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What Happened to 3,000 Migrants in TJ?
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Dec 5, 2018 21:16:21   #
Boo_Boo Loc: Jellystone
 
The whereabouts of around 3,000 Central American migrants is unknown after fewer than half of those in a Tijuana shelter were t***sferred to a new location. https://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/tijuana-migrant-numbers-down-by-3000/?utm_source=Mexico+News+Today&utm_campaign=3f1429e530-MNT+dec05-2018&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_f1536a3787-3f1429e530-349565373

More than 6,200 mainly Honduran migrants have arrived in the northern border city since mid-November and most had been staying in a sports complex that was converted into a temporary shelter.

However, government authorities announced last week that the migrants would be t***sferred from the Benito Juárez sports complex, whose grounds had become a quagmire after heavy rain, to a 9,000-square-meter-piece of land known as El Barretal, which is located in Tijuana’s eastern outskirts.

However, Rodolfo Hernández, president of the Baja California State Migrant Council, said that between last Thursday and yesterday only around 2,500 migrants had arrived at the new shelter while 300 remained in and around the previous one.

“. . . the rest, around 3,000 [migrants], nobody knows where they are,” he said.

“We’re asking other shelters to supply us with lists in order to know how many of them are in those places, others crossed the wall and went into the United States . . . We’re trying to carry out a census,” Hernández added.

Those who have moved to the new shelter, located in the notoriously violent neighborhood of Mariano Matamoros, say that conditions there are much-improved.

The El Barretal shelter has the capacity to house 2,500 people indoors and another 3,500 in an outdoor area, according to Tijuana Civil Protection authorities.

David Alejandro, a 23-year-old Honduran man, told the newspaper El Universal that there was a downpour on the last day he spent in the Benito Juárez sports complex, which ruined his few possessions.

“. . . We’re better off here . . . because there is hard ground here and there it was dirt that turned into pure mud . . . they say it’s going to rain again and we don’t have a roof here either but at least there is no mud,” he said.

Another migrant identified only as Alicia, who is accompanied by her three small children, said that living in the previous shelter in crowded conditions with no privacy and poor hygiene was difficult but that the rain made it impossible.

“. . . Here the children can play a little bit more because it’s not so dirty. They told us that women and the little ones are going to sleep indoors, that’s fine by me,” she said.

Some other migrants agreed to move to the new shelter but quickly began planning their departure.

Honduran Claudia Lorely, her husband Bryan José and two of their friends were among those who decided to leave, according to a report published by the news website Univision Noticias.

On Sunday, the four Hondurans, who left San Pedro Sula on October 13 as part of the first and largest migrant caravan, ate a Chinese meal outside the El Barretal shelter and stocked up on sports drinks before setting off for Playas de Tijuana, a neighborhood in the west of the city where the border fence separating Mexico from the United States meets the Pacific Ocean.

Once there, they planned to try to jump the fence to turn themselves into United States border patrol agents and request asylum.

“We’re going to hand ourselves in because we no longer see any other option,” Claudia said.

The Hondurans took the decision to try to cross the border illegally after coming to the realization that they wouldn’t be able to enter the United States as a group as they originally thought would be possible.

A daily “metering” system adopted by United States border authorities limits the number of migrants who are granted appointments at which they can begin the process to request asylum.

That system, coupled with an existing backlog of would-be asylum seekers who were already in Tijuana when the caravan arrived, means that most new arrivals will be forced to wait months or even years to plead their case to U.S. authorities with no certainty that they will be successful.

“It’s not as we thought it would be. We’re tired, desperate, it’s already been a long time since we left home and we want to see something clear,” Bryan said.

The United States border patrol said that 24 people were intercepted on the U.S. side of the border Saturday while more migrants have crossed or attempted to cross the border over the past two days.

Some migrants have decided to remain in Tijuana – at least for the time being – while others have sought assistance to return to their countries of origin.

