US Frustration about park space for migrants boils over in 29th Ward: ‘I have compassion but I can only go so far’ - Chicago is going to explode by next summer. At some points throughout the meeting, the crowd chanted in unison “you work for us” and “what about kids?”

Frustration about park space for migrants boils over in 29th Ward: ‘I have compassion but I can only go so far’
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Caroline Kubzansky
2023-10-04 04:10:00GMT

Anger erupted at the Amundsen Park field house Tuesday night as Northwest Side residents shouted their frustration at officials tasked with explaining the city’s move to open a shelter for newly arrived migrants in the neighborhood’s Park District.

About 300 residents drowned out a panel of city officials representing several agencies, including Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office, police and the Park District. They filled the field house gym at 6200 W. Bloomingdale Ave., lined up to vent their outrage at officials.

Outside, a crowd of people gathered at the door as police watched from inside, saying the building had reached its capacity for fire hazards.

Those who spoke did so amid yells of “send (migrants) to Bucktown” and “where’s the f------ mayor?”

At some points throughout the meeting, the crowd chanted in unison “you work for us” and “what about kids?” Two groups of football players who use the park to practice filed into the meeting to stand before city representatives, some getting on the stage with officials, as attendees jumped onto chairs to film on their cellphones, cheering.

The meeting was the second the city has held in as many days as officials sprint to house and administer a mounting number of asylum-seekers arriving from the southern border.

At previous meetings, city representatives have presented about how the shelters will be operated and gone through frequently asked questions. On Tuesday, most of the officials on the panel were not able to speak because the crowd was shouting back at them.

Deputy Mayor Beatriz Ponce De León’s comment that “the people that we’re talking about are human beings just like you” was met with enough shouting that the second part of her statement was not audible.

Ald. Chris Taliaferro, 29th, asked many times for people to allow city representatives to speak and received loud boos and shoutsas he expressed support for Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration’s work to house and administer to migrants.

Later, the crowd responded with stomping and cheers when he repeated his opposition to the use of Amundsen Park as a shelter.

“We cannot take resources from the Black community, a community that has already for decades been disinvested in,” Taliaferro said to applause.

Neighbors shared many fears and frustrations that have also characterized preceding meetings, including the short notice on which the city intended to open the shelter, expressed fears about public safety and anger at how the city has historically allocated resources to predominantly Black and Brown communities.

Linda Johnson, 69, told the panel of city officials that “how we got here is not our problem.”

“This is our park and we have a right to say so,” she said. “You need to stop the buses, stop sanctuary city right now and get to the root of the problem.”

James Frazier, 75, said the panel of city officials at the gym should tell city leadership that the neighborhood did not want to see a migrant shelter open in the park.

“I have compassion, but I can only go so far,” he continued to applause.

City chief operating officer John Roberson said the panelists would take what they had heard back to City Hall.

Outside the field house, 25th District Police Council Member Angelica Green said she didn’t feel the meeting had gone well: “It was just a yelling match.

Green said she wished residents who pay taxes to maintain the park had been given more notice and input on the plan to turn the site into a migrant shelter, though she also saw how the effort to house migrants created tense situations for host neighborhoods and the city.

“Nobody wants to feel unwanted,” she said. “But nobody wants to feel put out either.”


 
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The families said they plan on pressing charges on those who have been identified and who are at least 18-years-old. They also said they are working with the school on a safety plan.
Oh, NOW they care about the law.

Surprising how nobody has looked at the simplest solution:

FUCKING DEPORT THEM!
 
“People need to also understand how things change radically with our change of seasons.”
The subtext being, just wait and let the winter do its cull. Not the worst strategy. Most of the economic migrants didn't anticipate a Chicago winter. Moving the invaders to colder climes makes it a problem that solves itself.
 
