Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

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old salt
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Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by old salt »

Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 11:01 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:41 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:27 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:02 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 8:22 pm The Trump administration has frequently argued that the increase in the number of families and children fleeing violence in their countries of origin and seeking asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border is a result of “loopholes” in U.S. immigration laws. This is a distortion of the reasons why an increased numbers of families and children are seeking protection in the United States, and is not an accurate characterization of the U.S. asylum process.

There has indeed been a sharp rise in asylum seekers from Central America’s Northern Triangle region (Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador). U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) reports that more individuals from the Northern Triangle region sought affirmative asylum in the United States between 2013 to 2015 than in the previous 15 years combined.

WOLA has been tracking violence and migration in Central America for nearly 15 years.

The growing backlog of cases forces judges to make rapid decision with little resources. Compounding this situation is the Trump administration’s decision in July 2017 to cancel the annual week-long training course to prepare judges for ongoing changes in case law, ethics and other areas.
Published Feb 1, 2018, by a pro-migration NGO. Out of date & overcome by events.
No wonder you don't link or provide attribution of what you quote.
https://reliefweb.int/report/united-sta ... um-seekers
:lol: :lol: :lol: Change the law.
Enforce existing laws. Restart deportations.
We deport people every day.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/immigrat ... ions-2023/
The increase in deportations is more a reflection of the high numbers of migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border than interior enforcement, which Biden has discouraged in most cases.
Typical Lax Dad
Posts: 34295
Joined: Mon Jul 30, 2018 12:10 pm

Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by Typical Lax Dad »

old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 7:35 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 11:01 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:41 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:27 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:02 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 8:22 pm The Trump administration has frequently argued that the increase in the number of families and children fleeing violence in their countries of origin and seeking asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border is a result of “loopholes” in U.S. immigration laws. This is a distortion of the reasons why an increased numbers of families and children are seeking protection in the United States, and is not an accurate characterization of the U.S. asylum process.

There has indeed been a sharp rise in asylum seekers from Central America’s Northern Triangle region (Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador). U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) reports that more individuals from the Northern Triangle region sought affirmative asylum in the United States between 2013 to 2015 than in the previous 15 years combined.

WOLA has been tracking violence and migration in Central America for nearly 15 years.

The growing backlog of cases forces judges to make rapid decision with little resources. Compounding this situation is the Trump administration’s decision in July 2017 to cancel the annual week-long training course to prepare judges for ongoing changes in case law, ethics and other areas.
Published Feb 1, 2018, by a pro-migration NGO. Out of date & overcome by events.
No wonder you don't link or provide attribution of what you quote.
https://reliefweb.int/report/united-sta ... um-seekers
:lol: :lol: :lol: Change the law.
Enforce existing laws. Restart deportations.
We deport people every day.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/immigrat ... ions-2023/
The increase in deportations is more a reflection of the high numbers of migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border than interior enforcement, which Biden has discouraged in most cases.
Are we deporting people or not? In “what case” are most cases and who has a record of the cases Biden has discouraged?

https://www.cato.org/blog/new-data-show ... rump-biden
“I wish you would!”
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old salt
Posts: 18906
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Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by old salt »

Typical Lax Dad wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:07 pm
old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 7:35 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 11:01 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:41 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:27 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:02 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 8:22 pm The Trump administration has frequently argued that the increase in the number of families and children fleeing violence in their countries of origin and seeking asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border is a result of “loopholes” in U.S. immigration laws. This is a distortion of the reasons why an increased numbers of families and children are seeking protection in the United States, and is not an accurate characterization of the U.S. asylum process.

There has indeed been a sharp rise in asylum seekers from Central America’s Northern Triangle region (Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador). U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) reports that more individuals from the Northern Triangle region sought affirmative asylum in the United States between 2013 to 2015 than in the previous 15 years combined.

WOLA has been tracking violence and migration in Central America for nearly 15 years.

The growing backlog of cases forces judges to make rapid decision with little resources. Compounding this situation is the Trump administration’s decision in July 2017 to cancel the annual week-long training course to prepare judges for ongoing changes in case law, ethics and other areas.
Published Feb 1, 2018, by a pro-migration NGO. Out of date & overcome by events.
No wonder you don't link or provide attribution of what you quote.
https://reliefweb.int/report/united-sta ... um-seekers
:lol: :lol: :lol: Change the law.
Enforce existing laws. Restart deportations.
We deport people every day.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/immigrat ... ions-2023/
The increase in deportations is more a reflection of the high numbers of migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border than interior enforcement, which Biden has discouraged in most cases.
Are we deporting people or not? In “what case” are most cases and who has a record of the cases Biden has discouraged?

https://www.cato.org/blog/new-data-show ... rump-biden
https://www.texastribune.org/2021/01/20 ... migration/
Typical Lax Dad
Posts: 34295
Joined: Mon Jul 30, 2018 12:10 pm

Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by Typical Lax Dad »

old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:15 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:07 pm
old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 7:35 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 11:01 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:41 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:27 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:02 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 8:22 pm The Trump administration has frequently argued that the increase in the number of families and children fleeing violence in their countries of origin and seeking asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border is a result of “loopholes” in U.S. immigration laws. This is a distortion of the reasons why an increased numbers of families and children are seeking protection in the United States, and is not an accurate characterization of the U.S. asylum process.

