Dem Director Shreds Immigration Narrative, Targets Biden In New Doc | |
Agent 99
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Moon&Stars
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Cap’n Obvious
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Happy in Nature
(OP) User ID: 79449875 Nicaragua 10/05/2020 08:10 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | I live on the Nicaraguan-Costa Rican border. (My and is 500meters from the border. I am pro-ICE, even though I am in another country.) A few years ago there was a group of 5,000 Cubans trying to pass through Nicaragua, but Ortega refused to let them through without documentation. In 2016, there were tens of thousands of Africans, Haitians and Cubans passing through Central America. (Heard at least 100,000, possibly up to one million depending on the version.) A few times I saw large groups of Africans, some women, children, and babies. It was very strange to see these groups at dusk, walking along the dirt roads. It was/is illegal fro anyone in Nicaragua to give assistance to illegal migrants. One family went to jail for taking care of some. I knew a guy (dead now) who revealed that he smuggled them from CR to Honduras 5-6 at a time in the back of an unregistered pick up. He got $600 per person. I often saw one or two African men, clean clothes, cell phones, fresh backpacks walking along the road. I saw several detained by the military, too. I had to show my ID 5 times every time I drove from the town where I resided and my farm. My car was often searched. It was a bit of a pain, but just life. On the other side of the border in CR, there were black plastic shanties without toilets, food or water with thousands of undocumented migrants denied entry into Nicaragua. It went on for several hundred meters, just outside CR immigration. The smell was unbearable, even in a car with AC and windows rolled up. Where do they get the money? Where do they get the phones and clothes? No one appeared to be in tattered clothes, just a little sweaty at the need of the day. If they have that much money to get from Africa to Panama to Mexico and the US, why not start a business in your own country? And how is one going to earn that much money to pay off the coyotes and live in the US? How many are put in sweat shop job, living in a single house while the owner collects welfare and WIC for each person unbeknownst to the refugee? Most came up through Panama. The Obama administration paid for thousands of beds in hotels in the CR -Panama border in 2016 when they found out Nicaragua was denying them passage. Costa Rica couldn't afford another 10,000 refugees/migrants/undocumented people lined up at the border for months. The day of Trump's inauguration, the military checkpoints stopped and the refugee/migrant problem went away. There was still the black tarp shanties in CR a year ago when I passed by, but it seems like the African refugees have found a different passage. Last Edited by Happy in Nature on 10/05/2020 11:24 PM |
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FlashBuzzkill
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TXP
User ID: 29842978 United States 10/05/2020 11:16 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | I live on the Nicaraguan-Costa Rican border. (My and is 500meters from the border. I am pro-ICE, even though I am in another country.) A few years ago there was a group of 5,000 Cubans trying to pass through Nicaragua, but Ortega refused to let them through without documentation. In 2016, there were tens of thousands of Africans, Haitians and Cubans passing through Central America. (Heard at least 100,000, possibly up to one million depending on the version.) A few times I saw large groups of Africans, some women, children, and babies. It was very strange to see these groups at dusk, walking along the dirt roads. It was/is illegal fro anyone in Nicaragua to give assistance to illegal migrants. One family went to jail for taking care of some. Quoting: Happy in Nature I knew a guy (dead now) who revealed that he smuggled them from CR to Honduras 5-6 at a time in the back of an unregistered pick up. He got $600 per person. I often saw one or two African men, clean clothes, cell phones, fresh backpacks walking along the road. I saw several detained by the military, too. I had to show my ID 5 times every time I drove for the town where I resided and my farm. My car was often searched. It was a bit of a pain, but just life. On the other side of the border in CR, there were black plastic shanties without toilets, food or water with thousands of undocumented migrants denied entry into Nicaragua. It went on for several hundred meters, just outside CR immigration. The smell was unbearable, even in a car with AC and windows rolled up. Where do they get the money? Where do they get the phones and clothes? No one appeared to be in tattered clothes, just a little sweaty at the need of the day. If they have that much money to get from Africa to Panama to Mexico and the US, why not start a business in your own country? And how is one going to earn that much money to pay off the coyotes and live in the US? How many are put in sweat shop job, living in a single house while the owner collects welfare and WIC for each person unbeknownst to the refugee? Most came up through Canada. The Obama administration paid for thousands of beds in hotels in the CR -Panama border in 2016 when they found out Nicaragua was denying them passage. Costa Rica couldn't afford another 10,000 refugees/migrants/undocumented people lined up at the border for months. The day of Trump's inauguration, the military checkpoints stopped and the refugee/migrant problem went away. There was still the black tarp shanties in CR a year ago when I passed by, but it seems like the African refugees have found a different passage. Happy, wow, thanks for sharing this. . . "Stop the lockdown. Stop the masks. Stick your vaccine up your ass." - Tess....AMEN! "What does CENSORSHIP reveal? It reveals FEAR." - Julian Assange . |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 79119011 United States 10/05/2020 11:39 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | I live on the Nicaraguan-Costa Rican border. (My and is 500meters from the border. I am pro-ICE, even though I am in another country.) A few years ago there was a group of 5,000 Cubans trying to pass through Nicaragua, but Ortega refused to let them through without documentation. In 2016, there were tens of thousands of Africans, Haitians and Cubans passing through Central America. (Heard at least 100,000, possibly up to one million depending on the version.) A few times I saw large groups of Africans, some women, children, and babies. It was very strange to see these groups at dusk, walking along the dirt roads. It was/is illegal fro anyone in Nicaragua to give assistance to illegal migrants. One family went to jail for taking care of some. Quoting: Happy in Nature I knew a guy (dead now) who revealed that he smuggled them from CR to Honduras 5-6 at a time in the back of an unregistered pick up. He got $600 per person. I often saw one or two African men, clean clothes, cell phones, fresh backpacks walking along the road. I saw several detained by the military, too. I had to show my ID 5 times every time I drove from the town where I resided and my farm. My car was often searched. It was a bit of a pain, but just life. On the other side of the border in CR, there were black plastic shanties without toilets, food or water with thousands of undocumented migrants denied entry into Nicaragua. It went on for several hundred meters, just outside CR immigration. The smell was unbearable, even in a car with AC and windows rolled up. Where do they get the money? Where do they get the phones and clothes? No one appeared to be in tattered clothes, just a little sweaty at the need of the day. If they have that much money to get from Africa to Panama to Mexico and the US, why not start a business in your own country? And how is one going to earn that much money to pay off the coyotes and live in the US? How many are put in sweat shop job, living in a single house while the owner collects welfare and WIC for each person unbeknownst to the refugee? Most came up through Panama. The Obama administration paid for thousands of beds in hotels in the CR -Panama border in 2016 when they found out Nicaragua was denying them passage. Costa Rica couldn't afford another 10,000 refugees/migrants/undocumented people lined up at the border for months. The day of Trump's inauguration, the military checkpoints stopped and the refugee/migrant problem went away. There was still the black tarp shanties in CR a year ago when I passed by, but it seems like the African refugees have found a different passage. Thanks for this info! |