...and unfortunately since 9/11, that's where literally 100% of the terror attacks in the U.S. have come from.
No 'border wall' fixes that.
No tomahawk missiles fix that.
No amount of 'boots on the ground' in Syria or Iraq fixes that.
It's disturbing that this administration's key cabinet members literally have no answer for the primary terrorist threat that actually faces us. Because it requires doing things they either don't understand, or doing things they campaigned against and/or go against their core values and tenets. And that means we all lose - we lose all the money wasted on nonsense "fixes" and we lose when the next homegrown terrorist kills more Americans and is spin-doctored into another "immigration" and "we need to go bomb ISIS" meme...
EDIT- Part of the transcript:
DICKERSON: I just want to follow up, Mr. Secretary. You said on the homegrown threat, a lot of people think that is the biggest threat. It was part of the San Bernardino shooting, a part of the Boston bombing. But you said you don’t know how to stop that. If that’s the biggest threat and you don’t know how to stop it, that seems like a big problem.
KELLY: It is a big problem. It is ― you know, depending on where you sit is where you stand on this, it is a big threat. Is it the number one threat? I think it’s the most common threat. ...
I think the appeal I would make on the homegrown threat is if you see something, say something. Whether you’re a parent, a sibling, an imam. And this extends frankly, John, to white supremacists and that kind of terrorism as well. If you see a young man or a young woman going down that path where they’re always on these kind of websites or saying things at church or in a mosque that are clearly disturbing, then tell someone about it so that we can help that kid, young man or woman, before they break the law.
Let's not go after the biggest and most common threat; let's "build a wall" and deny refugees safe haven instead, because that plays to a fake narrative better, and it's easier to do anyway.