Mario Madrazo, a director at the National Immigration Institute (INM), said that 453 migrants had voluntarily requested assistance to return home, adding that around 150 others would be deported after being arrested for committing misdemeanors or other crimes.

Around 100 migrants were arrested and deported after participating in a rush on the border on November 25 to which U.S. border agents responded with the use of tear gas.

Honduran migrant Yoselin Martínez told Univision that the number of people making snap decisions about their plans had spiked since Thursday when rumors began circulating that those t***sferred to the new shelter would be detained by immigration authorities and immediately deported.

Another migrant at the new shelter, 23-year-old Honduran Milson Martínez, who traveled more than 4,000 kilometers to the border with his partner, cousin and five-year-old nephew, said it was necessary to remain “level-headed” when planning any future move because “one could lose everything” with a poor decision.

“The t***h is that they’re filling our heads with a lot of ideas, a lot of people think that those of us who are here are going to be deported . . . and others are enticing people to leave and cross the wall but I believe that we have to be calm and patient . . . We saw that we can’t enter as a group like we entered Guatemala, we have to wait,” he said.

“We know that Donald Trump’s heart won’t be touched by us, we know that it’s going to be difficult but for now we’re going to wait and see if they speed up the process to request asylum . . .”

Reply
Dec 5, 2018 21:30:13   #
no propaganda please Loc: moon orbiting the third rock from the sun
 
Pennylynn wrote:
The whereabouts of around 3,000 Central American migrants is unknown after fewer than half of those in a Tijuana shelter were t***sferred to a new location. https://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/tijuana-migrant-numbers-down-by-3000/?utm_source=Mexico+News+Today&utm_campaign=3f1429e530-MNT+dec05-2018&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_f1536a3787-3f1429e530-349565373

More than 6,200 mainly Honduran migrants have arrived in the northern border city since mid-November and most had been staying in a sports complex that was converted into a temporary shelter.

However, government authorities announced last week that the migrants would be t***sferred from the Benito Juárez sports complex, whose grounds had become a quagmire after heavy rain, to a 9,000-square-meter-piece of land known as El Barretal, which is located in Tijuana’s eastern outskirts.

However, Rodolfo Hernández, president of the Baja California State Migrant Council, said that between last Thursday and yesterday only around 2,500 migrants had arrived at the new shelter while 300 remained in and around the previous one.

“. . . the rest, around 3,000 [migrants], nobody knows where they are,” he said.

“We’re asking other shelters to supply us with lists in order to know how many of them are in those places, others crossed the wall and went into the United States . . . We’re trying to carry out a census,” Hernández added.

Those who have moved to the new shelter, located in the notoriously violent neighborhood of Mariano Matamoros, say that conditions there are much-improved.

The El Barretal shelter has the capacity to house 2,500 people indoors and another 3,500 in an outdoor area, according to Tijuana Civil Protection authorities.

David Alejandro, a 23-year-old Honduran man, told the newspaper El Universal that there was a downpour on the last day he spent in the Benito Juárez sports complex, which ruined his few possessions.

“. . . We’re better off here . . . because there is hard ground here and there it was dirt that turned into pure mud . . . they say it’s going to rain again and we don’t have a roof here either but at least there is no mud,” he said.

Another migrant identified only as Alicia, who is accompanied by her three small children, said that living in the previous shelter in crowded conditions with no privacy and poor hygiene was difficult but that the rain made it impossible.

“. . . Here the children can play a little bit more because it’s not so dirty. They told us that women and the little ones are going to sleep indoors, that’s fine by me,” she said.

Some other migrants agreed to move to the new shelter but quickly began planning their departure.

Honduran Claudia Lorely, her husband Bryan José and two of their friends were among those who decided to leave, according to a report published by the news website Univision Noticias.

On Sunday, the four Hondurans, who left San Pedro Sula on October 13 as part of the first and largest migrant caravan, ate a Chinese meal outside the El Barretal shelter and stocked up on sports drinks before setting off for Playas de Tijuana, a neighborhood in the west of the city where the border fence separating Mexico from the United States meets the Pacific Ocean.

