Posted: 6/15/2014 9:18:33 AM EDT
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Let me see if I have this right.
So, in order to not be a racist, bigoted, xenophobic, fascist, hater, I need to be all in and all for rounding up and bringing central and south american children entire villages and OTMs into the U.S., crossing our border without any documentation, distributing them around the U.S., providing free transporation, dental, medical, legal assistance, lodging, food, clothing, and education including college. This, I or my progeny, will pay for out of our own pockets through taxes or other means. Is that it? |
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Quoted:
Let me see if I have this right. So, in order to not be a racist, bigoted, xenophobic, fascist, hater, I need to be all in and all for rounding up and bringing central and south american children entire villages and OTMs into the U.S., crossing our border without any documentation, distributing them around the U.S., providing free transporation, dental, medical, legal assistance, lodging, food, clothing, and education including college. This, I or my progeny, will pay for out of our own pockets through taxes or other means. Is that it? According to the left, yes....you got it. |
| Some of those folks coming across the Border have a better shot at citizenship than others - http://www.ad-hoc-news.de/the-battle-for-gay-asylum-why-sexual-minorities-have-an--/de/News/37406872 |
One of the strangest things... I steeled myself to actually read the Senate Bill (Gang of Eight) on Comprehensive Immigration Reform last year, after the KenyanKare debacle (hey, lets pass it first so we can see what is in it![]() ).
Well anyway, there is absolutely nothing in there about wholesale throwing the border open to Central and South American kids and making off with $2.5Bn out of the Senate "Appropriations Committee". So, this has got to be some kind of later day hooliganism by a few in the Obamanation that is doing this, to the tune of "Oh..the Humanity!...". |
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From Brietbart today:
"...based on current immigration and asylum laws, the vast majority of those children could be legally staying right here in the United States before long.
Under the authority of the Homeland Security Act, the federal government transfers custody of illegal immigrant children who are apprehended alone at our borders to the Department of Health and Human Service’s Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR). The ORR’s primary goal is to reunite them with a family member or legal guardian already here in the US (regardless of their legal status) while the child goes through removal proceedings. As Breitbart Texas recently reported, UACs receive a bevy of assistance while in ORR custody, including classroom education, health care, socialization/recreation, vocational training, mental health services, family reunification, access to legal services, and case management. In many cases, they are treated better than US citizen children currently in the foster care system. The most valuable of all those benefits is the legal assistance. ORR has an outreach program to connect immigration attorneys willing to work on a pro-bono basis with UACs as they go through removal proceedings. For adult illegal immigrants facing deportation or applying for a status adjustment through avenues like asylum or cancellation of removal, finding a pro-bono attorney is next to impossible, and even lower-priced immigration attorneys are financially out of reach for cash-strapped applicants. But in the case of UACs, there is a program designed specifically to help just them, as well as unaccompanied refugee minors. The pro-bono attorneys who volunteer to help these children aren’t bottom-of-the-barrel lawyers, either; some of them work for very prestigious firms in different parts of the country. One such organization that provides pro-bono legal services for UACs is The Safe Passage Project. Their “attorneys of the week” list highlighted on their main page included a litigator who has practiced multiple areas of law, including Immigration, Foreclosure, Personal Injury, and Real Estate, for seven years and established her own law firm on Wall Street. With this kind of legal firepower behind them, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that the odds of UACs being granted some kind of legal status to stay in the United States is very high. Safe Passage Project Director Lenni Benson wrote a letter to The New York Times in May 2014 in which she said, “Our organization, Safe Passage Project, finds that nearly 90 percent of the unaccompanied minors we meet who are facing deportation qualify for immigration relief, allowing them to remain in the United States legally.” She continued, “While emergency shelters provide a temporary solution for unaccompanied minors entering the United States, appointed legal counsel to enable these vulnerable young people to receive the immigration remedies for which they might be eligible would provide permanency and would truly be in their best interests.” Yeah, they sound like real solid citizen attorneys. Well, thanks to Brietbart, my list grows.
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