Archive for April, 2021

Impacts of illegal immigration on ranchers, armed intrusions, fever ticks – KGBT-TV

HARLINGEN, Texas (KVEO) Armed intrusions, economic losses, fever ticks, trespassing and property damage, are just a few ways ranchers along the Rio Grande are affected by the influx of migrants crossing the border illegally.

Imgoing to step lightly and tell you we do carry ourguns. Ive had armed intrusions here before, said Richard Guerra, Starr County Rancher

Guerra owns 8,000 acres along the Rio Grande. Guerra said that when the migrants cross illegally, it can come at a cost.

Some of these people do a lot of damage because they leave the gatesopen, they tear down the fences. Some of these people on the highwaythey are chases, they knock down your fence, they cut down your fence. All of that is an expense that I have tobare,nobodypays us for that, he said.

Apart from property damage Guerra said cartels on the Mexican side force ranchers to abandon their properties, leaving their animals behind which can bring across fever ticks.

People that cross sometimes bring the fever tickon humans. Plus the cattle, horses and everything that comes across the river, if they haveticks on them, then Im most likely going to be quarantined,Guerra told KVEO.

The quarantine can be costly for ranchers because they cant move their cattle until they are free of ticks.

Guerras property is patrolled by an aerostat which he said gives him some comfort and security, but there have been talks those could go away.

Itsworrisomebecausetheadministrationis saying well it cost too muchor they are going tocome up withnew technologyto replace some of that, but whenis that going to happen?Instead,they are shutting these things down, with nonew technology. Well, were going to have a tsunamiof people comingacross, Guerra said.

Guerra said that ranchers concerns need to be addressed and they need to be compensated for their losses either from the state or federal government.

Ihope that this president and administration wakes up, he said We do have a crisis, they need to address it, do not sugar coat it, its a problem.

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Impacts of illegal immigration on ranchers, armed intrusions, fever ticks - KGBT-TV

Sen. Hoeven: Illegal immigrants being given court dates ‘three to four years’ away, as crisis worsens – Fox News

Senate Appropriations Committee member John Hoeven, R-N.D., told Fox News on Tuesday that illegal immigrants who are given notice-to-appear tickets by federal immigration authorities are receiving court dates that are several years into the future, as the border crisis overwhelms government resources.

Hoeven told "Your World" that the flow of illegal immigrants has increased so exponentially, little is known about most of those coming across the Rio Grande river from Mexico.

He said that those illegally entering the United States from near Reynosa, Tamaulipas, Mexico are being processed in a makeshift area under the Anzalduas International Bridge, which connects that city with Mission, Texas.

"What is happening isinsome cases they were beingprocessed under thebridge. We saw hundreds andhundreds of children and mothersand they essentially didn'tgo to the processing center," said Hoeven, who toured the border with 17 other Republican senators hosted by the border patrol union.

"They were actually -- they gointo town and like I said, are givena bus ticket and off they go.They're given a notice thatthey're supposed to appear incourt, but in many cases that'snot for three or four years," the North Dakota lawmaker continued.

Hoeven said giving illegal immigrants such a long gap between their entry and the adjudication of whether they are qualified to receive formal asylum essentially incentivizes more migrants from all over the world to come illegally.

"So think about it.They're being sent into theinterior of the country.They may have a contact, may bea family member -- or maybe eventhe cartel because the cartelsare operating in our country aswell as on the border...Of coursethey don't come backfor that."

Host Neil Cavuto noted, in that regard, that as the crisis continues, migrants from outside the so-called Central American "triangle countries" are attempting to enter the United States as well.

He said some migrants have come from as far as Eritrea, on the Red Sea in East Africa.

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During his trip, Hoeven told Cavuto, he and the other lawmakers viewed things the Biden administration "wouldn't [show]", he claimed.

"We were in the RioGrande Valley and saw the trailswhere minors were coming overthe border illegally. They're processed for 8 or 9 hours ...and sent into McAllen.They're turned over to NGO's andthey get on a bus and they go aoff to wherever in the country.

"So once they're here and they gointo the country, that's it.They're here.That's why they're coming.They know that's what's goingon."

