Friday, April 15, 2022

NAFTA JOE BIDEN - ILLEGALS FIRST!!! - Is Biden Planning to Send VA Doctors to the Border to Treat Illegal Aliens? - Mayorkas has repeatedly suggested that he identifies himself with migrants, not with Americans.

 

What Has He Done For You?




Texas repeals immigration order that caused gridlock at border with Mexico




Study: More than 7-in-10 California Immigrant

Welfare


https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2018/12/04/study-more-than-7-in-10-california-immigrant-households-are-on-welfare/

 

More than 7-in-10 households headed by immigrants in the state of California are on taxpayer-funded welfare, a new study reveals.

The latest Census Bureau data analyzed by the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS) finds that about 72 percent of households headed by noncitizens and immigrants use one or more forms of taxpayer-funded welfare programs in California — the number one immigrant-receiving state in the U.S.

AMERICA IS A NATION FOR THE RICH AND 'CHEAP' ILLEGAL LABOR THAT THE RICH DEMAND

25 Facts About The Explosive Growth Of Poverty In America That Will Blow Your Mind

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ANm7FAKuCw0


The rest of the world sees America as the wealthiest nation on the entire planet. But when we take a closer look at the hardships our population is facing, we can rapidly realize that there's a tremendous amount of financial suffering in the United States, and that's getting dramatically worse with each passing year. Today, more money goes towards the pockets of the rich than ever before. Over the past few decades, we've been witnessing the greatest event of wealth transfer in the history of our nation without even realizing it. While billionaire CEOs like Mark Zuckenberg make over a million times more than the average American worker every year, many families out there, whose parents work themselves to the bone every single day, will still struggle to find what to eat and where to sleep with their children tonight. Extreme poverty continues to grow all across the country. According to an analysis released by the University of Chicago, at least 336,000 households with children live on less than two dollars a day. That’s a group known as the ultra-poor. Amid skyrocketing housing and rent prices, at least 600,000 Americans remain in a group known as the “unhoused”. “Right now, we are still trending in the wrong direction,” explained Anthony Love, interim executive director at the United States Interagency Council on Homelessness. “When the public is told that one particular policy is going to end homelessness, what they’re expecting is that they’re going to see fewer homeless people around,” added Stephen Eide, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute. What they haven’t considered yet is that housing has to come first, Eide stressed. Meanwhile, the gap between the rich and the rest of the population is worsening. On average, the top 1% of earners make 20 times more than the bottom 90% every year. The wealth disparity grows the higher up the ladder we climb. Even the mid-level one-percenters can’t reach the gigantic amounts earned by the ultra-rich. These disparities, make us question whether the US is indeed a rich nation or a nation for the rich. The answer is up to interpretation, but you can have a clearer picture about this issue at the end of this video. Today, we gathered some staggering stats that expose that poverty in the United States is wildly out of control. Here are 25 Facts About The Explosive Growth Of Poverty In America That Will Blow Your Mind.  For more info, find us on: https://www.epiceconomist.com/

Is Biden Planning to Send VA Doctors to the Border to Treat Illegal Aliens?

By Susan Jones | April 15, 2022 | 7:30am EDT

  

Migrants caught crossing the US-Mexico border are loaded into a transport van by US Border Patrol agents in Sunland Park, New Mexico on July 22, 2021. (Photo by PAUL RATJE/AFP via Getty Images)
Migrants caught crossing the US-Mexico border are loaded into a transport van by US Border Patrol agents in Sunland Park, New Mexico on July 22, 2021. (Photo by PAUL RATJE/AFP via Getty Images)

(CNSNews.com) - Is there a plan to send medical personnel from the Department of Veterans Affairs to the southern border to deal with the anticipated surge in illegal immigration after Title 42, a public health measure, is lifted on May 23?

Republicans want to know if those reports are true.

In an April 13 letter to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, Rep. Jody Hice (R-Ga.), a member of the Veterans Affairs Committee, said reports of such a move are “deeply troubling.” 

"Moving VA medical staff away from our veterans’ healthcare needs to examine illegal immigrants is a recipe for disaster," he wrote. "Wait times for a veteran to see their doctor can average 22 days and reach a high as 42 days. This is unacceptable mismanagement of federal government resources by the Biden administration," he wrote.

