Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (“DACA”) is an executive order first issued by President Obama in June of 2012 allowing young illegal immigrants then in the US to apply for status that would put on hold deportation for up to two years. While ostensibly affecting only residents located in the U.S. at a previous date, the policy has essentially continued. Keep that in mind as word gets around: once presenting yourself to US officials at the border, your foot is in the door providing long delays accompanied by generous welfare benefits. No doubt there is a common anticipation of the essence of the DREAM act applying, or if not, the possibility of long term evasion of deportation.
Driving the influx from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador is the reliance on the Feinstein Amendment of 2008, and the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act, signed into law by President George W. Bush in 2008, requiring officials to enable unaccompanied children entering from countries other than Canada and Mexico to present themselves at a legal border crossing, claim to be political refugees and seek asylum.
However, In this Newsmax article James H. Walsh, who was associate general counsel with the U.S. Department of Justice Immigration and Naturalization Service from 1983 to 1994 reports that Immigration advocates and Democrats are considering designating these children as “refugees” or “asylum-seekers.” but “The children do not qualify for either status.”
According to Breitbart.com The White House admitted “rumors of free entry to the United States are motivating migrants to risk the trek northward.”
Now consider this report from Dave Gibson writing for the publication examiner.com: Mexico made deal to send more illegal aliens to the U.S.
On Monday, Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto and Guatemalan president Otto Perez Molina held a joint press conference in Playas de Catazaja, Mexico, to officially announce an agreement to make it easier for those making the illegal journey to the United States from Central America, to cross into Mexico.
The Southern Border Program to Improve Passage, will provide for more border checkpoints along Mexico’s border with Guatemala, and offer more protection and even emergency medical care to those making their way north. The illegal aliens will receive a so-called Regional Visitor’s Card, according to El Universal.
Officially, the program will grant the cards to only illegal aliens from Guatemala and Belize, allowing them to remain in Mexico’s southern states for 72 hours (more than enough time to reach the U.S./Mexican border by train). While, those two countries share a border with Mexico, the program will undoubtedly benefit anyone who makes it to the border, which would explain why our Border Patrol stations are currently overflowing with illegal aliens from El Salvador and Honduras as well.
The official announcement only confirms what many of us have known all along . . . the current chaos on the border which the Obama administration has sympathetically (and dishonestly) characterized as a “humanitarian crisis,” only exists due to collusion between the governments of Mexico, Guatemala and likely the United States.
This has caused advocates of US border sovereignty, including this publication, to call for denial of foreign aid to Mexico or other pressures available unless they stop facilitating this additional assault on our country’s financial health and social structure. R Mall