Friday, June 3, 2022

thoughts on the border "crisis"

 


There are currently 5 Republicans competing to be the 2022 candidate for governor in Arizona.

They are Kari Lake, Scott Neely, Matt Salmon, Karrin Taylor Robson, and Paola Tilliani Zen.

 

The highlighted portions of their bios show why they would be poor choices for governor.

Former television anchor Kari Lake has jumped into politics. After 22 years at FOX 10, Lake left the Phoenix station in March 2021, bashing the media on her way out for what she described as a lack of balanced coverage. Even before departing the station, Lake showed signs of delving into the far-right movement of the Republican Party, including an incident when she shared a debunked video about COVID-19. She’s since aligned herself with members of the Stop the Steal movement and QAnon. She’s earned the endorsement of Donald Trump for her fervent support of claims the 2020 election was stolen from the former president.

Valley business owner Scott Neely is considered a longshot candidate in the race for governor. He’s the owner of Action Concrete Pumping Supply in Mesa, and plays up his blue-color aesthetic online as the candidate for all people, “from the dirt to the boardroom.” Like other GOP candidates, Neely has praised the so-called audit of Maricopa County elections led by Senate Republicans and raised suspicions about the 2020 election.

Former U.S. Rep. Matt Salmon is running for governor for the second time — he narrowly lost a race 18 years ago to Democrat Janet Napolitano. Salmon served in the Arizona Legislature before winning three terms in Congress in the 1990s. Salmon ended his congressional tenure to follow a pledge that he would serve only three terms. He went on to run for governor in 2002, worked as a lobbyist and served two more terms in Congress from 2013 through 2016. In a video announcing his entry into the governor’s race, Salmon touted his conservative views, such as supporting gun rights and strong border security and opposing critical race theory and tax hikes.

I’d give Salmon a quadruple bogie for the following reasons:

1)    Any politician that still does not believe in stronger gun laws should not be in office.

2)   Anyone who is opposed to students learning ALL of our history should not be in office

3)   Anyone concerned about the “border crisis” is not serious about immigration reform

4)   In you examine tax cuts going back to at least the Reagan era, you’ll discover that tax cuts DO NOT generate economic growth as well as other programs

 

Karrin Taylor Robson identifies herself as a conservative leader and successful business leader — and she’s the preferred candidate of establishment Republicans in Arizona. She’s committed to protecting Arizona from the “radical left,” she said on her website. Taylor Robson also plans to focus on building and sustaining a dynamic and diverse economy, protecting property values and supporting the military. Though considered a more centrist candidate due to her political allies in the GOP, Taylor Robson hasn’t shied away from aspersions of the 2020 election, as she recently told the New York Times the election “wasn’t fair” despite President Joe Biden’s clear victory.

Another longshot bid for governor, Paola “Z.” Tulliani Zen can’t be ignored thanks to a well-financed — and mostly self-financed — campaign. She’s put nearly $1.2 million towards her candidacy through a political action committee, Z for Arizona. Tulliani Zen, the former owner of La Dolce Vita biscotti company, vows to “embrace bold traditional values of ingenuity and common sense.”

 

Here's Brennan’s law of common sense:

Any candidate that is still claiming that the 2020 election was stolen should be automatically excluded from consideration for the governor’s office. In addition, those who think that we are having a crisis at the border should also be automatically excluded from the governor’s race.

 

All of the people above have that view, and Karrin Taylor Robson vows to “complete the border wall”.

https://kjzz.org/content/1684307/2022-arizona-governors-race-candidates

What all these “Christians” forget about is what the Bible says about immigration.

“When a stranger sojourns with you in your land, you shall not do him wrong. You shall treat the stranger who sojourns with you as the native among you, and you shall love him as yourself, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt: I am the Lord your God.

Leviticus 19:33-34

 

What Does the Bible Say about Immigration? (and How Should Christians Respond) - (christianity.com)

 

So, why do so many people from “south of the border” want to come here?

Here’s the answer:

Just as Pope Francis' trip to Cyprus and Greece shone a light on the humanitarian crisis unfolding in the Mediterranean Sea, the good people at the Hope Border Institute have issued a report entitled "No Queda de Otra" on the root causes of immigration that shines a light on the humanitarian crisis at our southern border. "What led you to leave your home?" was the question posed to 51 migrants in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico, and the answers provide the basis of the report. 