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Sen. Hoeven: Illegal immigrants being given court dates 'three to four years' away, as crisis worsens - Fox News

Why We Need To Stop Calling People ‘Illegal Immigrants’ – The Swaddle

This week, a 14-year-old Rohingya girl, detained for two years in India,faced a peculiar situation: authorities wanted to deport her back to Myanmar, but her family was in Bangladeshs refugee camps. She drew public attention for being the first person India officially attempted to deported since a military coup began in Myanmar; a minor forced to flee violence was sent back to even more violence,critics decried. The deportation didnt take place in the end, because Myanmar authorities refused to accept her, The Wire reported Friday. But it is the governments firm stance that stands out: the girl, along with more than 150immigrantRohingyas who escaped persecution in Myanmar and were living in Jammu andother states, wasillegal and must exit Indian premises, they maintained.

The persistent labeling of people as illegal immigrants is a poignant issue, one that has perturbed western countries like the U.S. for long. Perhaps, the human rights crisis unfolding right under our eyes gives India sufficient reason to mull over the moral concerns at playin the language we use to discuss them.

The most evident is the way this dubious attribution frames vulnerable people seeking a better life. The use of the term illegal to refer to a person is a usage which is confined to exactly one group of people: Migrants. As a result, illegal, when used as a noun, always means immigrantspeople whose only crime is the victimless pursuit of liberty and prosperity, Felix Salmon wrote about what we understand when we hear the word illegal in Fusion. Human rights groups have called illegal immigrant a slur and pejorative as well; arguably, it strips people of the dignity and humanity to which they, like everyone, are entitled to.

The language of immigration, or any socio-cultural issue, is more than minor semantic hiccups; it is inherently political. In calling people illegal, there is an implication that someone poses a security threat; several political parties and organizations in Jammu have claimed Rohingyas presence is a threat to peace and a conspiracy to alter the demographic character, The Print reported. During a hearing in the Supreme Court last week, the Centre called Rohingyas absolutely illegal migrants who posed serious threats to the national security. The counsel pushing for their deportation told the bench it would start a dangerous trend by interfering with a diplomatic issue relating to illegal migrants.

Rohingyas, in particular, are doubly oppressed; as a Bengali-dialect speaking Muslim minority from Myanmar, they also bear the stigma of being Muslims in a country witnessing growing religious friction. Indias most recent policy around displaced people from neighboring countries (the Citizenship Amendment Act) still weighs fresh in public discourse; many have argued that Islamophobic sentiments underline the contentious national policy. The term illegal, used more and more by the state, only works to alienate them.

American media houses have recalibrated their style guide over the years; the Associated Press, NBC, and ABC have banned illegal immigrant; they recommend the usage of undocumented instead, reiterating the idea that even language can be violent.

Related on The Swaddle:

J&K Government Rounds Up 168 Rohingya Refugees, Places Them in Holding Centres

Beyond linguistics, the term alters, and ignores, a grim social reality. The Rohingyas fled to parts of India and Bangladesh not out of whim: as a persecuted ethnic minority in Myanmar, they have been facing an ongoing genocide since 2017. The United Nations has called the Myanmar armys campaign against the Rohingya a textbook example of ethnic cleansing. Rohingyas displacement is as much a state issue as it is a humanitarian one; but by casting their presence in refuge countries as illegal, the discourse stops being about the people and their persecution, and instead transforms them into perpetrators of harm against the state.

Sabber, a Rohingya Myanmar who reached India in 2008, recounts the scale of violence to The Wires Ismat Ara: We will be killed if we return They were burning us to death back there. My family sent me because I was the only one who could manage such a long journey, my parents were old and my sister was weak. His mother, father, and sister are still in Myanmar.

An article in The Swaddle last month also pointed out the pathos of the deportation exercise: It is not clear where the Rohingya people would be deported. In Myanmar, they would likely face death following the recent coup by the military, a key institution driving the genocide of the community. Bangladesh, at the forefront of the Rohingya influx from Myanmar, hasrefused to acceptforcible returns of the people and is undertaking its own questionable process ofmoving Rohingya people to Bhasan Char, a newly-formed sediment island in the Bay of Bengal. This may leave the Rohingya people in J&K, and potentially elsewhere in India, in permanent residence at the sub-jail, an incarcerated state that cannot be the solution to the crisis even if it ismutually acceptableto the state.