Once there, they planned to try to jump the fence to turn themselves into United States border patrol agents and request asylum.

“We’re going to hand ourselves in because we no longer see any other option,” Claudia said.

The Hondurans took the decision to try to cross the border illegally after coming to the realization that they wouldn’t be able to enter the United States as a group as they originally thought would be possible.

A daily “metering” system adopted by United States border authorities limits the number of migrants who are granted appointments at which they can begin the process to request asylum.

That system, coupled with an existing backlog of would-be asylum seekers who were already in Tijuana when the caravan arrived, means that most new arrivals will be forced to wait months or even years to plead their case to U.S. authorities with no certainty that they will be successful.

“It’s not as we thought it would be. We’re tired, desperate, it’s already been a long time since we left home and we want to see something clear,” Bryan said.

The United States border patrol said that 24 people were intercepted on the U.S. side of the border Saturday while more migrants have crossed or attempted to cross the border over the past two days.

Some migrants have decided to remain in Tijuana – at least for the time being – while others have sought assistance to return to their countries of origin.

Mario Madrazo, a director at the National Immigration Institute (INM), said that 453 migrants had voluntarily requested assistance to return home, adding that around 150 others would be deported after being arrested for committing misdemeanors or other crimes.

Around 100 migrants were arrested and deported after participating in a rush on the border on November 25 to which U.S. border agents responded with the use of tear gas.

Honduran migrant Yoselin Martínez told Univision that the number of people making snap decisions about their plans had spiked since Thursday when rumors began circulating that those t***sferred to the new shelter would be detained by immigration authorities and immediately deported.

Another migrant at the new shelter, 23-year-old Honduran Milson Martínez, who traveled more than 4,000 kilometers to the border with his partner, cousin and five-year-old nephew, said it was necessary to remain “level-headed” when planning any future move because “one could lose everything” with a poor decision.

“The t***h is that they’re filling our heads with a lot of ideas, a lot of people think that those of us who are here are going to be deported . . . and others are enticing people to leave and cross the wall but I believe that we have to be calm and patient . . . We saw that we can’t enter as a group like we entered Guatemala, we have to wait,” he said.

“We know that Donald Trump’s heart won’t be touched by us, we know that it’s going to be difficult but for now we’re going to wait and see if they speed up the process to request asylum . . .”
The whereabouts of around 3,000 Central American m... (show quote)


They probably managed to sneak across the border under cover of darknes.
By the way It is NOT the Presidents job to be moved by he propaganda or "feeling" for the "women and children and strong young men in fit condition in the caravan, it is to make sure the laws of the US are not broken and the soverenty of the USA remains intact.

Reply
Dec 5, 2018 21:56:32   #
Boo_Boo Loc: Jellystone
 
NPP,

Did you notice the quotation marks. What that means is I have copied and pasted directly from the link provided. Only the opening line and the thread title came from me. The rest is the product of the story's author. So, I do agree with you, we are not responsible for being emotional about this caravan, they took a gamble and it did not work out for them. But, they will get a free trip home. As for as the 3,000 crossing in the cover of darkness, that was acknowledged in the article. This means one of two things, either our border patrol are incompetent (which I would rather not even consider) or these people had help from the US side of the border...much more probable.

no propaganda please wrote:
They probably managed to sneak across the border under cover of darknes.
By the way It is NOT the Presidents job to be moved by he propaganda or "feeling" for the "women and children and strong young men in fit condition in the caravan, it is to make sure the laws of the US are not broken and the soverenty of the USA remains intact.