There has indeed been a sharp rise in asylum seekers from Central America’s Northern Triangle region (Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador). U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) reports that more individuals from the Northern Triangle region sought affirmative asylum in the United States between 2013 to 2015 than in the previous 15 years combined.

WOLA has been tracking violence and migration in Central America for nearly 15 years.

The growing backlog of cases forces judges to make rapid decision with little resources. Compounding this situation is the Trump administration’s decision in July 2017 to cancel the annual week-long training course to prepare judges for ongoing changes in case law, ethics and other areas.
Published Feb 1, 2018, by a pro-migration NGO. Out of date & overcome by events.
No wonder you don't link or provide attribution of what you quote.
https://reliefweb.int/report/united-sta ... um-seekers
:lol: :lol: :lol: Change the law.
Enforce existing laws. Restart deportations.
We deport people every day.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/immigrat ... ions-2023/
The increase in deportations is more a reflection of the high numbers of migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border than interior enforcement, which Biden has discouraged in most cases.
Are we deporting people or not? In “what case” are most cases and who has a record of the cases Biden has discouraged?

https://www.cato.org/blog/new-data-show ... rump-biden
https://www.texastribune.org/2021/01/20 ... migration/
That was three years ago.
“I wish you would!”
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old salt
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Joined: Fri Jul 27, 2018 11:44 am

Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by old salt »

Typical Lax Dad wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:44 pm
old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:15 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:07 pm
old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 7:35 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 11:01 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:41 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:27 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:02 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 8:22 pm The Trump administration has frequently argued that the increase in the number of families and children fleeing violence in their countries of origin and seeking asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border is a result of “loopholes” in U.S. immigration laws. This is a distortion of the reasons why an increased numbers of families and children are seeking protection in the United States, and is not an accurate characterization of the U.S. asylum process.

There has indeed been a sharp rise in asylum seekers from Central America’s Northern Triangle region (Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador). U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) reports that more individuals from the Northern Triangle region sought affirmative asylum in the United States between 2013 to 2015 than in the previous 15 years combined.

WOLA has been tracking violence and migration in Central America for nearly 15 years.

The growing backlog of cases forces judges to make rapid decision with little resources. Compounding this situation is the Trump administration’s decision in July 2017 to cancel the annual week-long training course to prepare judges for ongoing changes in case law, ethics and other areas.
Published Feb 1, 2018, by a pro-migration NGO. Out of date & overcome by events.
No wonder you don't link or provide attribution of what you quote.
https://reliefweb.int/report/united-sta ... um-seekers
:lol: :lol: :lol: Change the law.
Enforce existing laws. Restart deportations.
We deport people every day.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/immigrat ... ions-2023/
The increase in deportations is more a reflection of the high numbers of migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border than interior enforcement, which Biden has discouraged in most cases.
Are we deporting people or not? In “what case” are most cases and who has a record of the cases Biden has discouraged?

https://www.cato.org/blog/new-data-show ... rump-biden
https://www.texastribune.org/2021/01/20 ... migration/
That was three years ago.
That's when Biden announced he was halting deportations. The cartels heard him.
Typical Lax Dad
Posts: 34295
Joined: Mon Jul 30, 2018 12:10 pm

Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by Typical Lax Dad »

old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:49 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:44 pm
old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:15 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:07 pm
old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 7:35 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 11:01 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:41 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:27 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:02 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 8:22 pm The Trump administration has frequently argued that the increase in the number of families and children fleeing violence in their countries of origin and seeking asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border is a result of “loopholes” in U.S. immigration laws. This is a distortion of the reasons why an increased numbers of families and children are seeking protection in the United States, and is not an accurate characterization of the U.S. asylum process.

There has indeed been a sharp rise in asylum seekers from Central America’s Northern Triangle region (Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador). U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) reports that more individuals from the Northern Triangle region sought affirmative asylum in the United States between 2013 to 2015 than in the previous 15 years combined.

WOLA has been tracking violence and migration in Central America for nearly 15 years.

The growing backlog of cases forces judges to make rapid decision with little resources. Compounding this situation is the Trump administration’s decision in July 2017 to cancel the annual week-long training course to prepare judges for ongoing changes in case law, ethics and other areas.
Published Feb 1, 2018, by a pro-migration NGO. Out of date & overcome by events.
No wonder you don't link or provide attribution of what you quote.
https://reliefweb.int/report/united-sta ... um-seekers
:lol: :lol: :lol: Change the law.
Enforce existing laws. Restart deportations.
We deport people every day.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/immigrat ... ions-2023/
The increase in deportations is more a reflection of the high numbers of migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border than interior enforcement, which Biden has discouraged in most cases.
Are we deporting people or not? In “what case” are most cases and who has a record of the cases Biden has discouraged?

https://www.cato.org/blog/new-data-show ... rump-biden
https://www.texastribune.org/2021/01/20 ... migration/
That was three years ago.
That's when Biden announced he was halting deportations. The cartels heard him.
https://www.cato.org/blog/data-show-tru ... sers-biden

BTW, I see Latinos are the largest demographic group in Texas now…..your nightmare is being realized…..deh coming for your women.
“I wish you would!”
User avatar
old salt
Posts: 18906
Joined: Fri Jul 27, 2018 11:44 am

Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by old salt »

Typical Lax Dad wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 9:13 pm
old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:49 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:44 pm
old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:15 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:07 pm
old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 7:35 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 11:01 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:41 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:27 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:02 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 8:22 pm The Trump administration has frequently argued that the increase in the number of families and children fleeing violence in their countries of origin and seeking asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border is a result of “loopholes” in U.S. immigration laws. This is a distortion of the reasons why an increased numbers of families and children are seeking protection in the United States, and is not an accurate characterization of the U.S. asylum process.

