Friday, June 3, 2022

August 9, 2018: "Chain Migration" Must Be Stopped - Too Many Immigrants Have Dark Skins!

 

8/9/18: Can we all shout together: “Chain migration must be stopped!” 

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“Suresh Abayasekara Krause…as American as you can get.”

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The president insists chain migration is the worst. Chain migration allows one immigrant to come to this country legally. That immigrant becomes a citizen. Somehow, many Trump fans think this is terrible, too, at least when the new citizen’s skin is some color other than white. The new citizen then sponsors relatives to come. Those relatives qualify for green cards and may, in five years or so, become citizens themselves. According to Trump, this is awful because these new Americans sponsor adult children or even parents to come to the States. 

(Spoiler alert: Major hypocrisy to follow.)

 

According to Laura Ingraham, on Fox News, we can’t allow this to continue. Ingraham highlights the danger: 

In some parts of the country, it does seem like the America that we know and love doesn’t exist anymore.

 

Massive demographic changes have been foisted upon the American people and they’re changes that none of us ever voted for and most of us don’t like.

 

Let’s tease out her meaning. Once upon a time there was an America we could “love.” Now there are changes “most of us don’t like.” These are changes, she also notes, that “we see.” 

What prompts Ingraham to turn fear into words? She’s upset about a Democratic candidate for Congress, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who expounds socialist views. People like Ocasio-Cortez, that “we see,” will ruin America. 


Even legal immigration may mean America won’t be the America “we love” for much longer.

 

To give you some idea who Ingraham’s target audience is, consider who rallies behind her on Twitter. Her argument seems so on point, according to David Duke, that he has to tweet support. “One of the most important (truthful) monologues [emphasis added throughout] in the history of MSM,” he says. 

And who is Duke? He ran as a Republican for governor of Louisiana in 1991. He didn’t win. He ran as a Republican for the U.S. Senate in 2016. He still didn’t win. Duke is also a former grand wizard of the K.K.K. and, to the day he dies, likely to remain a K.K.K. man at heart. 

What then can “we see,” assuming we look through the eyes of people like Ingraham, Duke, and the current President of the United States? We don’t want immigrants who look like this:


Ocasio-Cortez (born in Brooklyn): Still too brown for Ingraham and Duke.

 


Hakeem Olajuwon: Too Muslim.


Alix Idrache (graduating from West Point): Too Haitian.

President Trump says Haitian immigrants bring AIDS.


Lance Cpl. Diego Velazquez Valdiva, takes oath of citizenship, Kandahar, Afghanistan.

Too Mexican for Trump.


Still too "Mexican:" Staff Sgt. Martin Alonso Balcazar 

takes the oath of allegiance as a new citizen in 2016.

 

 Or this: 


Tung Nyguyen doesn't look like the America Ingraham used to love.


Too funny looking in a Muslim turban for Trump and his base.

Capt. Kamal Kasi is actually a Sikh.

We want immigrants, as even the president has said himself, who look like this:


Trump actually said we'd be better off with more immigrants from Norway.

Ever wonder why?

And these guys are okay, too (as we shall read below): 


The parents of the First Lady.

 

More than 65,000 foreign-born in the U.S. Armed Forces. 

Again, it’s a shame the president never bothers to read. We knew a decade ago how much immigrants helped to keep America great. It’s too bad the Commander-in-Chief can’t keep it straight. 

By February 2008, the U.S. military could report that 65,033 foreign-born men and women were serving under the Stars and Stripes. That included 20,328 non-citizens but did not include the 111 who had been killed in Iraq and Afghanistan, fighting for a flag that people like Ingraham, Trump and Duke don’t believe they’re fit to have drape their coffins.  

Those hundred-odd heroes had been posthumously granted citizenship in return for their lives. 

(By 2013, 284 foreign-born service members had been killed in the global fight against terror.)

 

Of course, Ingraham might not like the America she “sees.” President Trump might not like it any more than he liked the idea of serving his country back when he was young and had his chance. 

Let’s consider a few immigrants who did: 

One officer who decided to use his talent and skill in service to our national security was Army Chief Warrant Officer Suresh Krause. In Sri Lanka, where Krause was born, the two official languages are Tamil and Sinhalese, both of which are considered “critical” languages for recruitment purposes by the U.S. Army.

 

Krause joined the U.S. military to contribute another skill that was a passion from an early age – flying – telling family members the Christmas before his death that he planned on serving as a pilot in the Army for 20 years.

 

Krause’s story is similar to that of many talented and ambitious immigrants. He came to America at age 14 after being adopted by his aunt and uncle. As a young man, Krause tried to take advantage of the opportunity his parents gave him. Krause, who teachers describe as a “math genius,” displayed incredible talent in aeronautics, going on to graduate from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. After graduation, he became an officer in the U.S. Army, where he distinguished himself once again…

 

Krause was ultimately killed while piloting a Black Hawk helicopter in Kandahar, Afghanistan. His uncle, Brody Schmidt, described his decision to enlist as an act of gratitude for the nation that took him in. “This is not his native soil,” Schmidt said at the time, “But in his heart of hearts he bled U.S.A. blood.” Following his death, former Representative Mary Bono Mack…stated, “He wanted to defend his adopted home…In the end, Suresh Abayasekara Krause was as American as you can get.”