Reply
 
 
Dec 5, 2018 22:33:50   #
no propaganda please Loc: moon orbiting the third rock from the sun
 
Pennylynn wrote:
NPP,

Did you notice the quotation marks. What that means is I have copied and pasted directly from the link provided. Only the opening line and the thread title came from me. The rest is the product of the story's author. So, I do agree with you, we are not responsible for being emotional about this caravan, they took a gamble and it did not work out for them. But, they will get a free trip home. As for as the 3,000 crossing in the cover of darkness, that was acknowledged in the article. This means one of two things, either our border patrol are incompetent (which I would rather not even consider) or these people had help from the US side of the border...much more probable.
NPP, br br Did you notice the quotation marks. W... (show quote)


Yes, I noticed the quotation marks so that comment was really directed t the general readership. My guess is that they had "assistance" from many Marxists, socialist, "progressives" in the USA, as usual.

Reply
Dec 5, 2018 22:46:15   #
Boo_Boo Loc: Jellystone
 
NPP,

I am so glad you understood, there are times when my threads/comments are unclear.
I agree, if they got across, they had help. If you have had the misfortune of traveling near the border... it is best if you speak Spanish and be a Democrat.

no propaganda please wrote:
Yes, I noticed the quotation marks so that comment was really directed t the general readership. My guess is that they had "assistance" from many Marxists, socialist, "progressives" in the USA, as usual.

Reply
Dec 5, 2018 23:05:42   #
EmilyD
 
Pennylynn wrote:
The whereabouts of around 3,000 Central American migrants is unknown after fewer than half of those in a Tijuana shelter were t***sferred to a new location. https://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/tijuana-migrant-numbers-down-by-3000/?utm_source=Mexico+News+Today&utm_campaign=3f1429e530-MNT+dec05-2018&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_f1536a3787-3f1429e530-349565373

More than 6,200 mainly Honduran migrants have arrived in the northern border city since mid-November and most had been staying in a sports complex that was converted into a temporary shelter.

However, government authorities announced last week that the migrants would be t***sferred from the Benito Juárez sports complex, whose grounds had become a quagmire after heavy rain, to a 9,000-square-meter-piece of land known as El Barretal, which is located in Tijuana’s eastern outskirts.

However, Rodolfo Hernández, president of the Baja California State Migrant Council, said that between last Thursday and yesterday only around 2,500 migrants had arrived at the new shelter while 300 remained in and around the previous one.

“. . . the rest, around 3,000 [migrants], nobody knows where they are,” he said.

“We’re asking other shelters to supply us with lists in order to know how many of them are in those places, others crossed the wall and went into the United States . . . We’re trying to carry out a census,” Hernández added.

Those who have moved to the new shelter, located in the notoriously violent neighborhood of Mariano Matamoros, say that conditions there are much-improved.

The El Barretal shelter has the capacity to house 2,500 people indoors and another 3,500 in an outdoor area, according to Tijuana Civil Protection authorities.

David Alejandro, a 23-year-old Honduran man, told the newspaper El Universal that there was a downpour on the last day he spent in the Benito Juárez sports complex, which ruined his few possessions.

“. . . We’re better off here . . . because there is hard ground here and there it was dirt that turned into pure mud . . . they say it’s going to rain again and we don’t have a roof here either but at least there is no mud,” he said.

Another migrant identified only as Alicia, who is accompanied by her three small children, said that living in the previous shelter in crowded conditions with no privacy and poor hygiene was difficult but that the rain made it impossible.

“. . . Here the children can play a little bit more because it’s not so dirty. They told us that women and the little ones are going to sleep indoors, that’s fine by me,” she said.

Some other migrants agreed to move to the new shelter but quickly began planning their departure.

Honduran Claudia Lorely, her husband Bryan José and two of their friends were among those who decided to leave, according to a report published by the news website Univision Noticias.

On Sunday, the four Hondurans, who left San Pedro Sula on October 13 as part of the first and largest migrant caravan, ate a Chinese meal outside the El Barretal shelter and stocked up on sports drinks before setting off for Playas de Tijuana, a neighborhood in the west of the city where the border fence separating Mexico from the United States meets the Pacific Ocean.

Once there, they planned to try to jump the fence to turn themselves into United States border patrol agents and request asylum.