There has indeed been a sharp rise in asylum seekers from Central America’s Northern Triangle region (Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador). U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) reports that more individuals from the Northern Triangle region sought affirmative asylum in the United States between 2013 to 2015 than in the previous 15 years combined.

WOLA has been tracking violence and migration in Central America for nearly 15 years.

The growing backlog of cases forces judges to make rapid decision with little resources. Compounding this situation is the Trump administration’s decision in July 2017 to cancel the annual week-long training course to prepare judges for ongoing changes in case law, ethics and other areas.
Published Feb 1, 2018, by a pro-migration NGO. Out of date & overcome by events.
No wonder you don't link or provide attribution of what you quote.
https://reliefweb.int/report/united-sta ... um-seekers
:lol: :lol: :lol: Change the law.
Enforce existing laws. Restart deportations.
We deport people every day.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/immigrat ... ions-2023/
The increase in deportations is more a reflection of the high numbers of migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border than interior enforcement, which Biden has discouraged in most cases.
Are we deporting people or not? In “what case” are most cases and who has a record of the cases Biden has discouraged?

https://www.cato.org/blog/new-data-show ... rump-biden
https://www.texastribune.org/2021/01/20 ... migration/
That was three years ago.
That's when Biden announced he was halting deportations. The cartels heard him.
https://www.cato.org/blog/data-show-tru ... sers-biden

BTW, I see Latinos are the largest demographic group in Texas now…..your nightmare is being realized…..deh coming for your women.
They were the largest demographic group in S Texas when I lived there 50 years ago.
Were I not already married, I'd have come for their women. Wet dream rather than nightmare.
Typical Lax Dad
Posts: 34295
Joined: Mon Jul 30, 2018 12:10 pm

Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by Typical Lax Dad »

old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 9:22 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 9:13 pm
old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:49 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:44 pm
old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:15 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 8:07 pm
old salt wrote: Sat Feb 10, 2024 7:35 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 11:01 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:41 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:27 pm
old salt wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 10:02 pm
Typical Lax Dad wrote: Fri Feb 09, 2024 8:22 pm The Trump administration has frequently argued that the increase in the number of families and children fleeing violence in their countries of origin and seeking asylum at the U.S.-Mexico border is a result of “loopholes” in U.S. immigration laws. This is a distortion of the reasons why an increased numbers of families and children are seeking protection in the United States, and is not an accurate characterization of the U.S. asylum process.

There has indeed been a sharp rise in asylum seekers from Central America’s Northern Triangle region (Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador). U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) reports that more individuals from the Northern Triangle region sought affirmative asylum in the United States between 2013 to 2015 than in the previous 15 years combined.

WOLA has been tracking violence and migration in Central America for nearly 15 years.

The growing backlog of cases forces judges to make rapid decision with little resources. Compounding this situation is the Trump administration’s decision in July 2017 to cancel the annual week-long training course to prepare judges for ongoing changes in case law, ethics and other areas.
Published Feb 1, 2018, by a pro-migration NGO. Out of date & overcome by events.
No wonder you don't link or provide attribution of what you quote.
https://reliefweb.int/report/united-sta ... um-seekers
:lol: :lol: :lol: Change the law.
Enforce existing laws. Restart deportations.
We deport people every day.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/immigrat ... ions-2023/
The increase in deportations is more a reflection of the high numbers of migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border than interior enforcement, which Biden has discouraged in most cases.
Are we deporting people or not? In “what case” are most cases and who has a record of the cases Biden has discouraged?

https://www.cato.org/blog/new-data-show ... rump-biden
https://www.texastribune.org/2021/01/20 ... migration/
That was three years ago.
That's when Biden announced he was halting deportations. The cartels heard him.
https://www.cato.org/blog/data-show-tru ... sers-biden

BTW, I see Latinos are the largest demographic group in Texas now…..your nightmare is being realized…..deh coming for your women.
They were the largest demographic group in S Texas when I lived there 50 years ago.
Were I not already married, I'd have come for their women. Wet dream rather than nightmare.
Well S. Texas ain’t Texas……..this is 50 years later….those days are gone…..and I am not surprised about your last comment.
“I wish you would!”
jhu72
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Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by jhu72 »

Migrants are not smuggling Fentanyl as MAGATs have claimed. This should come as no surprise to sane people. MAGATs just pull sh*t out of their ass!

