What to do with the $800 billion the illegal aliens send home?

LOL.. if Homan makes gas chambers and crematoriums I'll say you may have a point, until then...NO.
Ok. So camps are fine. Right?

That’s how it started in Germany
 
Maybe you live in a monochrome world but I dont

We accept more legal immigrants than any other country

And most of them are one of your pet minorities, not white Christians

But they have gone through the vetting process and met all the legal requirements.

Including waiting their turn because we cant accept everyone

You want to flood America with aliens willy nilly

And the result is a lot of undesirable and dangerous people roaming our streets

“Not white Christians..”

That really sticks in your craw huh?
 
Please do.

"Libs resent successful people, (democrats insult Elon Musk, Hegseth, and Trump all the time)
I can put up the many memes about Trump, Musk, Hegseth, and other successful people

and defend law-breakers. (BLM, antifa, shoplifters, etc)
1734967730372.webp


It’s more of their upside-down value system. (church-goers are bad, deviants are good, patriotism is bad, socialism is good, etc)
This one is obvious.

illegals over citizens. (open borders proves that, blacks in Chicago are proving it by yelling at the mayor)

Chicago Mayor Boots Angry Residents From Meeting After Being Criticized for Prioritizing Illegal Aliens​


Welfare recipients over the working class. (Welfare costs exploded, the 2-year limit on welfare was removed)

Islamic terrorists over Jews. (the recent pro-Palestinian riots/protests on many campuses proves this)

Shoplifters over store owners. (CA laws prove this)

California $950 theft and shoplifting law 2024​

 
Social Security/pensions/401s

But that’s not what was being discussed
sorry, we aren't talking about retirees....there a millions of prime aged Americans...where are they getting a living? How are they living off rretirement accounts they never paid into? or SS, they never paid into?

Why are you ok with that? and why are you ok with bringing in illegals to do the jobs those folks can do, but don't want to do, only to have them live off their work?
 
You won’t find Americans willing to do most of those jobs… especially not at the rate they are being paid

Wages will go up due to a lack of illegal labor supply. Cutting welfare state benefits will help to. The gov't is broke.
 
I do blame the businesses that profit off of substandard pay and poor working conditions.

No illegal is going to sign up for fancy hotels
A good way to catch them and send them home
Explain how 1 in 5 NYC hotels are housing illegals, and they aren’t being sent home?
 
You won’t find Americans willing to do most of those jobs… especially not at the rate they are being paid
Bullshit.

THOUSANDS of homeless people would be more than happy to take those jobs
 
Wrong jerk off. Most would NOT be picking strawberries in the baking sun for minimum wage. It would take a LOT more money to entice them and that would cost YOU
Horseshit.

I myself picked strawberries for a summer.

It ain't that hard
 
Yep.

We shouldn't be giving these "migrants" free money while they're waiting.
Yup. All it does is encourage more of them. It’s like if you feed ONE pigeon on the Boardwalk, 200 of them swarm around you within 10 seconds.

There was no VALID reason for the Obamaians running Biden to cancel the stay in Mexico arrangement, other to get them to swarm in and start lowering the caliber of our nation.

One Big Ass Mistake, America.
 
Horseshit.

I myself picked strawberries for a summer.

It ain't that hard
Picking a bushel of berries in grandma’s garden ain’t nearly the same think
 
But you can buy a gun without it.


Where they're being extorted, raped, and sex trafficked by the cartels. Trump has been the biggest boon to cartel business in decades.



From your link, dumbass...



From February to early March 2024, WOLA staff interviewed 15 researchers, humanitarian workers, and shelter staff working in Matamoros, Reynosa, and Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, or on the U.S. side of the same border region. Their identities have been withheld for security reasons. We note three alarming trends:

  1. The kidnapping and extortion of migrants has increased notably since late 2023. Many describe this moment as the worst period of violence they’ve seen, both in numbers and brutality.
  2. Many Mexican authorities tolerate or are actively involved in the migrant kidnapping enterprise.
  3. U.S. border policies continue to channel migrants and asylum seekers through Tamaulipas at disproportionately high rates, even though U.S. authorities are aware of the extreme dangers for migrants in this region of the border.

