Obama to Central America: Keep the Kids Home for Safety!
06/27/2014
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The post-Constitutional President spoke out recently about the illegal alien kiddie chaos on the border. Interestingly he didn’t mention the threat to national security caused by the Border Patrol being overwhelmed by being forced to provide childcare for unwanted foreigners.

His concern was the safety of the junior invaders. No mention of the negative effect on Americans, for example the swamping of local schools next fall with tens of thousands of non-English speakers jammed into classrooms. The government is planning $2 billion in taxpayer funds just for the care and feeding of the little aliens for a year now that America has gone into the orphanage business. One measure of how distracted the Border Patrol has become with childcare is the decline of drug seizures along the border.

Funny, but not everyone thinks the President is unhappy to see the human tsunami of future Democrats.

Plus the self-identified Constitutional scholar does not seen alarmed at the massive battering to the nation’s sovereignty that the mass invasion creates. Of course very few if any of the kids and their families will be deported, despite the President’s statement that “they’ll get sent back.” It’ll never happen.

Obama Warns Central Americans: ‘Do Not Send Your Children To The Borders’, ABC News, June 26, 2014

President Obama says tens of thousands of Central American children flooding into the U.S. along the southern border have created a “humanitarian crisis,” and he appealed directly to parents to stop sending kids north.

“Our message absolutely is don’t send your children unaccompanied, on trains or through a bunch of smugglers,” Obama told ABC’s Chief Anchor George Stephanopoulos in an exclusive interview here. “We don’t even know how many of these kids don’t make it, and may have been waylaid into sex trafficking or killed because they fell off a train.

“Do not send your children to the borders,” he said. “If they do make it, they’ll get sent back. More importantly, they may not make it.”

The Department of Homeland Security says more than 52,000 unaccompanied minors have been detained along the U.S. border with Mexico this fiscal year. In addition, authorities have apprehended 39,000 adults with small children. The numbers reflect a significant uptick over last year, when just 24,000 unaccompanied minors were apprehended. The majority in the surge hail from Central American countries, and a disproportionate number are young women and under age 13, officials say.

Under federal law, undocumented immigrant minors from countries other than Mexico cannot be immediately returned. Instead, U.S. authorities are required to process the children, then provide for their health care and other basic needs before releasing them to relatives or foster parents until they are to appear in an immigration court.

“If they come from a non-contiguous country, then there’s a lengthy process,” Obama told Stephanopoulos.

Obama administration sources said this week that of the unaccompanied children who come into the U.S., historically more than 50 percent are placed with parents or family members in the U.S. and many are adopted by American families and remain.

Republican critics say lenient immigration policies under the administration – including the Deferred Action program, granting legal status to some undocumented youth already in the U.S., and a directive to prosecutors to focus on deporting criminal aliens – have exacerbated the problem.

But Obama said this year’s influx reflects “the desperation and the violence that exists in some of these Central American countries.”

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