I moved to the suburbs a few years ago, so I rarely visit downtown Chicago. But the last time I was there, a month ago, it was like being in a horror movie. Once vibrant and beautiful streets are empty, closed shops with boards over the windows, everything abandoned and dirty. It was a miracle that I didn't get mugged as I was like the only white person on the streets. Took a picture worth a thousand words

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I moved to the suburbs a few years ago, so I rarely visit downtown Chicago. But the last time I was there, a month ago, it was like being in a horror movie. Once vibrant and beautiful streets are empty, closed shops with boards over the windows, everything abandoned and dirty. It was a miracle that I didn't get mugged as I was like the only white person on the streets. Took a picture worth a thousand words

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Grab N Go yup sure looks like they did lol.
 
Mayor Brandon Johnson exploring backup plan to tent cities for migrants as Gov. J.B. Pritzker says more state funding unlikely
Chicago Tribune (archive.ph)
By Alice Yin, Dan Petrella, and A.D. Quig
2023-10-05 22:10:00GMT

Mayor Brandon Johnson’s administration is exploring unspecified backup plans should it not hit its goal of setting up tent base camps for new asylum-seekers before winter, a top deputy said Thursday while also pushing back at comments from Gov. J.B. Pritzker that more state funds for migrant services aren’t going to be made available anytime soon.

With winter fast approaching and temperatures expected to dip into the low 40s in the next few days, Johnson’s deputy chief of staff Cristina Pacione-Zayas said the strategy announced one month ago to erect tent encampments throughout the city still has no start date and that no sites have been finalized because of the need to “do our due diligence.”

Her comments came as Pritzker appeared to close the door on any more state money being allocated for migrant relief by state lawmakers, who are meeting later this month and next for their fall veto session.

“It isn’t as if we’re coming in with enormous surpluses,” Pritzker told reporters Thursday. “This is not something where we have hundreds of millions of dollars to support.”

Asked about the governor’s comments, Pacione-Zayas, a former state senator, responded: “We have to continue to educate the General Assembly about this critical point that we’re in.”

“We have to go through the exercise, right? We have to identify what’s already committed, and might be able to be directed,” she said. “We have to think outside of the box and be creative around this, and so I don’t see the discussions (as) closed. I think that this needs to be ongoing. And as I’ve said before, everyone has to do more.”

Pacione-Zayas added that the mayor’s administration has begun meeting with individual state legislators and will ask the state to look for ways to shift existing budget allocations toward an additional migrant appropriation for Chicago, which has taken on the brunt of the new arrivals in Illinois.

Late Thursday, Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch was spotted at City Hall and headed up toward the mayor’s office on the fifth floor.

Johnson and Pritzker also have sought assistance from the federal government, with both talking to White House officials last weekend and the governor writing a three-page letter to President Joe Biden to argue Washington needs to step up on the issue.

Pacione-Zayas said that the cold weather expected in upcoming days poses a “grave concern,” though she said the mayor’s office remains hopeful it can “put some stakes into the ground soon” for the tent encampments.

The city aims to use those encampments to relocate people now staying in the city’s two main airports, Chicago police station lobbies and other unsuitable places until spots open in the nearly two-dozen brick-and-mortar shelters the city is running.

Johnson rolled out the tent city proposal in early September, vowing to get it done before winter. But the mayor faced criticism from some aldermen and advocacy groups over his team’s decision to bring in a controversial private security company to run the base camps.

“As far as the delay, I mean, welcome to government. This is how it kind of works,” Pacione-Zayas said. “As far as what our backup plan is, we are exploring what could be alternative large spaces with the state, with the county, so that if we’re not able to pop up this base camp in time for a significant drop, that we do have some alternatives. But everything’s on the table.”

She added that some of those backup sites are located outside of Chicago.

County officials confirmed Thursday they are helping with the search. At Johnson’s request, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle said she asked suburban municipalities to share some of the burden.

“They were not prepared to make commitments unless they got resources to do it,” Preckwinkle said during an interview with the Tribune’s Editorial Board, though it was unclear when those conversations took place. “That’s why we need money from the feds.”

Preckwinkle’s chief of staff, Lanetta Haynes Turner, added: “We have been very closely coordinating with the city to at least identify locations for housing both within the city of Chicago and, of course, if we are aware of locations, potentially in suburban Cook.”