Americans are poisoning the soul of America! The Americans doing the poisoning are MAGATs!
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cradleandshoot
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Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by cradleandshoot »

jhu72 wrote: Sun Feb 11, 2024 2:50 pm Migrants are not smuggling Fentanyl as MAGATs have claimed. This should come as no surprise to sane people. MAGATs just pull sh*t out of their ass!

Americans are poisoning the soul of America! The Americans doing the poisoning are MAGATs!
You sound really stupid.🤪
We don't make mistakes, we have happy accidents.
Bob Ross:
Typical Lax Dad
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Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by Typical Lax Dad »



They don’t look Mexican to me.
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Typical Lax Dad
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Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by Typical Lax Dad »



Must be a southern Mexican.
“I wish you would!”
jhu72
Posts: 14485
Joined: Wed Sep 19, 2018 12:52 pm

Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by jhu72 »

cradleandshoot wrote: Sun Feb 11, 2024 3:21 pm
jhu72 wrote: Sun Feb 11, 2024 2:50 pm Migrants are not smuggling Fentanyl as MAGATs have claimed. This should come as no surprise to sane people. MAGATs just pull sh*t out of their ass!

Americans are poisoning the soul of America! The Americans doing the poisoning are MAGATs!
You sound really stupid.🤪
... it sounds stupid to refer to MAGATs as Americans I guess. :roll:
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Farfromgeneva
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Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by Farfromgeneva »

Typical Lax Dad wrote: Sun Feb 11, 2024 3:54 pm

Must be a southern Mexican.
Got them Meximericans in CNY too!

https://www.syracuse.com/news/erry-2018 ... acuse.html
Harvard University, out
University of Utah, in

I am going to get a 4.0 in damage.

(Afan jealous he didn’t do this first)
jhu72
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Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by jhu72 »

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MDlaxfan76
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Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by MDlaxfan76 »

jhu72 wrote: Tue Feb 13, 2024 1:53 pm
They hit harder than Dems do...

Imagine if they'd spent $7 million on a Super Bowl ad...
Typical Lax Dad
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Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by Typical Lax Dad »

https://apple.news/Ap2M0dFkfTI-6pngqoiybdA

Just some good ol’ boys huntin’
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Is Biden giving millions of migrants false hope?

Post by OuttaNowhereWregget »

IDEAS

Biden has been giving millions of migrants false hope
Desperate people have been allowed into the country while they apply for the right to stay, but such permission is very difficult to obtain.
By Carine Hajjar Boston Globe Staff, January 26, 2024


For weeks there has been a line of mostly male migrants rounding the block outside the closed St. Brigid school in the East Village of Manhattan. They’re waiting to enter a city-run “reticketing site” in search of new shelter. According to news outlet The City, officials are hoping migrants will accept an offer for a flight out of New York. Most, however, are just seeking shelter reassignment, because they’ve reached the initial 30-day shelter limit for adult migrants and need a new place to sleep. Many wait for hours, wearing an eclectic collection of what looks like donated winter gear. A migrant walks up and down the line selling warm drinks and cigarettes to men leaning against the church or propped up on top of their few pieces of luggage. When covering similar situations a year ago, I only ever heard Spanish. But as I walk down the sidewalk now, I hear dozens of languages from Latin America, Africa, Russia, Asia.

Jonathan, who didn’t offer his last name, is a 32-year-old lawyer from Venezuela and stands in the line wearing a red jacket. “I had problems [in my country] as a lawyer,” he says in Spanish. “If you’re against the government, you’ll have problems, they’ll come to your house.” Jonathan chose to come to New York because he has some family in the city and heard that migrants are given resources to apply for asylum — a sentiment echoed by other migrants in line. But when it comes to shelter, “it’s a little more difficult,” he says. “There aren’t enough places. . . . I have friends who are going back to Venezuela.” He recently slept on a church floor where he arrived at 1 a.m. and had to leave by 6 a.m. He’s hoping for more stability from the reticketing center. “At least they told me between today and tomorrow they could reassign me,” he says. “But nothing is sure.”

Jose Rafael, 42, who also didn’t offer his last name, is another Venezuelan, and he told me that the daily uncertainty is “a psychological type of exhaustion. . . . It’s a torture.” An older Colombian man next to him started to shed tears as he told me about having to wait seven hours in the cold just to be able to sleep on the floor of a church for one night. “This man is of advanced age, he shouldn’t be out here, look how he cries with a feeling of despair,” Jose Rafael says. But migrants seem to consider their suffering to be tempered by hope for what is to come. “Thank God for Biden, because that man has a noble heart because we all want the American dream,” says Jose Rafael. “For those who entered legally and those who entered illegally — we all want to know America. . . .We want to get our citizenship.”

But current policies at the border funnel migrants into a system where their long-term legal claim to “the American dream” is uncertain, and for many, unlikely. Under past presidents, people like the men in line in the East Village might never have made it that far, because many of them lacked a strong case for asylum. But under Biden, millions of migrants — in a move that has no precedent in recent history — have been released into the country under a haphazard presumption of asylum eligibility and led down a hazy legal pathway. Others have been admitted under different programs that lack any clear or permanent path to citizenship. In the meantime, many are forced to rely on an increasingly strained state as they face mounting court backlogs and struggle to obtain work permits. In the end, many won’t meet the high legal bar for asylum and will face deportation or a life in the shadows.