“We’re going to hand ourselves in because we no longer see any other option,” Claudia said.

The Hondurans took the decision to try to cross the border illegally after coming to the realization that they wouldn’t be able to enter the United States as a group as they originally thought would be possible.

A daily “metering” system adopted by United States border authorities limits the number of migrants who are granted appointments at which they can begin the process to request asylum.

That system, coupled with an existing backlog of would-be asylum seekers who were already in Tijuana when the caravan arrived, means that most new arrivals will be forced to wait months or even years to plead their case to U.S. authorities with no certainty that they will be successful.

“It’s not as we thought it would be. We’re tired, desperate, it’s already been a long time since we left home and we want to see something clear,” Bryan said.

The United States border patrol said that 24 people were intercepted on the U.S. side of the border Saturday while more migrants have crossed or attempted to cross the border over the past two days.

Some migrants have decided to remain in Tijuana – at least for the time being – while others have sought assistance to return to their countries of origin.

Mario Madrazo, a director at the National Immigration Institute (INM), said that 453 migrants had voluntarily requested assistance to return home, adding that around 150 others would be deported after being arrested for committing misdemeanors or other crimes.

Around 100 migrants were arrested and deported after participating in a rush on the border on November 25 to which U.S. border agents responded with the use of tear gas.

Honduran migrant Yoselin Martínez told Univision that the number of people making snap decisions about their plans had spiked since Thursday when rumors began circulating that those t***sferred to the new shelter would be detained by immigration authorities and immediately deported.

Another migrant at the new shelter, 23-year-old Honduran Milson Martínez, who traveled more than 4,000 kilometers to the border with his partner, cousin and five-year-old nephew, said it was necessary to remain “level-headed” when planning any future move because “one could lose everything” with a poor decision.

“The t***h is that they’re filling our heads with a lot of ideas, a lot of people think that those of us who are here are going to be deported . . . and others are enticing people to leave and cross the wall but I believe that we have to be calm and patient . . . We saw that we can’t enter as a group like we entered Guatemala, we have to wait,” he said.

“We know that Donald Trump’s heart won’t be touched by us, we know that it’s going to be difficult but for now we’re going to wait and see if they speed up the process to request asylum . . .”
The whereabouts of around 3,000 Central American m... (show quote)


Someone told them it was not a good idea to throw rocks and bottles....that it made them look like invaders instead of amnesty seekers.....duh.

Now they have to turn around and find jobs somewhere in Mexico.

Reply
Dec 5, 2018 23:23:38   #
Radiance3
 
Pennylynn wrote:
The whereabouts of around 3,000 Central American migrants is unknown after fewer than half of those in a Tijuana shelter were t***sferred to a new location. https://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/tijuana-migrant-numbers-down-by-3000/?utm_source=Mexico+News+Today&utm_campaign=3f1429e530-MNT+dec05-2018&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_f1536a3787-3f1429e530-349565373

More than 6,200 mainly Honduran migrants have arrived in the northern border city since mid-November and most had been staying in a sports complex that was converted into a temporary shelter.

However, government authorities announced last week that the migrants would be t***sferred from the Benito Juárez sports complex, whose grounds had become a quagmire after heavy rain, to a 9,000-square-meter-piece of land known as El Barretal, which is located in Tijuana’s eastern outskirts.

However, Rodolfo Hernández, president of the Baja California State Migrant Council, said that between last Thursday and yesterday only around 2,500 migrants had arrived at the new shelter while 300 remained in and around the previous one.

“. . . the rest, around 3,000 [migrants], nobody knows where they are,” he said.

“We’re asking other shelters to supply us with lists in order to know how many of them are in those places, others crossed the wall and went into the United States . . . We’re trying to carry out a census,” Hernández added.

Those who have moved to the new shelter, located in the notoriously violent neighborhood of Mariano Matamoros, say that conditions there are much-improved.

The El Barretal shelter has the capacity to house 2,500 people indoors and another 3,500 in an outdoor area, according to Tijuana Civil Protection authorities.

