by
Phyllis Schlafly Eagle Forum June 25, 2014
Officials of the Obama Administration trekked out
to a tiny rural community in southern Virginia to teach the local yokels a
thing about immigration policy. Yet the lessons learned were not by the local
farmers, but by the bureaucrats who got more than an earful in protests against
placing illegal aliens in their small town of Lawrenceville.
“We will not be strong-armed by federal officials,”
bellowed one resident at the town hall, a 32-year-old former Marine named Aaron
Smith. “We will not be pushed around,” he exclaimed against the federal
officials, as the crowd of townspeople gave him rousing applause.
Lawrenceville has only about 1,400 residents, and
the town hall was held on June 19th in a spacious auditorium that seats 900.
But even that large facility was not big enough to hold the outrage, as more
than 1,000 angry people – nearly everyone in the town – showed up to express
opposition to the Obama Administration plan to relocate illegal immigrant
children there.
The Obama Administration thought it could quietly
house 500 children, who had illegally crossed our Mexican border, in a vacant
college that had recently closed in this small town, but the politicians badly
misread the depth of public opposition. Numerous federal officials were then
sent by the Obama Administration to appease the locals, but in the face of the
uproar the officials felt compelled to apologize, one after another, for what
they had done.
The apologies rang hollow. In typical
government-speak, one official attributed the problem to “communication
challenges,” and acted like the miscommunication could be overcome with a bunch
of talk. But there was no “communication challenge” in the numerous signs brought
by town residents which shouted “no illegal immigrants.”
Residents expressed concern about public safety and
a possible increase in crime if so many kids were bought into the community
without parental supervision. “The No. 1 concern we have is the potential for
shenanigans and the potential for crime,” observed townsman Derek Lewis at a
local pizza parlor.
Brunswick County Sheriff Brian Roberts was also
candid, describing “fear” among locals about the way the government was
handling this, adding that “500 kids unaccounted for – illegal alien children
in my little sleepy town – I just don’t think it’s the right fit for this
community.”
Another harebrained response by the Obama
Administration to the massive influx of illegal immigrant kids, roughly 100,000
in this year alone, is to promise to send more money to the Central American
nations that are dumping their kids on us. Obama wants to send $161.5 million
to the so-called Central American Regional Security Initiative, and nearly $100
million to El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, payments that will
be additional incentives for them to permit more kids to show up at our
southern border.
Instead of the United States rewarding nations for
demanding that we provide free daycare and medical care for their kids,
shouldn’t we instead be sending those countries a big bill for the cost of
return bus tickets to transport the kids back?
Only one person amid the numerous presidential
hopefuls seems to be getting the message. That candidate is, lo and behold,
Hillary Clinton, who is seizing the day and outflanking Republicans on this
issue, by being the first to call for a return of the tens of thousands of
children back to their homes in Central America. The only other prominent
leader to call for sending them back to where they came from is, surprise,
surprise, John McCain.
The anemic reaction by Republican Party leadership
is almost as pathetic as the swarming of children across our southern border.
Euphemistically called unaccompanied children (UACs) rather than illegal
aliens, they are overwhelming Homeland Security and turning border patrol
agents into nannies with diaper-changing responsibilities.
Back in Lawrenceville, Virginia, the Obama
Administration officials promised that the 500 young illegal aliens would not
be dumped on the small community without their approval. Really? Thousands of
other young illegal aliens have already been relocated to Arizona and Oklahoma
despite criticisms by their governors.
Nobody seems to know who or where the parents of
these children are, but we do know what the cause of the surge in illegal
border crossings is. Promises of so-called “immigration reform,” with its
allure of amnesty, inevitably bring more illegal aliens wanting more of the
same.
The tens of thousands of kids surging across our
southern border are not unaccompanied; they may be carrying staph infections,
chickenpox, and scabies, which is a highly contagious skin disease that causes
massive itching due to burrowing mites, plus diseases that the U.S. eradicated
in our country years ago, such as tuberculosis, Chagas disease, dengue fever,
hepatitis, malaria, and measles.
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