The debate around refugee rights and citizenship is not a new one. In 2017, Indias Ministry of Home Affairs issued an urgent notice to all states and union territories saying that Rohingya illegal migrants must be identified and deported without delay. While hearing the Rohingya deportation issue on March 26 this year, the Supreme Court remarked: The fear is that once they are deported, they may get slaughtered. But we cannot stop it. The Chief Justice also added that India cannot become the international capital of illegal migrants, according to a Hindustan Times report.

A commonly recognized principle under the international human rights framework asserts the idea of non-refoulment, noting that people should not be returned to a country where they would face torture, cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment, and other irreparable harm which Rohingyas do. But since India is not a party to the 1951 Refugee Convention, the global treaty to protect the interests of refugees, India faces no legal qualms in carrying out the present deportation exercise.

The tussle between law and human rights could continue till the end of time. But in the end, it boils down to: can a person be illegal? The word illegal in itself is evil and fundamentally wrong There can be irregular migrants or undocumented migrants, not illegal human beings, Fazal Abdali, an associate with the Human Rights Law Network, reflects in The Wire.

Language carries the imperative of evolution; our linguistic understanding has progressed to find better substitutes for many objectionable terms: we have found wisdom in using oppressed instead of lower while talking about the Indian caste system; historians now prefer the usage of enslaved persons to slaves. More recently, people pointed out the erroneous labeling of migrant workers; they have been invisibilized, and arent invisible, as many media reports termed them. Perhaps, the phrase illegal immigrant could come to a much-needed halt.

New York Times writer Jeffrey Toobin, in a 2015 article titled Should I Use The Term Illegal Immigrants?, argued that the term has proved to be slanderous and should retire from civilized discourse. His conclusion was this: There does seem to be a consensus against the use of the term by the people most affected by it, who happen to be a vulnerable minority seeking a better life, and thats good enough for me.Personally, Im dropping the use of the term illegal immigrant.' This battle over words seems primed for a moral resolution.

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Why We Need To Stop Calling People 'Illegal Immigrants' - The Swaddle

Cruz, AOC go at it on Twitter over immigration debate – Fox News

New York Democrat Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez exchanged jabs on Twitter with Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz Thursdayover the growing immigration crisis at the U.S. southern border.

In response to a series of tweets by Ocasio-Cortez on the Democratic Partys division in addressing migrant children crossing the border illegally,Cruz condemned the spike in undocumented migrant arrivals.

CRUZ, AOC EXCHANGE BLOWS ON NAZI ACCUSATIONS

Ocasio-Cortez"explains the real Dem position: abolish ICE. Full open borders. Which would make the [Biden border crisis] even worse," the Texas Republican wrote.

"She says nothing else works. Really? Last year, we had the lowest illegal immigration IN 45 YEARS. This year, we have the highest in 20 years," he added.

Ocasio-Cortez fired back, recapping the senators decision to leave his home statein February, amidone of Texas biggest crises in years.

"Ted, this is pretty rich coming from someone who fled their own home (and responsibilities) during an environmental crisis to cross the border and seek refuge in Mexico," she retorted in a tweet Thursday. "Also you funded cages, expanded cages, and yet youre complaining about cages. You have no policy, just puff."

"Maybe Mexico shouldnt let YOU in the next time you try to run away from your job to sip umbrella drinks in Cancn," she continued before adding, "A reminder that your resignation is 84 days past due. At least."

AOC REBUFFS TED CRUZ TWITTER OVERTURE: 'YOU ALMOST HAD ME MURDERED'

Thursdays diatribe is just the latest Twitter exchange between the two political big wigs.

Ocasio-Cortez and Cruz have been firing heated tweets at one another since early January, after the New York Democrat accused the Texan of inciting the violent Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.The attack resultedin the death of five people, andvideos showingpro-Trump supporters seeking out officials like Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Ocasio-Cortez were posted to social media.

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Cruz has called Ocasio-Cortez a "liar" for her claims, and the New York Democrat in turn has rejected any calls for comradery, telling the Republican from Texas he almost had her "murdered".

"Happy to work w/ almost any other GOP that arent trying to get me killed," she said in a January tweet. "In the meantime if you want to help, you can resign."

