4/22/2020 - Casey Ryan Townhall.com
More
than a million veterans who served this great nation struggle to make ends
meet. Worse yet, tens of thousands of them are living on the streets homeless,
and thousands more are constantly at risk of losing their homes. Many of them
fail to receive the proper health care they deserve. This tragedy should be a
top priority for our nation’s lawmakers. However, too many politicians today
seem more concerned about offering handouts to illegal aliens who have no legal
right to be in this country than they are about the plight of America’s heroes:
Our Veterans.
Sadly,
more than 37,000 veterans in the United States are homeless, according to a
recent report
by the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR). More than a quarter
of them – nearly 11,000 – belong to the sanctuary state of California, with
other sanctuary jurisdictions like Washington and New York harboring thousands
more.
And
the troubling statistics don’t stop there. Approximately 1.2 million veterans
are either unemployed or underemployed, meaning they are struggling to provide
for themselves and their families. Included in that figure are 27 percent of
the men and women who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan and now aren’t even sure
how they will put food on their tables. Meanwhile, 7 million illegal aliens are
working in jobs that should belong to these veterans and other Americans. That
should anger any American who understands the sacrifice veterans made for this
country.
Unfortunately,
many of this nation’s elected officials seem completely unaware and/or
unbothered by the plight of our nation’s heroes. In fact, their actions have
made the situation worse. Rather than support veterans with financial aid until
they get back on their feet or provide them with training programs to prepare
them for the workforce, elected officials in sanctuary jurisdictions like
California have spent millions of dollars ensuring that illegal aliens feel
safe and comfortable in the United States and have free access to legal
services when they need to fight deportation.
For
example, elected officials in Oakland created a $300,000 fund to protect
illegal aliens from federal law enforcement in 2018. Los Angeles has an even
larger program that has spent approximately $7 million so far. The Golden State
has the largest number of homeless veterans in the nation. But rather than do
something about the problem, elected officials are funneling millions of
dollars to illegal aliens while ignoring their homeless and underserved
veterans.
California,
in fact, has become the nation’s case study in how to not treat your veterans.
Veterans often wait several months before receiving the proper medical care
that they deserve. The veterans living in San Jose wait an average of 50 days
before receiving vital treatment at a primary care Veterans Affairs clinic, and
the wait time in other areas can be almost twice as long. How did California’s
elected officials react to this problem? They passed a law last year to provide
health insurance for illegal aliens between the ages of 19 and 25, which is
expected to cost taxpayers nearly $100 million in the first year alone.
With
just the money California is allocating to illegal alien health insurance, the
state’s elected officials could give every single homeless veteran nearly
$10,000 per year. That kind of money could go a long way toward fully
eliminating the Golden State’s homeless veteran epidemic.
Other
states have also copied California’s playbook. In Maryland’s Montgomery County,
a proud sanctuary jurisdiction, elected officials created a similar $370,000
fund to protect their local illegal alien population from federal law
enforcement in 2018. Despite the fact that at least eight illegal aliens were
accused of rape within the span of a month last year, the county continues to
provide free legal services to illegal aliens while refusing to hand over those
who should be removed to federal officials.
Overall,
the United States spends a total of $132 billion every year providing goods and
services to illegal aliens. At that price tag, you could make every homeless
veteran in the United States a millionaire! It’s a shame that many of this
nation’s leaders spend more effort ensuring that illegal aliens feel
comfortable breaking the law than they do providing basic services and aid to
the veterans who risked their lives defending our freedom. When the United
States has more than a million veterans struggling to put food on their table
and tens of thousands remaining homeless, there is a real crisis on our hands.
It’s far past time for our elected officials to realize this and act now before
it’s too late.
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