1. Kidnapping, physical and psychological violence, and extortion: a lucrative business

Every service provider we spoke to in the region recounted that most, or all, of the people they served in the latter half of last year and this year had been kidnapped, battered, raped, forced to work for the cartel, or experienced other forms of abuse. Interviewees repeatedly told us that there are almost no safe spaces left for migrants in Tamaulipas—and that the situation is getting worse.

Kidnapping for ransom


“Bus kidnappings, where armed groups intercept vehicles full of migrants in broad daylight, are a terror tactic that dehumanizes their victims and turns them into instruments of profit and power for the benefit of cartels and organized crime groups.”
-Staff member at Lawyers for Good Government
Criminal groups carry out constant surveillance, with eyes and ears throughout their territory, making it difficult for a migrant to go unidentified anywhere in Tamaulipas. Service providers with whom we spoke describe criminals grabbing people from tents in outdoor migrant camps, taking over entire buses full of migrants, waiting at terminals for buses to arrive and targeting people without Mexican identification, or collaborating with transportation services or Mexican authorities to have migrants dropped off at their “safe houses.”

One humanitarian volunteer in the Rio Grande Valley shared the story of a Guatemalan woman who sought to flee to the United States to escape gang members seeking to recruit her 8-year-old daughter into sex work. She attempted to access the port of entry (official border crossing) to ask for asylum, while she continued to receive threats, but was denied access. Criminals kidnapped her on her way back from the border bridge. Migrants “can’t be alone in Reynosa”, the volunteer told us.

Kidnapping, often accompanied by brutal physical and psychological violence, seeks to force the victims’ family members into paying extortion fees. Kidnappers often manipulate ransom prices according to the victim’s country of origin and ties to people in the United States. They use violence to acquire this information, along with other personal information that they might use to threaten the victims further after their release.

Kidnappers charge ransoms in dollars, usually wired from U.S.-based relatives. Saving loved ones from harm requires many to go into crippling debt or lose everything. A member of a Rio Grande Valley humanitarian collective recounted meeting people who even sold their homes to get family members out of captivity. Often, the person being extorted has undocumented status in the United States and fears asking U.S. authorities for help.

When victims manage to pay ransoms and win release, their abusers may drop them off at the doors of migrant shelters. The threatening environment brings a perpetual feeling of insecurity for service providers and migrants alike. Insecurity has forced some shelters to cease operations: Nuevo Laredo currently has closed all shelters in operation due to “members of organized crime threatening and perpetrating violence against shelter staff and migrants.”

Sexual violence in captivity


“They’re beaten without mercy. Many are murdered in front of the others. Almost all the adults, both men and women are gang raped in front of their children. The survivors often show cigarette burns and slash marks on their genitals.”
Member of Angry Tias & Abuelas of the Rio Grande Valley
Multiple service providers highlighted the increasing brutality of the abuse that kidnap victims are suffering. Many described the particular horrors experienced by women, including sexual assault, rape, or even gang rape in front of children and partners, though sexual violence is inflicted on men and children, as well. In Reynosa and Matamoros, Doctors Without Borders reported a 70 percent increase in sexual violence consultations with migrants in the last three months of 2023, and 28 cases in January 2024 alone: more than in any month of 2023.

Once in captivity, those who cannot pay ransom fees may face conditions approaching slavery, performing forced labor for criminal organizations, a group of humanitarian workers explained. They told us of mothers forced into sex work to protect their children, individuals forced to be interpreters for other kidnap victims, and people witnessing extreme physical violence and made to clean up rooms where such violence took place. Some are conditionally released to shelters so that they might report about other migrants staying there; the criminal group keeps a loved one in custody as a “deposit”.

Some are held captive for months, though the duration is usually shorter. It is exceedingly rare for Mexican forces to rescue the people in captivity or to bring their perpetrators to justice.
 
Wrong jerk off. Most would NOT be picking strawberries in the baking sun for minimum wage. It would take a LOT more money to entice them and that would cost YOU
Most illegas jobs are not picking strawberrys

Even though thete are American citizens alive today who have done those jobs

So do tell us Americans are too good to do that kind of work

As for incentive I think not getting welfare would change their minds
 
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