As Congress continues to negotiate measures for stricter border security — negotiators appear to be closing in on a deal that links aid to Ukraine to tighter border rules — the president and Congress will have to confront the reality that securing the border is only the first step toward quelling the immigration crisis. Dealing with the legal fallout from the Biden administration’s decision to release millions of migrants into the country will be the real challenge.

Kicking the legal can down the road
Faced with historic migration numbers and political pressure from open-border activists, the administration has released hundreds of thousands of migrants into the interior to await further legal processing. They are given notices to appear in immigration court, which help move migrants out of Customs and Border Patrol custody quickly, especially as detention space at the border is at capacity. According to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse at Syracuse University, such notices to appear “were rarely used at ports of entry until the Biden administration.”

In October and November alone, 253,435 migrants who arrived at the southern border were given notices to appear. Eventually an immigration judge will determine whether they should be deported or are eligible for asylum or another “form of relief from removal,” in the words of the Congressional Research Service.

The Biden administration is also using a provision called humanitarian parole to deal with the high numbers of immigrants. According to the American Immigration Council, “Humanitarian parole does not provide any permanent pathway to remain in the United States and can be revoked or not renewed should [the Department of Homeland Security] decide that it is no longer warranted or if the beneficiary violates the conditions of the parole.” It appears that some of the migrants granted appointments at border ports of entry through the CBP One app are given parole with a notice to appear. Last January, the Biden administration instituted the process for Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans and admitted at least 297,000 migrants with humanitarian parole through November.

As with asylum adjudication, the end result of these parole programs is hazy. For example, parole for migrants from those four countries will expire after two years, at which point, according to the government agency that administers the system, “there are a full range of existing lawful immigration pathways, including an extension of parole, immigrant and nonimmigrant visas, asylum, and Temporary Protected Status (TPS), that certain parolees may be eligible for in accordance with US laws.” But a different presidential administration could also end the program altogether.

In other words, measures like parole and notices to appear are just kicking the legal can down the road. “Instead of dealing with these problems directly and concretely and with some sense of finality, you essentially just keep putting it off,” says Gil Guerra, an immigration policy analyst at the Niskanen Center think tank in Washington, D.C. “It’s really starting to catch up to us.”

The most recent statistics available are from November, when the immigration court backlog reached a record-breaking 3 million pending cases, up from 2 million cases a year earlier. Some migrants may have to wait a decade for a court date. Although the Biden administration has hired more judges over the past three years, the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse at Syracuse reports that “more judges and higher case closures per judge have still not been able to keep pace with the flow of incoming cases.”

The result is a self-perpetuating disaster. As more migrants are released, backlogs are rising and it’s taking longer to get a ruling on one’s legal status. On top of that, only migrants with humanitarian parole can immediately apply for a work permit. Those released with notices to appear on their own recognizance must first apply for asylum in immigration court and not until 150 days later can they apply for work authorization.

People lined up to get a ticket for a bed for the night outside the St. Brigid school on Saturday.
People lined up to get a ticket for a bed for the night outside the St. Brigid school on Saturday.STEPHANIE KEITH/GETTY
That is, if they know to do so. If your head is spinning with all these rules, you’re not alone — Homeland Security acknowledges that only “a small percentage of working-age individuals paroled after making an appointment through CBP One have applied for employment work authorizations.” Navigating the layers of rules is confusing, especially for those who don’t speak English well. Cities receiving migrants are struggling to locate translators for the various languages migrants do speak. Migrants I meet often ask me to translate their legal documents or to help guide them to their next government appointments or shelter location.

Without easy access to work permit approval from United States Citizenship and Immigration Services — which can also experience backlogs — migrants like Jose Rafael must fend for themselves as overburdened states and cities run out of resources. He showed me a recent notice that his work authorization application was being evaluated. He’s been in the United States for almost two years.

Even if he gets his work authorization — which will be temporary — his American dream is far from guaranteed. In the end, many migrants “will lose [their case for] asylum, either because they don’t have an attorney to represent them or they don’t have a strong case on the merits,” says Stephen Yale-Loehr, a professor of immigration law at Cornell Law School. Coming from countries with difficult political circumstances isn’t enough — asylum is granted based on persecution due to race, religion, nationality, membership in a “particular social group,” or political opinion. “It’s very hard to show that the persecution is well founded based on one of those five characteristics,” explains Yale-Loehr.

When the dust settles, migrants will generally fall into three categories: those who qualify for asylum, those who don’t and could face deportation, and those who have disappeared into the shadows. Guerra, of the Niskanen Center, believes there will be a “large population [of migrants] who may be precluded from working or who basically live in total and complete uncertainty.”

“That’s bad for our legal system, it’s bad for our economy, and it’s also bad for the migrants themselves,” Yale-Loehr says. He has underlined the need to fund more border patrol agents, more ICE agents for deportation, and more judges to help clear asylum backlogs.

In the short term, Biden should abandon policies that make the asylum system the easiest option for entry regardless of one’s legal claims. In the long term, Congress must reform the immigration system to incentivize the use of legal pathways.

