What to Think About During National Migration Week

Guest Post by Kevin Lynn

The week of January 7 to January 14 has been dubbed “National Migration Week,” wherein Americans reflect on the United States’ history of immigration. This is an important aspect of introspection; we must look to our past in order to move forward. However, events such as these have been distorted by some Non-Government Organizations to suite their own goals. As stated by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops on their site:

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For nearly a half century, the Catholic Church in the United States has celebrated National Migration Week, which is an opportunity for the Church to reflect on the circumstances confronting migrants, including immigrants, refugees, children, and victims and survivors of human trafficking. The theme for National Migration Week 2017, “Many Journeys, One Family,” draws attention to the fact that each of our families have a migration story, some recent and others in the distant past. Regardless of where we are and where we came from, we remain part of the human family and are called to live in solidarity with one another.

Unfortunately, in our contemporary culture we often fail to encounter migrants as persons, and instead look at them as unknown others, if we even notice them at all. We do not take the time to engage migrants in a meaningful way, as fellow children of God, but remain aloof to their presence and suspicious or fearful of them. During this National Migration Week, let us all take the opportunity to engage migrants as community members, neighbors, and friends.

We all feel for the plight of refugees who are suffering worldwide, unable to return to their homes. Sadly however, organizations like the USCCB are not the champions of migrants that they claim to be. They are, rather unfortunately, government contractors that are in many cases acting in their best interest.

Refugee watchdog group Refugee Resettlement Watch has been tracking the efforts and expenditures of government contracted refugee groups such as the USCCB, and has discovered many unsettling revelations. USCCB, for example, received over $95 million dollars from the Federal Government for their refugee and migrant programs.  There is little accountability for the usage of this money, and we essentially have to take these christian groups at their word.

Refugee Resettlement Watch has also noted the objections of refugee contractors on the termination of the Temporary Protected Status (or TPS) program for migrants from El Salvador. Designed for national crises such as natural disasters or civil war, these TPS programs average in length of roughly 18 months. However, the Salvadoran program, which began in 2001 after a devastating series of earthquakes in the country, has remained for almost 17 years.

Those who oppose the program’s termination such as the US Bishops’ Conference argue that while the original conditions caused by the 2001 earthquakes no longer exist, the return of Salvadoran refugees would destabilize the country. Frankly, that decision is not up to the US Bishops’ Conference, but by the government of the United States. There is a valid concern that programs such as these are being used by refugee contractors to collect a paycheck from the government, while foreign citizens remain in the United States in an indefinite limbo. If these charities are so concerned at the current state of El Salvador, they should petition the government to send foreign aid, not house their citizens for them for decades.

This week we most certainly should reflect on the historical and cultural significance of immigration on our country, but we should also remain wary of those that seek to profit off of the status quo.

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14 Comments
MN Steel
MN Steel
January 11, 2018 7:14 am

WHY are refugees “unable to return to their homes” after years, perhaps decades, of living here?

WHY are illegal aliens celebrated as “migrants” by churches?

WHY are churches paid MILLIONS OF DOLLARS PER YEAR to bring in “refugees and migrants” and locate them in the whitest areas of the country?

WHY IS THE BORDER SECURITY CHARADE GOING ON DECADE AFTER DECADE, AND NO MASS ENFORCEMENT OF LEGAL EMPLOYMENT LAWS?

Perhaps it is by design, ever look into who runs the policy arm of US immigration?

Martin brundlefly
Martin brundlefly
  MN Steel
January 11, 2018 8:35 am

They are unable to return because their home was nothing but a corrugated metal lean to in the fucking desert to begin with, nothing grows there, and they finally heard enough sam kinison to move where the food is. And we are stupid enough to provide them a free lunch and cable tv for all eternity, with obama phones for all the negro. Because white male patriarchy gender blah blah supremacy all whites must die so we can all be as free as the africans on the dole.