Rep. Kat Cammack (R-Fla.), a member of the Homeland Security Committee, told "Mornings With Maria" on Friday that human smuggling is enriching criminal networks and undermining U.S. national security:

"People pay a minimum $4,000 a head" to the cartels to make it to the U.S. soil, Cammack said.

"When you do the math, that's $32 million a day. That's over a billion with a 'B' a month. That doesn't include the drug trade, that doesn't include the weapons, and you mentioned China.

"Maria, there are Chinese nationals that pay $75,000 to be smuggled into the United States. I know this to be a fact because I have seen the investigative reports myself. We have people on the international terrorist watch list who pay hundreds of thousands of dollars to the cartels to be smuggled in the United States. We have Ukrainians at the southwest border trying to get in.

"But the thing that I find most egregious in the last 24 hours is the news that the Biden administration wants to send our VA doctors who are already backlogged within our own VA system taking care of our veterans, they want to send the doctors to the border to treat illegals. This administration is prioritizing illegals over our veterans, and it's disgusting."

Host Maria Bartiromo has been to the southwest border multiple times since Joe Biden became president, and she's also concerned about the Chinese nationals coming across:

"That's what I saw as well. One of four times I was told that there was a group of Chinese engineers, I mean, these are not people, you know, escaping poverty. These were engineers from China who had paid $50,000 a head to come in here.

“So the bottom line is, anybody who wants to come here, they recognize this is the way. The open border is the way to get in and once they are here, they are doing surveillance, they are doing intellectual property theft, engineers from China, 50,000 a head," Bartiromo said.

"So thanks for raising that, because that's what I heard, and I was absolutely stunned."

Cammack told Bartiromo the border crisis will end "when Republicans take back the House and the Senate, and we secure this border."


DHS Mayorkas Rewards 40,000 Economic Migrants from Cameroon

A member of Panama's National Borders Service takes a picture of a migrant at the Temporary Station of Humanitarian Assistance (ETAH) in La Penita village, Darien province, Panama on May 23, 2019. - Migrants mainly from Haiti, Cuba, Democratic Republic of Congo, India, Cameroon, Bangladesh and Angola cross the border …
LUIS ACOSTA/AFP via Getty
7:51

President Joe Biden’s pro-migration border chief is rewarding roughly 40,000 African economic migrants by granting them work permits and legal status.

The decision announced Friday to grant Temporary Protected Status (TPS) to the migrants from Cameroon will help to extract more African workers, consumers, and renters for use in the U.S. economy, even as at least 10 million American men lack jobs.

“The United States recognizes the ongoing armed conflict in Cameroon, and we will provide temporary protection to those in need,” said a statement from Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas:

Cameroonian nationals currently residing in the U.S. who cannot safely return due to the extreme violence perpetrated by government forces and armed separatists, and a rise in attacks led by Boko Haram, will be able to remain and work in the United States until conditions in their home country improve.

The 18-month TPS benefit will likely be extended for many years, just like prior awards to illegal migrants from Central America.

Republican legislators rarely push back against the TPS program, because the program delivers more consumers, renters, and workers to businesses in their districts.

A trickle of Cameroonians entered the United States during President Donald Trump’s tenure. The migrants asked for asylum from fighting in their African homeland. But their asylum claims are legally very weak because international law requires refugees to seek sanctuary in the first safe country they reach — and the Cameroonians traveled through many safe countries to reach the United States.

The Cameroonian inflow has rapidly increased to roughly 40,000 since Biden dismantled border controls, partly because the new arrivals instantly use their cellphones to summon their relatives and friends to join them.

In this Sunday, July 28, 2019, photo, migrants in Tijuana, many from Cameroon, listen to names being called for those who can claim asylum that day in the US. English-speaking Cameroonians fleeing atrocities of their French-speaking government helped push Tijuana’s asylum wait list to 10,000 on Sunday, up from 4,800 just three months earlier. (AP Photo/Elliot Spagat)

File/In this Sunday, July 28, 2019, photo, migrants in Tijuana, many from Cameroon, listen to names being called for those who can claim asylum that day in the US.  (AP Photo/Elliot Spagat)

Mayorkas also encourages migration by releasing the migrants to get jobs instead of detaining them until their asylum cases are heard, as required by law.

Mayorkas returned less than a hundred of the economic migrants to their home country.