Yale-Loehr and his colleagues recently wrote a paper expressing the imperative to “expand other legal avenues of migrants to the United States” beyond asylum. “We cannot cut off all avenues to asylum, but we also cannot continue to accept applications from all who arrive, especially those with highly unlikely claims,” they write. Guerra believes that offering more work visas and creating more temporary work programs could stem the tide of border crossings. He points out that this year there’s been a spike in Indian nationals coming to the southern border after struggling to obtain work visas. “They have sussed out that they have a better shot of going through the border,” Guerra says.

It’s the same costly calculation that migrants like Jose Rafael have made in hopes of a better life. “Here are people who come to work, here are people who want to overcome, here are people who want to pay their taxes, here are people who want to remake their life,” he says. But arriving in the United States is just the first step on another long, arduous journey. “We’re waiting for a miracle.”

Carine Hajjar is a Globe Opinion writer. She can be reached at [email protected]

https://www.bostonglobe.com/2024/01/26/ ... uthorQuery
Seacoaster(1)
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Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by Seacoaster(1) »

Here is a recent, and I think pretty comprehensive, overview of this endlessly recurring problem, and how it is exacerbated by purity politics:

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archi ... is/677464/

"When the mayor of New York, of all places, warned that a recent influx of asylum seekers would destroy his city, something didn’t add up.

“I said it last year when we had 15,000, and I’m telling you now at 110,000. The city we knew, we’re about to lose,” Eric Adams urged in September. By the end of the year, more than 150,000 migrants had arrived. Still, the mayor’s apocalyptic prediction didn’t square with New York’s past experience. How could a city with more than 8 million residents, more than 3 million of whom are foreign-born, find itself overwhelmed by a much smaller number of newcomers?

In another legendary haven for immigrants, similar dynamics were playing out. Chicago has more than 500,000 foreign-born residents, about 20 percent of its population, but it has been straining to handle the arrival of just 35,000 asylum seekers in the past year and a half. Some people have even ended up on the floors of police stations or in public parks. Mayor Brandon Johnson joined Adams and a handful of other big-city mayors in signing a letter seeking help with the “large numbers of additional asylum seekers being brought to our cities.”

Sometimes the best way to understand why something is going wrong is to look at what’s going right. The asylum seekers from the border aren’t the only outsiders in town. Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine brought a separate influx of displaced people into U.S. cities that quietly assimilated most of them. “We have at least 30,000 Ukrainian refugees in the city of Chicago, and no one has even noticed,” Johnson told me in a recent interview.

According to New York officials, of about 30,000 Ukrainians who resettled there, very few ended up in shelters. By contrast, the city has scrambled to open nearly 200 emergency shelters to house asylees from the Southwest border.

What ensured the quiet assimilation of displaced Ukrainians? Why has the arrival of asylum seekers from Latin America been so different? And why have some cities managed to weather the so-called crisis without any outcry or political backlash? In interviews with mayors, other municipal officials, nonprofit leaders, and immigration lawyers in several states, I pieced together an answer stemming from two major differences in federal policy. First, the Biden administration admitted the Ukrainians under terms that allowed them to work right away. Second, the feds had a plan for where to place these newcomers. It included coordination with local governments, individual sponsors, and civil-society groups. The Biden administration did not leave Ukrainian newcomers vulnerable to the whims of Texas Governor Greg Abbott, who since April 2022 has transported 37,800 migrants to New York City, 31,400 to Chicago, and thousands more to other blue cities—in a successful bid to push the immigration debate rightward and advance the idea that immigrants are a burden on native-born people.

To call this moment a “migrant crisis” is to let elected federal officials off the hook. But a “crisis of politicians kicking the problem down the road until opportunists set it on fire” is hard to fit into a tweet, so we’ll have to make do.

Asylum is a special form of protection for migrants who are at risk of serious harm in their home country because of their religion, political affiliation, nationality, race, or membership in a particular social group. Many people approaching the Southwest border are trying to avail themselves of that protection. In an ideal world, asylum seekers would cross the U.S. border at a designated port of entry, present themselves to immigration officers, and register as applicants for asylum. Those who pass an initial interview—by convincing an asylum officer that they have a credible fear of persecution or torture if they are turned away—should then receive a court date, find a lawyer, and have a chance to prove to a judge that they qualify to enter the United States. If rejected, they can be removed.

Every step of this process is broken.

First, the U.S. government discourages asylum seekers from crossing at ports of entry. It turns away many would-be asylum seekers who arrive at those entry points and, as the Cato Institute immigration expert David J. Bier explains, works with the Mexican government to discourage would-be asylum seekers from ever reaching them. This all but ensures that large numbers will try to cross in more dangerous places—through deserts, along the Rio Grande. Asylum seekers do then try to present themselves to an official agent, regularly lining up and waiting their turn to do so.

Second, Congress has underfunded immigration courts to such an extent that evaluating asylum claims quickly is impossible. According to the nonpartisan data clearinghouse TRAC at Syracuse University, the average wait time for an asylum hearing has reached nearly 4.5 years. Given that, detaining all applicants as they await trial is financially prohibitive. So they are typically released into the U.S. According to an analysis of government data from 2008 to 2018 by the American Immigration Council, a nonprofit advocacy group, 83 percent of non-detained immigrants, and 96 percent of those with a lawyer, attend their hearings.