“We have been, through our emergency management and real estate office, compiling a very detailed inventory of county facilities and other locations,” Haynes Turner said. “We’re also planning to provide any locations that are within the city limits from some of our brokers.”

As of Thursday, more than 17,000 migrants have come to Chicago since August 2022, when the flow of buses from Texas and other southern border states first started. More than 10,100 are in city-run shelters, while another 2,400 are in Chicago police stations and 820 at the city airports. More than 11 buses were expected to arrive Thursday.

Pritzker, meanwhile, defended the state’s support for Chicago following a City Council hearing last week that saw multiple Johnson allies lash out at the governor’s administration and call for him to take on more of the burden. The state has appropriated roughly $330 million toward asylum-seekers since the first busload of migrants was sent by Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, but not all of that has gone directly to the city to cover its costs.

“This is a challenge I think the city has been facing since the beginning. We don’t do city planning at the state level. This is a question best directed to the city,” Pritzker said Thursday when asked how his administration will brace for the next wave of new arrivals. “As they have developed plans, and as they’ve implemented them, we’ve been there in support.”

Pacione-Zayas said Johnson is still planning a trip to the border to establish some order in how the buses are being sent to Chicago, but that no schedule has been set. The city is bracing for up to 25 buses a day this week.

“Ultimately the goal is so that we have tighter coordination,” she said.

She also rebutted criticism of Chicago’s response to the migrant crisis and those who are calling on the city to turn away asylum-seekers.

“We are upholding our values. We are operationalizing our sanctuary city status. We are holding the line,” Pacione-Zayas said. “This is a welcoming state, so there would be some challenges that it would present if we were to shut our doors as well. I mean, we’re going to do this as long as we can. This is precisely why everyone must do more.”

Preckwinkle, too, repeated the need for both federal and state money to respond to the crisis. The county has been providing health care services to migrants, a cost that has varied by month but currently stands at $2.2 million.

That care has “run the gamut,” officials said, from vaccinations, health care screenings, mental health services, treatment of wounds and infections, to maternal and infant care. Until February, the state was helping pick up some of the tab. With an expected influx of more buses and planes arriving in the coming months, county officials think that monthly cost will rise. Migrant patient volumes have increased 30% to 40% in recent weeks, Cook County Health CEO Israel Rocha said.

While she said she would continue to advocate for a federal solution, Preckwinkle said “the state needs to step up as well, because $42.5 million barely covers the city’s costs for a month,” she said, describing the sum that the state recently announced in awards to local governments as a “drop in the bucket.”
 
Wonder how long it will be before Chicago follows others leads and starts bussing migrants back out. We're going to have a crazy shell game with migrants bouncing back and forth across the country.
Watch a circular bus game where some dude named Juan goes to Texas, to Maine, to Chicago, then back to Texas, then to California, lol.

Not only are we letting illegals in, but we are paying for them to see the entire united states on a fun road trip.
 
As Winter Looms, Venezuelan Migrant Surge Overwhelms Chicago
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Ernesto Londoño and Julie Bosman
2023-10-06 09:05:15GMT

Police stations have become tent encampments. More than 800 migrants are sleeping at Chicago O’Hare International Airport. City officials are scrambling.

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Asylum seekers have been living in tents outside a police station in Chicago.Credit...Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times

The buses packed with Venezuelan migrants are now arriving in downtown Chicago day and night, doubling in number in recent weeks. City officials are struggling to open more shelters, while more than 2,300 migrants are sleeping at police stations, in lobbies and just outside in makeshift camps.

At the city’s airports, migrants who have just landed sleep on the floor, many with babies and toddlers, as local officials plead for more help from the federal government.

“We don’t have any place for them to go,” said Cristina Pacione-Zayas, deputy chief of staff for Mayor Brandon Johnson. “We are scrambling.”

Like New York and a number of other cities in the country, Chicago is straining to provide for the growing numbers of migrants who have arrived over the last year on buses from the U.S.-Mexico border. But with Chicago’s infamously cold winter fast approaching, volunteers and leaders are worried that things will only get worse.