Dutchman
Dutchman
  Martin brundlefly
January 11, 2018 9:21 am

We aren’t stupid. This is our fucking government screwing us.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Dutchman
January 11, 2018 9:32 am

It’s liberal voters voting for “compassion”.

starfcker
starfcker
January 11, 2018 7:55 am

There’s actually more to this. Trump is doing a number of good things. By ending TPS for all the various nationalities, here’s what changes. First he’s forcing the dims to waste their political capital defending foreigners in an election year. The trade-off that Trump seeks in every negotiation are limits on persons coming into the country at a future date. In other words we win. Another huge consideration is, that as refugees, all the TPS people have instant access to all kinds of federal benefits such as Section 8 housing. No waiting list, no citizenship requirements, none of that. Anything Trump negotiates with the dims, doesn’t matter. They will lose the refugee status, and an enormous amount of those benefits. It’s no different than the DACA situation. He’s negotiating on people that are already here in return for cutting future numbers and reduction in benefits. It seems slow, it seems minute. But this is how you get big things done. Start chipping away at stuff and just be relentless over time. What’s the saying, a billion here, a billion there next thing you know you’re talking about real money. Same principle

unit472/
unit472/
January 11, 2018 8:10 am

Its always about money. There is not a lot of difference between a church group importing refugees and migrants to be used as cheap labor by local businesses and a slaver importing Africans to pick cotton except that the slave owner had see to it his workers ( and their children) got food and shelter.

What Trump needs to do is make it time consuming and expensive for aliens to get green cards and citizenship. We cannot prohibit immigration as the Democrats won’t accept that but there is no reason we cannot make residency a time consuming, bureaucratic process that requires an ‘immigration attorney’ to navigate ( that would keep the Democrat immigration lawyers happy) and charge stiff fees at every step such that low income immigrants could not afford to gain citizenship.

A Chinese engineer or Brazilian doctor could manage to get citizenship because they could come up with $10,000+ to do it but your basic Guatemalan stoop laborer or Somali cab driver couldn’t so they would stay in legal limbo until they get arrested for something and then they get deported.

MN Steel
MN Steel
  unit472/
January 11, 2018 5:39 pm

In days of yore, slave-holders paid for their farm-implements.

In current days, workers (overwhelmingly white) pay for antiquated farm-implements to live a life of leisure.

So goeth this lesson in white priviledge.

Anonymous
Anonymous
January 11, 2018 8:23 am

“Refugees” are no longer refugees after whatever the conditions in their homelands that forced them to leave are over.

And “refugees” aren’t refugees in the first place when there is no reason for them to flee other than simply seeking personal economic advantages not readily available in their homelands.

We should be more careful how we use that word and to whom we apply it.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
January 11, 2018 9:36 am

If we stop letting people sneak in, they’re going to have to fix their own countries. They may even learn to read or graduate from high school. #MMGA

Diogenes
Diogenes
January 11, 2018 10:55 am

“Unfortunately, in our contemporary culture we often fail to encounter migrants as persons, and instead look at them as unknown others, if we even notice them at all.”

I look at them as fucking parasites. Taking more than they ever put in.

Tom
Tom
January 11, 2018 1:40 pm

Ann Corcoran does an awesome job running that Refugee Resetttlement Watch site. She does her homework and is a great source to use when contacting politicians and informing others of what is actually going on
http://www.refugeeresettlementwatch.wordpress.com

Doug Lynn
Doug Lynn
January 11, 2018 2:40 pm

Kevin Lynn is my progressive brotha’ from anotha’ mutha’.

So – correct me if I am wrong, but what I believe you are describing is this (i.e. – follow the money):

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Kevin
Kevin
January 11, 2018 3:03 pm

Ha! Good one Doug.

22winmag - The South was Right (and slavery would have ended through legislation not war in the years to come, so don't give me that shit) What happened to places like Rhodesia and safe spaces for white folks? What comes next?
22winmag - The South was Right (and slavery would have ended through legislation not war in the years to come, so don't give me that shit) What happened to places like Rhodesia and safe spaces for white folks? What comes next?
January 11, 2018 10:43 pm

Hitler was openly envious of America’s then relatively tough immigration standards.

He was also dealing with a bomb cyclone of “immigrants” (read undesirables and carpetbaggers) stemming from the Treaty of Versailles.