, making armed, responsible citizens the last line of defense. Spain’s post office may have dropped the ball, but we won’t: stay informed, stay armed, and demand accountability before technical faults hit our shores.

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