The situation is putting new pressure on Mr. Johnson, who took office in May.

Mr. Johnson, a Democrat, said this week that he intended to travel with a city delegation to the border, where they would gather information about the flow of migrants.

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A group of asylum seekers embracing after arriving in Chicago.Credit...Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times
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Migrant children outside the O’Hare Airport Shuttle Center, where hundreds of people have been temporarily housed for more than a week.Credit...Jamie Kelter Davis
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A young Venezuelan boy rode his bike in front of the Inn of Chicago, where more than 400 asylum seekers are being housed.Credit...Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times

The crisis has caused clashes in the Chicago City Council, whose members have fought over how much to spend on the asylum seekers amid other pressing priorities in the city of 2.7 million people.
“It’s a logistical nightmare,” said Andre Vasquez, the chairman of the city’s Committee on Immigrant and Refugee Rights. “You’re going to see more people on the street figuring out a way to survive.”

Volunteers have worked to help the asylum seekers in the spirit of Chicago’s tradition as a sanctuary city for immigrants. But in some neighborhoods, there has been growing resistance. Public meetings to discuss opening shelters have turned into shouting matches, with residents accusing city officials of prioritizing the needs of new arrivals over longtime Chicagoans.

Some residents feel the city has been too accommodating. Deaundre Miguel Jones, 47, said he had watched with exasperation as the police station in his Old Town neighborhood turned into a place where migrants sleep on cots indoors and outside in camping tents.
“These people are eating well — they have better phones than I do, better shoes,” Mr. Jones said, sitting outside his apartment complex. Chicago officials, he said, are doing more to help migrants than they are people who have lived in the city for years.
“How are you going to take care of someone else when you’re not even taking care of your own people?” he said.

What has drawn the migrants to Chicago is not always clear. Some eagerly boarded buses to Chicago at the southern border because they recognized the name of the city and assumed that it was large enough to offer opportunity and a place to work. Officials in Chicago pointed to Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas, a Republican, for his campaign to bus migrants to liberal cities out of political motivation, but some migrants arrive in those cities on trips paid for by charities, volunteer groups or family members.

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Cata Truss, a resident who supports a lawsuit accusing the city of Chicago of creating inhumane conditions for Chicagoans and new migrants from South America, spoke at a news conference this week in front of the vacant South Shore High School.Credit...Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times
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Venezuelan asylum seekers slept on the ground atop cardboard boxes at O’Hare Airport.Credit...Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times
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From left, Eliana Orellany, Luis Alfonzo Orellany Arias and their 3-year-old daughter in a volunteer’s car before they were driven to a bus station to travel to Michigan, where a friend said they would be received.Credit...Sebastian Hidalgo for The New York Times

In interviews, several Venezuelans who had arrived recently said they had come to Chicago because they had distant relatives in the city or had heard from friends that it had robust social services. But many said Chicago had become their destination simply because they were offered a free plane or bus ticket from previous shelters, where they arrived penniless and sleep deprived.

“We came here with one sole purpose: to work,” said Eudo Luis Ledezma, 41, who arrived in Chicago on Tuesday after a harrowing two-month journey that began in his hometown, Maracaibo, a city in northwestern Venezuela. “We were tired of living in misery.”

Many newly arrived Venezuelans said they had found their way to Chicago after stops in San Antonio and Denver, where shelters were teeming with people.

Yureibi Olivo, a mother of four who arrived in Chicago this summer, said she was already glad her family had taken the great risk to leave. She is among the lucky few who secured beds at a temporary shelter in a downtown hotel.

Ms. Olivo, 45, has been selling arepas, stuffed cornmeal cakes, on the streets, where she pulls in around $60 a day. Back home, working two jobs — one as a street sweeper and one preparing government-subsidized meals — would earn her that amount in three months, she said.

“Being here is a privilege,” Ms. Olivo said. “God gave us an opportunity, and the government here has opened the door.”

