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Reply to "50% of all U.S. immigrants on welfare program(s) "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Why do you care OP? What have they done to you? Do you get extra money for every child who goes to bed hungry? [/quote] Over populated my child's elementary school and half her class is taught in Spanish. Learn to f g speak English for starters and it is not the United States job to feed these children. [b]You come here at least be able to provide for your children.[/b] [/quote] That is an excellent point my friend. Just out of curiosity you ever consider that's the reason many immigrants come here in the first place...so they can take care of their children. Pick a country, any country in Central America ([i]Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama[/i]). Do you know what those countries all have in common aside from being crippled with widespread underemployment and poverty and ravaged by ridiculous amounts of violence? All those countries are also plagued with disgustingly high rates of child labor and sickening high rates of child prostitution. Self-preservation is a basic biological trait that is universal among all living organisms and survival is an innate instinct. With a twister is headed straight for the farm you wouldn't expect Dorothy to dutifully wash the dishes and sweep the floor and finish counting chicks like Auntie Em told her to before getting to safety would you? Well...with their children's welfare, safety, and very lives at risk Every Single Day do you seriously expect a mother in Nicaragua to dutifully learn fluent English before beginning her arduous and dangerous journey here? [/quote] I do. If it’s that important that she can provide for her children she should learn the language. [/quote] Lol - well let’s hope you remain totally unfamiliar with perilous predicaments, treacherous conditions, and life-threatening situations my friend because your stubborn preoccupation with nonessential priorities will most certainly be your downfall. But I doubt you’re that stupid. I understand you have to argue with me just to save face (odd seeing how this is an anonymous forum) but surely if your children were starving and at risk of being kidnapped and forced into child labor or child prostitution and possibly facing death in the crossfire of competing criminal factions you’d be wise enough to get the hell out now and learn English later too.[/quote] This is exactly the reason we need a big wall. And families caught at the border should be separated to differing facilities. Deterrence is paramount in stemming the flow of illegals coming here only to claim tax dollars that should go to American citizens. If the bleeding hearts feel so bad for the unfortunates of other countries, and there are plenty more in Africa and Asia, then they can send their money to charities that feed and support people in their own countries. It is not racist to have borders and legal immigration.[/quote] Good news for you. We do have borders and legal immgiation. Shocking, I know.[/quote] Then why are there so many illegals here?[/quote] Because it's not really a priority for either party. And the numbers are going down so...there's that. [/quote] And because there are people here who are willing to hire them. Look at the industries that benefit most from illegal immigrant labor. Farm and construction. Most of the owners of those businesses are R. It's all just lip service by the Rs. https://www.texastribune.org/2016/12/14/lawmakers-go-easy-employers-undocumented-workers/ [quote]Despite promising during the 2014 race to crack down on Texas employers who hire undocumented workers, it was status quo last session in the state Senate that Patrick oversees. And illegal hiring practices in the Texas workplace, which the state has authority to police, have largely gone missing from his public outrage over the porous border and illegal immigration. That’s not political apostasy. It’s the default posture in pro-business Texas — and one of the increasingly rare areas where Republicans and Democrats come together in common cause year after year. [/quote] http://www.sacbee.com/news/state/california/article139284133.html [quote]Farmers employ tens of thousands of people in the San Joaquin Valley and run a $35 billion industry producing grapes, milk, oranges, almonds and dozens of other commodities sold in stores around the globe. Many of them supported Donald Trump for president For now, farmers said they are banking on Trump’s business background as evidence that, mindful of the potential risk to the economy and food prices, he won’t send immigration agents to valley farms. By some estimates, more than half of the estimated 800,000 farmworkers in California are undocumented immigrants. “Everybody’s concerned, without question, but at the same time, most people know ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) is not going to come in and raid a field,” said Tom Barcellos, a Tulare County dairy farmer and Trump supporter. [/quote] http://www.houstonchronicle.com/business/article/Texas-builders-fear-fallout-of-immigration-10959823.php http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/08/02/texas-home-builders-relying-on-immigrant-labor-feel-effects-immigrant-crackdown.html [/quote]
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