Large majorities of Americans favor legal immigration. News coverage and political commentary might leave the impression that asylum seekers must be ignoring some clear, orderly process. But the reality is that successive administrations—both Democratic and Republican—and lawmakers of both parties have made legal, orderly immigration at the southwestern border impossible. In doing so, they created a form of chaos that is now spreading throughout the nation.

In 1996, President Bill Clinton signed into law the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act, which, among other things, created a six-month waiting period before asylum seekers could legally receive a work permit. In essence, asylum seekers from the southwestern border are prohibited from taking care of themselves. Many try anyway. “I talked to two guys just half an hour ago,” Denver Mayor Mike Johnston told me recently. They “were commuting to Colorado Springs, which is about an hour and 20 minutes from here, just for jobs to shovel snow on a daily basis. People are hungry for work.”

Yet if asylum seekers are caught working under the table, their application can be rejected. And if they turn begrudgingly to government aid, they incur resentment from many native-born Americans who question why newcomers are receiving handouts.

The waiting period is meant as a deterrent. If people in troubled nations get the idea that applying for asylum is a sure way to get a work permit in the United States, the logic goes, the number of migrants will balloon. The problem is that persecution and economic devastation in migrants’ home country and greater opportunities in the U.S. are much stronger determinants of migration than tweaks to U.S. immigration policy. As I have previously argued, deterrence policies do not meaningfully dissuade migrants from making the journey, and even harsh Trump-era policies such as family separation had no discernible effect. Clinton now criticizes the six-month work-permit waiting period. “It doesn’t make any sense,” he said in a recent radio interview—curiously failing to mention that he had signed that nonsensical requirement into law.

These policies allow politicians to posture as being tough on immigration, but they create a vicious cycle: When policies hamper asylum seekers from entering the country in an orderly way, they create disorder that stokes anti-immigrant sentiment—thereby pressuring future administrations to crack down on immigrants even further, creating more disorder and fueling more backlash.

The lack of work permits is a national problem, but not every city is facing a migrant crisis. Immigration-court filings from last spring indicate that, along with New York City and the Chicago area, the counties that include Los Angeles, Houston, and Miami are all top destinations for asylum seekers, but the latter three cities show few signs of distress.

What is the “migrant crisis” in New York and Chicago? It includes visible signs of disorder like migrants sleeping outside as hotel rooms fill up, anger among native-born Americans that limited resources are being spent on migrants, and an expensive bureaucratic scramble to arrange health screenings, translation services, housing programs, legal services, school placements, school buses, and other needs for newcomers.

Those distress signals are absent in Houston. Late last year, the city’s outgoing mayor, Sylvester Turner, told NBC that the migrant crisis required federal intervention. Yet when asked whether the situation had caused budget cutbacks in his city, Turner replied, “In Houston this problem has not been that acute.” When I contacted the office of the current mayor, John Whitmire, about the issue, a spokesperson directed me to Catholic Charities and said, “The city does not handle this process.” Unlike New York and Chicago, Houston has not felt sufficiently pressured to create new bureaucracies to respond to the migrant crisis. Betsy Ballard, a spokesperson for the Catholic Charities of Galveston-Houston, told me, “We have not had a big increase in people on the street … It’s not like there are big encampments.” A spokesperson for the Coalition for the Homeless of Houston, the lead agency in the city’s nationally recognized services program for unhoused people, likewise said that the organization hadn’t seen an appreciable influx of asylum seekers.

Reporting by The New York Times indicates that homeless shelters in Los Angeles have similarly not detected “a significant increase in recent migrants seeking temporary housing.” The California city, the Times declared, “has quietly avoided the kind of emergency that has strained shelters and left officials [elsewhere] pleading for federal help.”

Miami and surrounding Miami-Dade County are used to accommodating migrants from Latin America. Homelessness in the area has actually decreased of late, Ron Book, the director of the Miami-Dade County Homeless Trust, told me. City and county public resources have not been diverted, according to city and county officials. Despite some signs of strain—the county school system has absorbed tens of thousands of new kids—the superintendent has rejected the “crisis” label. In fact, students have helped fill schools that had long been under capacity. The officials I interviewed were quick to note the need for federal intervention, including faster work-permit authorization and more federal dollars, but none painted a picture of looming destruction in South Florida as a result of the newcomers. Last summer, the executive director of Catholic Legal Services of the Archdiocese of Miami declared that, whereas other cities were “decrying the lack of resources and lack of bed space,” Miami had “just somehow made it work.” He noted that local nonprofits and immigrant-friendly populations had been able to absorb newcomers.

New York and Chicago don’t lack such resources. Nonprofits have been active in providing food, legal services, and many other forms of help. The problem isn’t a lack of community support or even the number of migrants, exactly. It’s the method—or lack of method—of the migrants’ arrival. The busing itself is a disruption.

Both New York and Chicago—unlike Miami, Houston, and Los Angeles—have been heavily targeted by Abbott’s migrant-relocation program. As of early February, Texas had steered tens of thousands of migrants to both cities. Nearly 70 percent of asylum seekers arriving in Chicago came via the busing program. By contrast, the state transported only 1,500 asylees to Los Angeles and none to Miami or Houston. In the NBC interview, Turner directly attributed the relative calm in Houston to the lack of busing.

