• You must be logged in to see or use the Shoutbox. Besides, if you haven't registered, you really should. It's quick and it will make your life a little better. Trust me. So just register and make yourself at home with like-minded individuals who share either your morbid curiousity or sense of gallows humor.

Sugar Cookie

Veteran Member
Bold Member!
America’s border crisis is worsening with a record 12,600 migrants encountered by Customs and Border Protection officers in 24 hours Monday, according to Fox News.
Pictures showed a sea of thousands of newly arrived migrants huddled in neat lines as they awaited processing after illegally crossing into Eagle Pass, Texas.

Many had walked across the Rio Grande river which serves as the border between the US and Mexico with plans to seek asylum.
Numbers have reached the highest ever recorded since the end of Title 42 measures in May. August saw more than 304,000 migrants attempt to gain entry to the US, September increased to 341,000 and October logged 310,000.

Border resources are stretched so thin, road and rail crossings have been closed so all available officers can be diverted to processing the arriving migrants.
The Biden administration’s plan to control the flow was for migrants to wait in another country until they could get an appointment via the CBP One app, with up to 30,000 people per month allowed into the US to pursue asylum applications.
“Do not just show up at the border. Stay where you are and apply legally from there,” President Biden said in January.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas also claimed a month later: “People who arrive at the border without using a lawful pathway will be presumed ineligible for asylum.”

In practice that has not been the case and 78% of all those encountered at the Southwest border in October — 188,778 people — crossed into the country illegally between points of entry.
Most aren’t being ejected, with the Department of Homeland security revealing between May and September they had removed or returned “over 300,000 individuals,” which equates to around 60,000 people per month — less than 30% of those who had arrived on US soil during that time.

Those now arriving at the border are not just those who claim to be fleeing persecution and failing regimes in South America. CBP figures show increases in those arriving from China, India, Russia and Africa.
One migrant from Morocco, Oussama, 20, recently told various media outlets how he had given up being an online gamer in his home country and tried his luck at the southern border in search of work and a better paying job, telling reporters: “I love you Joe Biden, thank you for everything Joe Biden,” once in the US.

He was processed and allowed into the country, then photographed in New York City days later where he said he was looking for work.

While authorities can’t stem the flow of people arriving – increasing every year of the Biden presidency, with CBP recording 1.9m border encounters in fiscal year 2021, 2.8m in 2022 and 3.2m in 2023 – the immigration court system isn’t in a position to effectively handle them either.
As of November, the US Immigration court reached a historic backlog of over three million pending cases, according to Transactional Records Access Clearing House (TRAC).

That number has grown by over a million cases in a single year, after reaching the milestone of two million cases for the first time in 2022.

The current backlog equates to around 4,500 cases for every immigration judge in the court system, according to TRAC.

That volume of cases is pushing hearings back by many months, meaning when migrants first enter the country they are given initial court dates years in advance.

Continue reading at link
In Texas, Governor Greg Abbott (R.) signed a bill into effect Monday giving police officers in the state power to arrest anybody caught entering the country illegally.

“President Biden’s deliberate inaction at the border left Texas to fend for itself,” he said of the action.

People arrested under the law will be allowed to choose whether to leave the country under a judge’s orders, or face prosecution, jail time, and fines up to $2,000. Repeat offenders will face felony charges.
 
Back
Top