David Alejandro, a 23-year-old Honduran man, told the newspaper El Universal that there was a downpour on the last day he spent in the Benito Juárez sports complex, which ruined his few possessions.

“. . . We’re better off here . . . because there is hard ground here and there it was dirt that turned into pure mud . . . they say it’s going to rain again and we don’t have a roof here either but at least there is no mud,” he said.

Another migrant identified only as Alicia, who is accompanied by her three small children, said that living in the previous shelter in crowded conditions with no privacy and poor hygiene was difficult but that the rain made it impossible.

“. . . Here the children can play a little bit more because it’s not so dirty. They told us that women and the little ones are going to sleep indoors, that’s fine by me,” she said.

Some other migrants agreed to move to the new shelter but quickly began planning their departure.

Honduran Claudia Lorely, her husband Bryan José and two of their friends were among those who decided to leave, according to a report published by the news website Univision Noticias.

On Sunday, the four Hondurans, who left San Pedro Sula on October 13 as part of the first and largest migrant caravan, ate a Chinese meal outside the El Barretal shelter and stocked up on sports drinks before setting off for Playas de Tijuana, a neighborhood in the west of the city where the border fence separating Mexico from the United States meets the Pacific Ocean.

Once there, they planned to try to jump the fence to turn themselves into United States border patrol agents and request asylum.

“We’re going to hand ourselves in because we no longer see any other option,” Claudia said.

The Hondurans took the decision to try to cross the border illegally after coming to the realization that they wouldn’t be able to enter the United States as a group as they originally thought would be possible.

A daily “metering” system adopted by United States border authorities limits the number of migrants who are granted appointments at which they can begin the process to request asylum.

That system, coupled with an existing backlog of would-be asylum seekers who were already in Tijuana when the caravan arrived, means that most new arrivals will be forced to wait months or even years to plead their case to U.S. authorities with no certainty that they will be successful.

“It’s not as we thought it would be. We’re tired, desperate, it’s already been a long time since we left home and we want to see something clear,” Bryan said.

The United States border patrol said that 24 people were intercepted on the U.S. side of the border Saturday while more migrants have crossed or attempted to cross the border over the past two days.

Some migrants have decided to remain in Tijuana – at least for the time being – while others have sought assistance to return to their countries of origin.

Mario Madrazo, a director at the National Immigration Institute (INM), said that 453 migrants had voluntarily requested assistance to return home, adding that around 150 others would be deported after being arrested for committing misdemeanors or other crimes.

Around 100 migrants were arrested and deported after participating in a rush on the border on November 25 to which U.S. border agents responded with the use of tear gas.

Honduran migrant Yoselin Martínez told Univision that the number of people making snap decisions about their plans had spiked since Thursday when rumors began circulating that those t***sferred to the new shelter would be detained by immigration authorities and immediately deported.

Another migrant at the new shelter, 23-year-old Honduran Milson Martínez, who traveled more than 4,000 kilometers to the border with his partner, cousin and five-year-old nephew, said it was necessary to remain “level-headed” when planning any future move because “one could lose everything” with a poor decision.

“The t***h is that they’re filling our heads with a lot of ideas, a lot of people think that those of us who are here are going to be deported . . . and others are enticing people to leave and cross the wall but I believe that we have to be calm and patient . . . We saw that we can’t enter as a group like we entered Guatemala, we have to wait,” he said.

“We know that Donald Trump’s heart won’t be touched by us, we know that it’s going to be difficult but for now we’re going to wait and see if they speed up the process to request asylum . . .”
The whereabouts of around 3,000 Central American m... (show quote)

===============
I hope the 3000 went back home.

Reply
 
 
Dec 6, 2018 00:21:17   #
EmilyD
 
Radiance3 wrote:
===============
I hope the 3000 went back home.

They sure blew it at our border. It's Mexico's problem.