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Residents and tourists walking past a group of asylum seekers near the Inn of Chicago. The Inn, near a popular shopping center and tourist destinations, has been the subject of contention for locals and businesses.Credit...Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times
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An asylum seeker from Venezuela wore an ankle bracelet that tracks his travels after arriving in Texas a few weeks earlier. Some migrants have been issued ankle bracelets to ensure they report for appointments with immigration officials as the government decides whether to deport them or allow them to stay.Credit...Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times
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Yureibi Olivo across the street from the Inn of Chicago, where she is living temporarily after coming to the United States about two months ago to seek asylum from Venezuela. Ms. Olivo makes arepas at a friend’s kitchen and sells the food out of coolers to other migrants and passersby.Credit...Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times

Gov. J.B. Pritzker of Illinois, a Democrat, has offered resources and financial support from the state. Since August 2022, his administration has allocated $328 million in aid, according to a spokeswoman.

But it is not nearly enough, city officials say. Chicago leaders signed a $29 million contract last month that calls for the sheltering of migrants in winterized tents. And the overall cost of housing and feeding the migrants is skyrocketing: The city is expected to spend at least $345 million in less than a year and a half, according to city officials. (The Chicago Public Schools, for comparison, have an annual budget of more than $9 billion.)

Mr. Pritzker, in a letter to President Biden this week, said that more aid from the federal government was urgently needed.

Currently, more than 10,000 migrants are in shelters, according to city data. Close to 3,200 are staying at police stations and airports.

Erika Villegas, a volunteer who is aiding migrants at police stations, said that she was concerned about the migrants’ ability to withstand the colder weather that was coming, especially since many were sleeping outdoors in tents.

“For Chicagoans, this is beautiful weather,” she said. “But for the new families, they’re asking for jackets. People are like: ‘I couldn’t sleep all night. My toes were cold all night.’ They have no idea what’s coming.”

On the Far South Side, Anthony Beale, a City Council member, said that the situation had become a disaster and an embarrassment, especially when considering the role of the federal government.

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A potential site on Chicago’s Far South Side where an encampment of winterized tents has been proposed for migrants arriving in the city.Credit...Sebastian Hidalgo for The New York Times
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Donated food being served out of the back of a minivan parked near the Inn of Chicago.Credit...Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times
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Milena Gallego, 30, of New Life Centers, talked to a family receiving furniture through the Asylum Seeking Emergency Assistant Program inside their new home in Chicago. The family received housing through a resettlement program after living outside a police station and in shelters.Credit...Sebastian Hidalgo for The New York Times

“The solution, No. 1, is for Joe Biden to close the border,” he said. “Secondly, what we need to do is disperse the migrants across the country evenly, and not just send them to certain cities or certain states. Everybody should be helping out with this crisis.”

Volunteers in Chicago, who have been working for more than a year to help migrants at police stations with food, clothing, tents, medical care and public school registrations, said that they had recently been more overwhelmed than at any point since migrants began arriving in summer 2022.

“We’re in a new phase just in this last week,” said Annie Gomberg, the lead volunteer organizer for a police station on the West Side. “We are reaching capacity in a way that makes everyone uneasy. The mayor’s office really seems overmatched by this problem.”

Ms. Gomberg saw the arrivals as an opportunity in the long term.

In the Austin neighborhood on the West Side, there are plenty of empty apartments, she said, adding that she had already encouraged one landlord to rent to the new arrivals.

“I said, ‘If you rent to these folks, this could be the revitalization of a blighted part of Black Chicago — you could be the mayor of Little Caracas,” she said. “This could be the next wave of immigrants, who have always been the bedrock of Chicago.”
 
I moved to the suburbs a few years ago, so I rarely visit downtown Chicago. But the last time I was there, a month ago, it was like being in a horror movie. Once vibrant and beautiful streets are empty, closed shops with boards over the windows, everything abandoned and dirty. It was a miracle that I didn't get mugged as I was like the only white person on the streets. Took a picture worth a thousand words

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Wicker Park used to be the hipster haven and now you have assaults, robberies and shootings that used to be rare in the area. All the hobos kept themselves confined to the actual park, but it's funny to see how bad it's getting there.
 
