NYTimes Spreads Soggy Sob Story About Hurricane Harvey-Hit Illegals
08/30/2017
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Unsurprisingly, the New York Times has its liberal gaze fixed upon illegal aliens in the path of Hurricane Harvey and their extra suffering due to their immigration status. Wednesday’s front page had a story on the subject, although not a complete shrieker with boo-hooey photos of “undocumented” misery — however the story was located beneath a big aerial photo of Houston flooding.

The NYT online article included a link to a Pew one-pager report from February, 20 metro areas are home to six-in-ten unauthorized immigrants in U.S., that featured an informative 2014 map that revealed areas of extreme invader concentration, where Texas looks affected like other big border states:

As has already been forecast, the recovery from this crushing natural disaster will take years. The Times did helpfully mention that Houston’s population includes 600,000 illegal aliens — persons who take jobs, education, welfare and other services that should go to citizens.

Nobody is suggesting that the invasive foreigners shouldn’t be rescued or given temporary protection in a shelter. But the help should stop at emergency assistance. Illegals should be ineligible for any aid beyond that. They should be urged to go home ASAP by Texas’ conservative government. Mexico, the true home of many, remains rich (with 15 billionaires!) and dry.

American aid should go to citizens and legal residents who are suffering from the disaster.

An Uneasy Time for [Illegal]Immigrants in Texas. Then the Rains Came., New York Times, August 29, 2017

HOUSTON — This has been a harrowing year for the hundreds of thousands of undocumented immigrants who have put down stakes in Houston.

Stepped-up enforcement of immigration measures put many on edge over deportations, while Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas signed one of the nation’s most punitive laws against cities that do not cooperate with federal immigration authorities. President Trump has amplified his harsh line on illegal immigration and renewed his promise to build a border wall.

Then came the chaos of Hurricane Harvey.

Families among Houston’s estimated 600,000 undocumented immigrants – the largest number of any city in the United States except New York and Los Angeles, according to the Pew Research Center – fled their homes to escape the flooding despite their anxiety over being turned away at shelters or facing hostile immigration agents.

“People were telling each other that the immigration men were coming to check our papers,” said Eloy González, 40, a truck driver who made it to the sprawling shelter at the George R. Brown Convention Center. All he had were the drenched clothes he was wearing when he escaped the flooding in Pasadena, a suburb of Houston where thousands of immigrants live in the shadow of oil refineries.

“The rumors are false but the fear is still there,” said Mr. González, an immigrant from northern Mexico, emphasizing that he was one of the “lucky ones” who is legally in the United States.

(Continues)

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