Reply
Dec 6, 2018 00:36:58   #
Boo_Boo Loc: Jellystone
 
Emily,

I agree with you with one caveat.... what if they slipped through our defenses?
Then they just became our problem..... track them down and deport. This also sends the message that our border is vulnerable and I can bet that information has been relayed to the next inbound caravan.... exactly where the holes are and best time to breach the border. But, take heart.... I am told that I over think issues. Perhaps they are just spreading out and finding a niche in Mexico.

EmilyD wrote:
They sure blew it at our border. It's Mexico's problem.

Reply
Dec 6, 2018 06:07:33   #
Singularity
 
Pennylynn wrote:
Emily,

I agree with you with one caveat.... what if they slipped through our defenses?
Then they just became our problem..... track them down and deport. This also sends the message that our border is vulnerable and I can bet that information has been relayed to the next inbound caravan.... exactly where the holes are and best time to breach the border. But, take heart.... I am told that I over think issues. Perhaps they are just spreading out and finding a niche in Mexico.


I do not remember ever finding you guilty of over thinking, but there are many who mistake emotional investment for perspicacity.

Reply
Dec 6, 2018 07:53:01   #
Radiance3
 
EmilyD wrote:
They sure blew it at our border. It's Mexico's problem.


===============
Thank you president Trump. May God bless you and our country!

Reply
 
 
Dec 6, 2018 08:31:35   #
Singularity
 
Radiance3 wrote:
===============
Thank you president Trump. May God bless you and our country!


MATTHEW 25:31-40
“When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, he will sit on his throne in heavenly glory. All the nations will be gathered before him, and he will separate the people one from another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. He will put the sheep on his right and the goats on his left.

“Then the King will say to those on his right, ‘Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world. For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, "I was a stranger and you invited me in, I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.’

“Then the righteous will answer him, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you something to drink? When did we see you a stranger and invite you in, or needing clothes and clothe you? When did we see you sick or in prison and go to visit you?’

“The King will reply, ‘I tell you the t***h, wh**ever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.

And verses 45, 46:

"He will reply, 'Truly I tell you, wh**ever you did not do for one of the least of these, you did not do for me."

"Then they will go away to eternal punishment, but the righteous to eternal life."

(The Holy Bible, NIV)

SO.

According to your book, the god will NOT. This is in the manual you claim to follow, unless you pulled a Thomas Jefferson hatchet job on the pages.

Reply
Dec 6, 2018 08:49:03   #
Wonttakeitanymore
 
We can send help to get them back to their country! We have people here that need help! We can provide nourishment and vehicles for the ride back! Our country is being overrun by these people and those that sneak them in!!!! Fraudulent ids should b a felony for those receiving and those providing!!!

Reply
Dec 6, 2018 08:53:15   #
Singularity
 
Wonttakeitanymore wrote:
We can send help to get them back to their country! We have people here that need help! We can provide nourishment and vehicles for the ride back! Our country is being overrun by these people and those that sneak them in!!!! Fraudulent ids should b a felony for those receiving and those providing!!!

I'm sure many would be grateful for that assistance from you now that their misperceptions regarding the erstwhile and future promised greatness of the USA are exposed as a simply a partisan political chew toy. Where can they apply for this assistance? And where can they pick up their children?

Reply
Dec 6, 2018 16:03:22   #
teabag09
 
It was reported, I believe on Drudge, that a Ca. Congresswoman got some across. Mike
Pennylynn wrote:
NPP,

Did you notice the quotation marks. What that means is I have copied and pasted directly from the link provided. Only the opening line and the thread title came from me. The rest is the product of the story's author. So, I do agree with you, we are not responsible for being emotional about this caravan, they took a gamble and it did not work out for them. But, they will get a free trip home. As for as the 3,000 crossing in the cover of darkness, that was acknowledged in the article. This means one of two things, either our border patrol are incompetent (which I would rather not even consider) or these people had help from the US side of the border...much more probable.
NPP, br br Did you notice the quotation marks. W... (show quote)

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