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Cruz, AOC go at it on Twitter over immigration debate - Fox News

Immigration and multiculturalism have their limits | Denver-gazette – Colorado Springs Gazette

Im proud to have joined the team of opinion columnists at The Denver Gazette. I subscribed to The Denver Post for 50 years and wrote an opinion column for that paper for 25 (as a token conservative). I finally dumped the Post last year as have many others. Just as the flagrant left-wing bias of the New York Times has made it unreadable for so many, the Post has succumbed to the same failing as its quality and credibility have declined.

The Gazette is a long overdue right-leaning alternative for conservatives and moderates. Its news pages are especially attentive to Denver and Colorado matters and offer more balance than the Post. Gazette editorials and opinion pages are reliably conservative but also feature a number of nationally-syndicated columnists on the left, like Ruben Navarrette who describes himself as the most widely read Latino columnist in the country and writes from that perspective. In one of his recent columns, he advocated for more permissive and expansive Latino immigration. And hes supportive of illegal immigrants.

With typical liberal condescension, Navarrette declared that Conservatives on talk radio (are) a mostly White cohort that is dependably wrong when discussing refugees and immigrants. He was gleeful about the United States march(ing) toward its destiny of becoming a majority non-White country by 2040. (Isnt that anti-white racism?)

He also argued that the whole point of America is to be a safe haven for those who come as refugees fleeing violence or economic migrants looking for a square deal. Adding, It says so right there in the brochure.

No, that isnt the whole point of America. Since the Constitution makes no such claim, I presume the brochure Navarrette has in mind is the inscription on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty which welcomes all the worlds tired, poor, huddled masses yearning to breathe free. But thats never been official U.S. government policy. Those exact words were from a poem by Emma Lazarus, a progressive New York socialite, anti-poverty activist and advocate for Russian Jews seeking immigration to the U.S. The statue was a gift to America from France in 1886 after our first centennial honoring the Declaration of Independence and American Democracy. Years later, in 1903, a fund-raising campaign by N.Y. writers and artists added a pedestal to the statue that included the Lazarus inscription, voicing her personal opinion and crusade.

The U.S. has historically imposed limits and restrictions on immigration. In the 19th century, as America expanded westward, building railroads and infrastructure the nation had a great need for physical laborers, who were welcomed as immigrants on the condition that they support themselves. Federal public assistance programs of the kind we have today didnt exist, nor did the spiraling national debt those programs are now driving. In the 21st century, open borders for countless needy immigrants and a welfare state are fiscally incompatible.

The point of America as codified by our founders in the Constitution was mostly about independence, individual liberty, limited government and private enterprise; the economic dimension of liberty.

The Bill of rights restricts government infringement on the peoples freedom of speech, religion, the press, assembly, the right to bear arms and other fundamental rights. But those freedoms arent absolute. Theyre implicitly limited by four vital words: Up to a point. Freedom of speech and the press doesnt countenance libel, slander or incitement to riot. Freedom of religion doesnt allow human sacrifice. Freedom of assembly doesnt condone trespassing.

Up to a point also applies to immigration. Im not a nativist or a xenophobe, and I dont oppose legal immigration. But I do oppose illegal immigration as do all sovereign countries including Mexico. The worlds impoverished and oppressed masses may yearn to come to America but its neither our obligation nor within our means to take them all in.

Progressives claim that multiculturalism makes us a better country. Perhaps, but, again, only up to a point. A tidal wave of immigration in the absence of assimilation would overwhelm our culture and lead to divisiveness and tribalism. Understandably, the French have resisted the Americanization of their culture. Ive visited more than 50 foreign countries. Some cultures are charming, intriguing and admirable, but not all. Sharia Law of Muslim fundamentalists is an affront to the Constitutional rights of American women. I much prefer our culture to Chinas totalitarian dictatorship. In fact, I prefer our culture to any other.

Dont be fooled by progressive propaganda. Democrats see open borders and multiculturalism as their route to a permanent electoral majority from ever-grateful migrants and their progeny. Thats what its all about.

Mike Rosen is a Denver-based American radio personality and political commentator.

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Immigration and multiculturalism have their limits | Denver-gazette - Colorado Springs Gazette