 

Next: 

Sgt. Pamela Osborne, who was born in Jamaica, is one foreign-born member who made her mark on the U.S. Army. Osborne moved to Miami at age 14 with two goals: to become a U.S. citizen and to serve her adopted country as a soldier in the military. She enlisted in 2001, shortly before September 11. “She loved what she did,” her husband has said….As she explained to her husband at the time, “I’m going to serve my country, to protect my country.”

 

On October 11, 2004 [in Iraq]…Osborne headed out to deliver supplies to another enlisted service member and vehicle mechanic, Pvt. Anthony Monroe of Bismarck, North Dakota.

 

Both were killed when rocket fire hit their camp in Baghdad. “Sgt. Osborne was always ready to help soldiers,” one of her colleagues wrote on a tribute page after her death, “She was a credit to the United States, and I’m lucky to have known and served with her.”

 

Finally, Trump and his kind might open their eyes a little and “see” all the colors of true Americans: 

Army Sgt. 1st Class Tung Nguyen is one immigrant who died in service in recent years after a long and celebrated career in the U.S. Army. Nguyen joined the military shortly after graduating from high school. During his 20 years of service, Nguyen rose steadily through the ranks. In 1992, he qualified as a Green Beret, becoming a part of U.S. Army Special Forces, a prestigious unit designed for special and unconventional operations…

 

Nguyen’s decision to serve led naturally from his experiences early in life. As a young boy living in South Vietnam, he was surrounded by a tradition of military service. He grew up hearing stories from the front lines of the Vietnam War, a battle in which many of Nguyen’s family members fought against communist forces. At the age of 11, Nguyen fled his native Vietnam, finding refuge and a stable home with a foster family in Tracy, California. Once there, his interest in serving his new country continued…[Nguyen was killed in combat in Iraq in 2006.] Following his death Nguyen was awarded the Bronze Star, Purple Heart, Iraq Campaign Medal, and Combat Infantryman Badge posthumously.

 

In his last conversation with his mother, while reflecting on his life, service, and accomplishments, Sergeant Nguyen continued to show a great level of dedication and gratitude to the United States. He ended the conversation thanking her for “letting him go to America.”

 

* 

Melania Trump, first link in a chain. 

FOR A LIST of all the times the president has railed against “chain migration,” go to his Twitter Archive, type “chain migration” under “search” and see what idiotic sentiments pop up:

 

Nov 1, 2017: CHAIN MIGRATION must end now! Some people come in, and they bring their whole family with them, who can be truly evil. NOT ACCEPTABLE!

 

Nov 2, 2017: Congress must end chain migration so that we can have a system that is SECURITY BASED! We need to make AMERICA SAFE!

 

Feb 6, 2018: We need a 21st century MERIT-BASED immigration system. Chain migration and the visa lottery are outdated programs that hurt our economic and national security.

 

Now, just for fun, try to guess who was sworn in as American citizens on this fine summer day! 

It was the First Lady’s parents, Viktor and Amalija Knavs. How did they get to the head of the line to immigrate to the United States? Were they admitted because of special merit? Do they have special skills in demand in the United States? Were they ready to serve under the U.S. flag? 

Viktor was listed as early as 2007 as having residence at Mar-a-Lago. In Slovenia, Viktor Knavs (now 73) worked as a chauffeur and car salesman. Amalija Knavs (now 71) was a pattern maker at a textile factory. 

How about Melania? 

She was admitted to the U.S. under a program that allows people with extraordinary abilities to cut the line. According to the Washington Post, “She has not provided details about how she proved to the U.S. government that she qualified to receive a green card for her ‘extraordinary ability,’ a category generally reserved for highly accomplished people such as ­Nobel Prize winners.” 

Apparently, she was awarded her green card because America had a critical shortage of fashion models. 

Melania’s older, “under-the-radar” sister, Ines, also immigrated to the U.S. One Florida philanthropist, who met her at Mar-a-Lago in 2005, described her “as a lovely person, and extremely creative.” Apparently, Ines is an artist; but the First Lady doesn’t care to talk about her. Ines lives quietly “in a Trump-owned apartment in the same Upper East Side building that Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump called home” before they headed off to D.C. to help drain the swamp.

 

And if Laura Ingraham was worried about a “socialist” Democrat like Ocasio-Cortez [who, by the way, was born in Brooklyn], she might want to consider Melania’s father. Growing up in what was Yugoslavia, he joined the Communist Party. 

White House spokeswoman Hope Hicks once assured reporters that Melania’s dad was never a “card-carrying” member. 

Still, shouldn’t Fox News be warning us about him? 

The First Lady’s parents made their first trip to America in February 2004. Now, fourteen years later, they are as American as you and I. (Assuming you’re not a Russian hacker trying to disrupt my blog.) 

Yet, in his State of the Union address last February the president warned: 

Under the current broken system, a single immigrant can bring in virtually unlimited numbers of distant relatives. Under our plan, we focus on the immediate family by limiting sponsorships to spouses and minor children. This vital reform is necessary, not just for our economy, but for our security and our future.

 

The First Lady has declined to comment about her parents’ new status; and we don’t know if she, her son Barron, who is close to his grandparents, or even the president celebrated in any way. 

We do know this. The president howled again during a recent news conference that the danger of “chain migration” was manifest. “You bring one person in, you end up with 32 people,” he said. “You come in and now you can bring your family and then you can bring your mother and your father, you can bring your grandmother,” he grumbled on another occasion. 

This was a terrible situation – and now that Melania’s family was safely arrived – it had to be stopped.

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