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Joe Biden’s Miserable Victims Hope for Migration Miracle

Many migrants lured north by President Joe Biden are stuck on the long journey between their homes and the U.S. border restored by the 2024 election.

Amid the humanitarian disaster caused by Biden's unfair invitation, some poor migrants are now seeking help to return home.

“I cry every day,” Yureidi Moreno, a Venezuelan immigrant lured north by Biden, said recently. Reuters reporter In Mexico. She added:

I want to return to my home country. I don't want to be here anymore. I'm in so much pain. It's hard because men treat me poorly. They mistreat us sometimes. Sometimes people die. There is a lot of sexual abuse and women are abused because they don't have money. This is terrible, this is terrible. ”

Another Venezuelan woman, Yorgeliz Maldonado, told Reuters the trip was “very dangerous.” “There's a lot going on and a lot of women and children suffering.”

“There's a lot of anxiety among immigrants” right now, said Todd Benman, an immigration expert at the Center for Immigration Studies. the vince collanese show They know, “They were the last caboose on the train, they were cut off and they were the ones who got stuck when the gates closed,” he added.

Since 2021, Biden's Cuban-born, pro-immigration border secretary, Alejandro Mayorkas, has invited and financed at least 10 million migrants to sneak through the U.S. border. But first, they had to borrow money and walk considerable distances from their home countries around the world, often through the deadly jungles of Panama.

Mr. Mayorkas' blend of fanatical progressivism and consumer economic colonialism has enriched the Democratic Party's donor class, killed many Americans, and slashed the wages of millions of Americans.

His exploitative welcome has also killed thousands of immigrants, enabled the rape of hundreds of thousands of immigrants, separated millions of foreign families, and destroyed tens of millions of immigrants in many poor countries. It enabled the economic and democratic development of the poor.

latin times reported December 4th:

Migrants crossing Mexico risk encountering extensive human trafficking networks. The country records around 30,000 murders a year, more than 100,000 people are officially reported missing, and violence including assaults, sexual exploitation and murder makes the journey north dangerous. I'm making it a thing.

Many of the remaining migrants lured north now realize that Mayorkas lacks the legal and political authority to bring them into the United States. To make matters worse, Mexican police are now blocking them from going north due to pressure from Donald Trump.

As a result, most of Mr. Mayorkas' wretched people stranded in Mexico and Guatemala are penniless and often deeply in debt to smugglers, with little hope of repaying their debts with jobs in the United States. .

“I have talked to dozens of migrants in Mexico City over the last couple of days,” Bensman said, adding:

There are a lot of encampments, informal encampments here, and there's a great deal of urgency among them to want to get in there before President Trump's swearing-in, and that's what's happening now. But…among the other immigrants I interviewed here, there were many who said they were just going to go home. They're going to get up and go back to Venezuela, go back to Colombia, go back to Guatemala, go back to where they came from…because they feel hopeless that they can't enter the country at this point.

Reuters reported December 4th:

More than a dozen migrants interviewed by Reuters in Mexico said they wanted to return to their home country despite the ongoing problems that drove them to leave, including poverty, lack of employment, security and political crisis.

This is too small a sample size to draw firm conclusions about how immigrants will respond after Trump takes office. Much will depend on what specific policies he implements and how he implements them. do. But it highlights the difficult choices many will face. [migrants] After January 20th.

Reuters reported that “Venezuelan officials say that every week between 50 and 100 of their compatriots request so-called 'voluntary repatriation' to Mexico, either at their own expense or with state assistance.” .

Some immigrants still expect Mallorca to creep into American communities.

“I'm traumatized,” said Nydia Montenegro, another Venezuelan migrant who is using Mr. Mayorkas' CBP-One cellphone FastPass to cross the border. “If I can't get a reservation, I'll go again,'' said a 52-year-old man. told Reuters.

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