The study found that Central Americans tend to migrate for a variety of reasons such as poverty, gang violence or domestic violence. Among the Mexicans they surveyed, violence and threats were the primary reason given for choosing to leave their homes, especially the forced conscription of young men into gangs run by drug cartels. Virtually all those interviewed said that "their income in their country of origin was insufficient to cover basic needs." The twin hurricanes, Eta and Iota, in November 2020 pushed those struggling already into desperation. Sixty percent of migrants were traveling with their families. Hovering over all these phenomena in the past two years was the specter of COVID-19 and the economic dislocation it occasioned.

The report contextualized the survey responses with important data points. Despite progress in recent years lifting people out of extreme poverty, in 2020, 4.7 million people in Latin America and the Caribbean were "pushed out of the middle class into poverty." They found that in Honduras, one country where migration is the most pronounced, only 25% of the population was fully vaccinated, and in Guatemala that number dropped to 16%.

The most shocking data point was this: “Nearly 70% of our interviewees were extorted or threatened by a criminal organization or gang at some point in their life. Despite having few resources to hand over, gangs pursued them with an incredible degree of persistence and violence.” We in the U.S. are right to worry about the health of our democracy, but perhaps helping these failing states to our south would be one way to recognize anew the preciousness of living under the rule of law. Our police and legal systems have their problems, to be sure, but we are not a failed state.

The report looks at the impact of climate change on the region and notes we can expect additional migration due to it. Especially in agricultural regions, the cycles of increased drought and heavy rain are destroying a way of life that goes back to the time before the Conquista. Hurricanes have long been a threat to the region, but they are now more frequent and of greater intensity than they were even a few years back. The people most affected, who work the land in the poorer regions of Central America, were not the ones adding greenhouse gases to the atmosphere, yet they have already begun to pay the environmental cost of our industrial revolutions.   

Statistics are important, but they are dry and do not capture the uniqueness of each person's story, so the report includes accounts of some of the individuals they interviewed, changing the names to protect their anonymity. Some of the stories are heartbreaking:

For example, Luz, a woman from San Pedro Sula, Honduras, had a degree in marketing, a good job at a bank and a home in a gated community where she was raising two sons as a single mother. When the pandemic began, her salary at the bank was cut by 65% and she took out a $5,000 lempira (approximately $200 USD) cash loan to cover basic expenses. The lenders began extorting her after she had paid off the loan and forced her to pay them over $70,000 lempiras (approximately $3,000 USD) as they stalked her, photographed her coming and going to work and made death threats. She tried to report the crime at two separate police stations but was told at both to keep paying. While family support helped her cope with the greatest dangers, it was not enough to stop the extortion. Several months later in Ciudad Juárez, she was still suffering sadness, depression and guilt from having left one son in hiding in Honduras because she could not pay to travel with both.

This woman went from a good job to refugee status in a matter of months due to some bad actors and a police force unable to enforce the law. No wonder she fled.

Luz’s story is one you wish everyone could learn. The next time you hear an anti-immigrant blowhard on Fox News or in the church hall after Mass, tell her story. Do they not admire her motherly protective instincts in fleeing a situation that compromised her ability to raise her children? Do they think this woman would not find ways to contribute to America? In what possible understanding of the term is this woman not a refugee? Why did the interview have to occur in Mexico rather than Texas?

Another woman who started poor found herself completely devastated by the hurricanes:

Sara, a 43 year-old woman from a small community in Huehuetenango, Guatemala, lived in a home made of earth with a tin roof. She made 15 quetzales (about $2 USD) per day doing laundry and cutting wood in the absence of more steady work, hauled water from outside her home and struggled to manage her colic and gastritis. She noted that drought in the summer and heavy flooding during hurricane season had become a feature of life. This precarity came full circle when the hurricanes destroyed her home entirely. 

One wonders how she found the wherewithal to make it to Ciudad Juárez? When people refer to someone like Sara as "illegal," what law decreed she must be consigned to extreme poverty because climate change had made major storms more frequent and more devastating? Is it a crime to live in the path of a hurricane?

The report finishes with some recommendations. I would put reducing gang violence and strengthening the criminal justice system at the top of the list: Until the rule of law is in place, no other changes are going to improve the lives of people in the countries of origin. The other items are important too: providing economic development support; making “climate change mitigation and adaptation a central pillar of development efforts and root causes policy”; and getting COVID vaccines to the people.