This is the endgame. Due to "racism", cities with large black populations won't have to house them. If Trump loses the election, we'll be forced to Quarter them in our homes.
Dude, they were already having to house them. The part of the country where the most illegals were shipped to away from the border states was along the cotton belt to try and flip the South permanently.
What's funny is blacks in northern cities got a break from the forced integration with Mexicans because of the lily white neoliberals they shared a city with.
 
If Chicago and NYC can’t absorb migrants there’s no way that Fucking Nowhere Texas can.
They don’t care. City libs think desert with absolutely nothing in it is heaven for the slave labor that picks crops for them. It’s almost comical how hard the switch was from these progressive retards saying we need open the borders to instant nationalism after they get a drop of the numbers.

Imo wait until corporates in NYC and the like discover the work ethic of Mexicans/Venz and replace all those uppity obese negros for entry level positions. It’s going to be drama of the century.
 
Imo wait until corporates in NYC and the like discover the work ethic of Mexicans/Venz and replace all those uppity obese negros for entry level positions. It’s going to be drama of the century.
Ironically the closest we’ve had to a race war has been between latino and black gangs in the south and Midwest. I expect we’re going to see more conflict between Venezuelan and Colombian gangs and blacks in NYC and Chicago.
 
They need to ship these people to suburban neighborhoods and not just downtown. Park these people in front of the rich white liberal's homes with all their "black lives matter" signs. Give them saws to cut through the gates of the gates communities and tents to pitch in these people's yards. Also send more to New England, let blue east coast states drown in these people. Send them to camp in New York Jew's summer houses.
 
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They need to ship these people to suburban neighborhoods and not just downtown. Park these peoplr in front of the rich white liberal's homes with all their "black lives matter" signs. Give them saws to cut through the gates of the gates communities and tents to pitch in these people's yards. Also send more to New England, let blue east coast states down in these people. Send them to camp in New York Jew's summer houses.
I know Massachusetts is declaring a state of emergency over it, but the first time they tried shipping illegals anywhere outside of Boston (Martha's Vineyard), the National Guard was called in and the illegals were out within 48 hours.
The Great Migration out of the South basically stopped at NYC, New England proper doesn't have enough of a minority population for the local government there (again, outside of its biggest city in Boston) to give a shit about the racial implications of tossing them all back down south.
 
Volunteers in Chicago, who have been working for more than a year to help migrants at police stations with food, clothing, tents, medical care and public school registrations, said that they had recently been more overwhelmed than at any point since migrants began arriving in summer 2022.

“We’re in a new phase just in this last week,” said Annie Gomberg, the lead volunteer organizer for a police station on the West Side. “We are reaching capacity in a way that makes everyone uneasy. The mayor’s office really seems overmatched by this problem.”

Ms. Gomberg saw the arrivals as an opportunity in the long term.

In the Austin neighborhood on the West Side, there are plenty of empty apartments, she said, adding that she had already encouraged one landlord to rent to the new arrivals.

“I said, ‘If you rent to these folks, this could be the revitalization of a blighted part of Black Chicago — you could be the mayor of Little Caracas,” she said. “This could be the next wave of immigrants, who have always been the bedrock of Chicago.”
Shitbags like this who enable these economic migrants (all they want is cash) are the biggest reason why no moronic plea not to come by some retarded Democrat official or mayor will work.

These people Whatsapp their relatives back home and helpfully show them all the free shit they get. Free food, clothes, housing, medical care education, etc. Remember, all those kids "no hablo/a Ingles" and will DEMAND ESL or Spanish language instruction. You're paying for that too.

Oh and the Biden administration has just given 500,000 Venezuelans essentially permanently residency via TPS as of last week.

So yeah, expect 1.5-5 MILLION "refugees" walking into the USA every year and getting everything handed to them on a platter paid for by YOU.

Fuck them, thrown their fucking asses out. No free shit imprison these aid groups, and of they come back in, imprisonment and unpaid labor cleaning up streets and sewer systems.

This makes me so goddamn MATI. I work for a living and these fuckers think they get to show up and get a free goddamn house FFFUUCCKKKK THEM.
 
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