Through 2021 and into 2022, Mayorkas has welcomed roughly 1.5 million economic migrants across the southern border, alongside the inflow of temporary workers and legal immigrants. The inflow likely adds up to one migrant for every two births in the United States during the year.

His welcome for economic migrants hurts ordinary Americans by pressing wages downwards, pushing up housing prices, adding more chaotic diversity to U.S. politics, and crowding schools, hospitals, and other resources. For example, Americans’ real wages fell by almost 3 percent as Biden and Mayorkas inflated the U.S. economy with record spending and migrant inflows.

Mayorkas’s welcome is encouraging migrants from many countries to risk their lives on the tough trip to the U.S. border. A 2012 Gallup survey showed that 150 million people would like to migrate to the United States.

Austen, a Cameroonian asylum seeker, speaks as thousands welcome back Congress by marching for Citizenship, Care, And Climate Justice on September 21, 2021 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Paul Morigi/Getty Images for CPD Action)

Mayorkas has repeatedly suggested that he identifies himself with migrants, not with Americans.

In a June 2021 speech, he described the shock he felt when visiting a migrant camp in Kenya around 2010 that was filled with many thousands of destitute migrants from the chaotically diverse country of Somalia. He continued:

And I returned to the States asking a lot of fundamental questions, certainly about whether we could define ourselves as a civilized world or not, but also asking questions about myself … and the question of identity became much more profoundly important to me as an individual, as a son, as a brother, and as a father, and husband. But it also became very important to me, as a leader of an organization. And the issue of identity became the central question when we were wrestling with policy issues.

When we consider a particular policy question before us, doesn’t the answer help define our identity? Who we are, and more importantly, who we want to be?

The Cuban-born Mayorkas concluded in 2013 that Americans’ homeland “always has been, and forever will remain a nation of immigrants.” Only about one-third of Americans accept the “nation of immigrants” narrative, according to a survey by a pro-migration group.

“We are building an immigration system that is designed to ensure due process, respect human dignity, and promote equity,” Mayorkas tweeted in August 2021, as he sketched out his plans for easy-asylum rules that would encourage a mass migration of poor job-seekers into Americans’ homeland.

“Justice is our priority,” Mayorkas declared at a November 2021 Senate hearing, adding, “That includes securing our border and providing relief to those [migrants] who qualify for it under our laws.”

This year, Mayorkas has also developed plans to open the southern border on May 23 to all migrants who say they need asylum.

Since at least 1990, the D.C. establishment has used a wide variety of excuses and explanations — for example, “Nation of Immigrants” — to justify its economic policy of extracting tens of millions of migrants and visa workers from poor countries to serve as workers, consumers, and renters for various U.S. investors and CEOs.

The self-serving economic strategy of extraction migration has no stopping point. It is brutal to ordinary Americans because it cuts their career opportunities, shrinks their salaries and wages, raises their housing costs, and has shoved at least ten million American men out of the labor force.

Extraction migration also distorts the economy, and curbs Americans’ productivity, partly because it allows employers to use stoop labor instead of machines.

Migration also reduces voters’ political clout, undermines employees’ workplace rights, and widens the regional wealth gaps between the Democrats’ coastal states and the Republicans’ Heartland states.

An economy built on extraction migration also alienates young people and radicalizes Americans’ democratic, compromise-promoting civic culture because it allows wealthy elites to ignore despairing Americans at the bottom of society.

The economic strategy also kills many migrants, exploits poor people, splits foreign families, and extracts wealth from the poor home countries.

The extraction migration policy is backed by progressives who wish to transform the United States from a society governed by European-origin civic culture into a progressive-led empire of competing identity groups. “We’re trying to become the first multiracial, multi-ethnic superpower in the world,” Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA), told the New York Times on March 21. “It will be an extraordinary achievement … we will ultimately triumph,” he insisted.

The award to Cameroonian migrants “is also a boost to US economy and will help stabilize the economy of Cameroon through increased remittances,” claimed Douglas Rivlin, a progressive spokesman for the business-backed America’s Voice pro-migration group.

Not surprisingly, the wealth-shifting extraction migration policy is very unpopular, according to a  wide variety of polls.

The polls show deep and broad public opposition to labor migration and the inflow of temporary contract workers into jobs sought by young U.S. graduates.

The opposition is growinganti-establishmentmultiracialcross-sexnon-racistclass-basedbipartisanrationalpersistent, and recognizes the solidarity that Americans owe to one another.

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