The report also makes recommendations to humanize our immigration policy. I fear that the Biden administration has not been able to conceptualize a political path forward on these issues, let alone flesh out such humanization into specific policies that could pass through Congress. I wish we could foresee the day when the administration would revoke the Title 42 expulsion policy, which denies entry to people from a country where a communicable disease was present — that is to say every country now — but we can't.

Our friends at Hope Border continue their splendid work of advocacy and, with this report, strengthen that work with research. Their findings will not melt the cold hearts of too many Americans, and they won't convince the people at Fox News that the humanitarian crisis south of the border creates a moral crisis on our side of that same border. At this time, both crises are at fever pitch and, on our side, there is nothing but shame. 

 

The most cost-effective way to reduce the number of people crossing our border is provide enough financial assistance so that they can safely stay in their own country, and earn enough income to pay for their basic expenses.

 

https://www.ncronline.org/news/opinion/migrants-were-asked-why-did-you-leave-your-home-heres-what-they-said

 

Congress has passed bi-partisan legislation to provide aid to Central America. In fiscal year 2017, the amount pledged was $180 million. For fiscal year 2018, the amount approved was $370 million.

 

On June 17, 2019, the Trump administration cut all those funds.

Lawmakers, including some of Trump’s fellow Republicans as well as Democrats, have chafed against the president’s repeated decisions to disregard spending bills passed by Congress, some of which he has signed into law himself.

Lawmakers who opposed the plan said it was cruel to cut off aid to countries grappling with hunger and crime and that the move would be counterproductive because it would more likely increase the number of migrants than decrease it.

“As feared, a presidential tantrum will limit our nation’s ability to actually help address the challenges forcing people to flee to the U.S.,” Democratic Senator Bob Menendez said on Twitter.

 

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-immigration-trump-idUSKCN1TI2C7

 

According to CBP data provided to FactCheck.org, the Trump administration secured a total of $15 billion during his presidency for wall construction. Some of it was appropriated in annual budgets by Congress, and some was diverted by Trump from counternarcotics and military construction funding. But it has all been borne by American taxpayers.

Back in August of 2020, when Trump was accepting the Republican nomination, he boasted: “The wall will soon be complete, and it is working beyond our wildest expectations.”

Most of the wall constructed to date has been replacement for existing dilapidated or inadequate fencing, despite earlier plans to build new barriers where none existed before. In 2018, an administration official testified that his agency would build 316 miles of new pedestrian barriers “in addition to what is there now.” But to date only about 40 miles of such new fencing have been built.

Other border experts warn not to minimize the impact of the replacement fencing. In some cases, the new barriers erected replaced fencing made from Vietnam-era landing mats. U.S. Customs and Border Protection also has replaced nearly 200 miles of vehicle barriers — the type that people could walk right through — with 30-foot-high steel bollards, lighting and other technology.

That’s a dramatic change. Below are before-and-after photos of vehicle barriers replaced by fencing in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument in Arizona. The first was taken in April 2019, the second in January 2020:




 


 But it may be years before we are able to tell how effective the wall has been at stopping illegal immigration. Many factors that have nothing to do with the wall — COVID-19, the economy, civil unrest — all play a role in attempted illegal border crossings.

Experts use figures on border apprehensions to gauge the level of illegal border crossings. The data from CBP present a mixed bag when it comes to making Trump’s case.

Border apprehensions spiked in fiscal year 2019, and then fell by about half in fiscal 2020, which ended on Sept. 30. It is impossible to tease out how much of that drop may be as a result of the new barriers constructed under Trump, but a Pew Research Center report documenting the decline attributed it mostly to a worldwide decrease in the movement of migrants due to the COVID-19 outbreak, and governments fully or partially closing their borders as a result.

Most immigrants who cross into the U.S. illegally come from Mexico and Central American countries that have passed measures restricting the movements of their residents due to COVID-19.

During the time period that money was being spent on the wall, infections from COVI skyrocketed, and over 1,000,000 Americans have died, in part because the Trump administration downplayed the severity of the pandemic, and also did not allocate adequate funding for vaccinations.

 

https://www.factcheck.org/2020/12/trumps-border-wall-where-does-it-stand/

 So, what’s the REAL cause of the border crisis?

Donald Trump.

Remember that in November.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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