When immigrants make their way to a city in an organic fashion, they usually are drawn to a place where they have family ties, job leads, or other connections and resources available. When they’re resettled through an official government program, as the displaced Ukrainians were, the federal government coordinates with local governments to ensure a smooth transition.

That’s very different from the haphazard Texas busing program. When Abbott’s buses arrive at their destinations, many of them are filled with people who had specific plans to go somewhere else. Cities then re-ticket many of the passengers. The mayor of Denver told me that roughly 40 percent of asylees who are bused into his city have no intention of staying there.


Washington’s failure to oversee where migrants go after entering the U.S. is causing particular pain to New York—and not just because the city has received the largest number of migrants from Texas buses. A symbol of American openness, wealth, and opportunity, and a magnet for people who don’t have a destination in mind, the city also has a stringent legal obligation, under a decades-old ruling by the state’s supreme court, to provide shelter to anyone who asks for it. A policy born out of the plight of unsheltered homeless New Yorkers is now also applicable to asylum seekers who are flocking to the city for aid—a fact that many asylum seekers learn along their journey to the United States. The Times reported in October on a Mauritanian asylum seeker who flew to Turkey and then Nicaragua with no thought on where in the U.S. he would live until a fellow migrant gave him the address to New York City’s main intake center for homeless men.

The American Immigration Council has recommended establishing a federal Center for Migrant Coordination, a centralized body that would help guide where asylum applicants go. Instead of standing by as New York or Chicago are inundated with buses and given little to no warning—and as desperate applicants seek out random addresses—the federal government could connect migrants with communities, organizations, and host families that can help them settle as they wait for their cases to be adjudicated. “Local government is not designed to carry this type of load,” Johnson told me.

More federal involvement would also limit Abbott’s arbitrary power. “The governor of New York didn’t get to decide where to send every Ukrainian refugee because they landed at JFK when they came to the U.S.,” Mike Johnston, the Denver mayor, told me. “There was a coordinated plan. If we had work authorization, we could easily get 200 other mayors together to say, ‘Okay great, Colorado Springs, how many folks can you take? Grand Junction, how many folks can you take?’”

For political reasons, the Biden administration has abdicated its responsibility to coordinate where asylees from the southwestern border end up. Reuters has reported that in 2021 and 2022 Biden officials “rejected a proposal to transport some migrants to other U.S. cities because the White House did not want ‘full ownership’ of the issue.” Unsurprisingly, Joe Biden is still being blamed for the crisis.

The American public is not particularly xenophobic. One 2020 study that looked at eight decades of opinion polling found that “despite frequent references to a hostile climate for immigrants, especially refugees, and a current administration that lends validity to that claim, the US public has been more welcoming of refugees in the twenty-first century than at any time during the twentieth century.”

The core cause of political backlash to immigration is a chaotic process that gives voters the impression that no one is in charge. Americans do not have some instinctive sense of the number of border crossers, but they do notice asylum seekers sleeping on the streets and their mayors announcing funding diversions from popular programs to migrant care. Views of immigration are highly contingent on the migrants’ country of origin and method of entry, the receiving country’s economic circumstances, and of course, the host population’s perception of whether its government controls its own borders.

In 2016, in the midst of a mass exodus of refugees from the Middle East, the U.K. voted to leave the European Union; Brexit supporters stoked fears that remaining in the bloc would allow migrants to flow unchecked across the Channel. But following the vote, Britain saw record high levels of immigration. Remarkably, the salience of the issue dropped dramatically and public opinion warmed to immigrants. Sentiment hardened again more recently, amid an uptick in the number of migrants seeking asylum by crossing the English Channel in small boats. In language that’s remarkably familiar, more than half of the respondents to one poll agreed that the vessels constituted an “invasion.”

American anxiety over border control follows similar patterns. And these anxieties won’t be pacified by vague and unrealistic promises to “shut down the border”; they need to be addressed with policies that reduce the real and perceived burdens of asylum seekers.

America has had ample practice absorbing large numbers of immigrants. In 1907, 1.25 million immigrants were processed at Ellis Island. That’s an average of 3,400 people a day. The busiest day ever was April 7, when the immigration center accepted 11,747 people. More than 625,000 of that year’s immigrants settled in just four states: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Illinois. More than 100 years later, some of America’s most immigrant-friendly cities are cracking under a much smaller influx of asylum seekers. That’s not the inevitable result of our current circumstances, nor is it proof of our incapacity to grant refuge to endangered people. It’s a function of our elected leaders’ refusal to build a legal-immigration system capable of handling the current volume of asylum applicants in an efficient, humane way. If New York City is overwhelmed, that will not be because of migrants, but because of native-born political dysfunction."
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youthathletics
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Re: Who is supporting the immigrant caravan?

Post by youthathletics »

Thank a border crosser for bringing this in to our home, but first thank your LEO's who seized it:

https://www.wtvr.com/news/local-news/an ... eb-17-2024
A fraudulent intent, however carefully concealed at the outset, will generally, in the end, betray itself.
~Livy


“There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn’t true; the other is to refuse to believe what is true.” -Soren Kierkegaard
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