Who is funding these peoples' travel? (Updated and bumped)

The US Migrant Invasion Was Carefully Planned

A network of NGOs, or non-governmental organizations, seems to be playing a powerful role in coordinating the large-scale invasion of illegals at the US southern border.

The new website Muckraker revealed a treasure trove of “mass migration blueprints,” handed out by NGOs across South and Central America to illegals with details about their route to the US.

“The collapse of the US southern border is the result of a carefully planned and deliberately executed industrial mass migration program,” Muckraker said…

What’s becoming increasingly evident is that a network of NGOs funded partly by the US taxpayer but by other countries and corporations are covertly facilitating the invasion of illegals at the US southern border, as well as distributing them across the US into progressive metro areas.

According to an August report by progressive left-leaning media watchdog organization Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting, President Biden’s Department of Homeland Security allocated $363 million to NGOs to assist illegal aliens once in the US.

AND HERE THEY COME

APACHULA, Mexico, Dec 24 (Reuters) - Thousands of migrants arrived on Sunday in the southern Mexican town Alvaro Obregon to spend the Christmas Eve in a public square without shelter before making their way north to cross the country and reach the border with the United States.

On Sunday, the group of mostly Central American and Caribbean migrants had walked 15 kilometers (more than 9 miles) from the southern border city Tapachula to get to Alvaro Obregon, with plans to set off again around 4 a.m. the next day.

Migrant rights activist Luis Garcia Villagran urged that migrants must not become political bargaining chips in the upcoming presidential election in the United States, where migrants were heading.

"We won't be stopped, we'll keep walking," he said.

That’s rather disingenuous of Mr. Villagran, because these invaders have always been political chips; it’s just a question of which political party will prevail in the coming years.

The good news, I suppose, is that our otherwise-unemployed lawyers and grifters (I repeat myself) have found a new source of income paid for, of course, by you

Your tax dollars are paying for the ‘rights for migrants’ legal scam

Betsy McCaughey:

As a record number of migrants invade the United States, wreaking pain on New York City and other communities, one group is winning big-time: the public advocacy lawyers.

Their business is to constantly sue to win more so-called rights for migrants. 

Rights to shelter, rights to meals, rights to health care, and even the right to vote in local elections.

Who pays the bills on both sides of these lawsuits? You do.

Taxpayer money largely funds these legal combatants, which include the Coalition for the Homeless, the Legal Aid Society, and the Vera Institute of Justice.

You’re paying to be legally coerced into providing more for migrants, even at the cost of cutting vital city services. 

It’s absurd, but it’s about to get worse.

The New York City Council this month passed Resolution 556, calling on the state Legislature to guarantee, as a right, that all migrants have lawyers paid for by taxpayers when they go to immigration court. 

It would be a “first in the nation” guarantee.

Resolution 556 would give migrants more rights than American citizens have.

No one else is guaranteed a publicly funded lawyer in civil court matters, such as housing court issues or divorce.

Fortunately, even small town America is entitled to enjoy the benefits of this administration’s illegal open border policy:

Influx of migrants worsens small Colorado mountain town’s housing shortage

Asmall Colorado mountain town that was already struggling with a housing crisis has become inundated with more than 120 Venezuelan migrants seeking refuge.

The migrants have reportedly been drawn to the town of Carbondale — 6,181 feet above sea level and 25 miles from an interstate — by hopes of working in a town they heard had severe labor shortages in the ski and hospitality industry, as well as in construction.

But many residents in the town of fewer than 7,000 people are being priced out of the community that is increasingly drawing tourists to its artsy downtown, with not enough housing for even its ski resort employees, 9News reports.

“We don’t want to become a destination for people,” Mayor Ben Bohmfalk told the local news station.

“We can’t take more people than we have now. We’re really over what we can handle.”

The town has been struggling with the migrant crisis since a group of 80 Venezuelan men were found living under a local bridge.

Some have taken shelter at hotels, supported by local organizations. Others are living out of their cars as temperatures in the area dip below freezing.

About 20 migrants more are being housed inside the meeting room at town hall, while another 60 are staying at the gym of the Third Street Center — a former elementary school that now rents spaces to artists and a ballet studio.

It was meant to be a short-term solution, as showers are located blocks away, according to the Washington Post.

Many residents in the town of fewer than 7,000 people are being priced out of the community that is increasingly drawing tourists to its artsy downtown, with not enough housing for even its ski resort employees. REUTERS

Over the past month, residents have complained that trash is piling up outside and the migrants staying inside the makeshift shelter report that the plumbing is constantly clogging.

But as winter approaches, Third Street Center agreed to extend its arrangement — though it said it would reduce its number of occupants from 60 to 45, making it more difficult for town officials to house those who are left.

“Carbondale is generally pretty Democratic and liberal, so we’re getting a lot of ‘You’re doing the right thing,’” Third Street Center director Colin Laird told the Washington Post. 

“Unfortunately, we don’t have the capacity for the right thing anymore.”

City trustee Marty Silverstein added: “While I have a lot of sympathy for our new residents, we have people that have been living here five, 10 years that are severely struggling.”

Still, the board of trustees has committed to supporting shelter for up to 100 people through March, and enlisted a former schools superintendent to manage the situation.

In his new role, Rob Stein said the town is working to finalize a shelter arrangement for another 20 people and set up a fourth shelter for women and children, according to the Aspen Daily News.

But officials are scrambling to find space for these shelters, with more than a dozen sites in the region declining to assist, according to Town Manager Lauren Gister, who once counted more than 140 migrants in the city.

She added that nearby towns and counties have only offered to send cots and COVID tests.

“If we ignore the problem, we could create permanent homelessness in the Roaring Fork Valley at levels that have never been seen,” Alex Sanchez, executive director of Voces Unidas, a regional advocacy group, told Aspen Public Radio.