
[snip]
Their mother still has her old Chilean passport with the three-person photo they took for the journey, Alejandra and Ines grinning together in their mother’s arms. Back then, minors routinely traveled on their mother’s passport.
At this point, the picture becomes fuzzy. It’s unclear how this couple (their names are changed in the story) came into the United States, but the linked article refers to them throughout the piece as “undocumented,” which, of course, means they are illegal aliens.
[snip]
They are packing up almost 40 years’ worth of belongings, keeping an eye on the neighborhood apps that let them know when ICE is in the area, and holding clandestine meetings with an immigration lawyer about how to self-deport safely.
It’s easy enough to self-deport safely. The United States will give them $1,000 each, a plane ticket, and people who leave voluntarily are eligible to return to the United States legally, through the legal immigration system. Why are they not taking advantage of this program?
They had 36 years to legitimize their presence in the United States. They did not.
And, as we might expect, there are several outright falsehoods in this piece.
“The most scary thing is, if something happened to us — if they arrest us or something — we can die,” says Claudia, “because [José] is diabetic. They don’t care. They don’t care if you have medicine or not. They don’t tell you where you’re going… They just arrest and keep you. That makes us very, very scared. My husband and I, we are scared.”
[snip]
Of course, this family may not get such great medical care back in Chile. But they are Chilean citizens, not American citizens, not even legal residents.
They had 36 years to legitimize their presence in the United States. They did not.
It’s a sad way to live out your golden years, says José: “We gave so much to this country. We worked very hard all our life here… So it’s not fair for us to live with this fear. Every day we watch the news and it’s just the same things, negative things. Poison things.”
They had 36 years to legitimize their presence in the United States. They did not.
[snip]
They had 36 years to legitimize their presence in the United States. They did not.
I have little to no sympathy for sob stories like this. They complain about the Trump administration actually enforcing immigration laws, but they had many years when it was more illegal-alien-friendly administrations in place, during which time they could have done something – anything – to try to legitimize their status. Apparently, they did not.
Now they are going back to Chile. And, once again, we can’t rely on the legacy media to tell the truth about the whole thing.
Editor’s Note: Thanks to President Trump, illegal immigration into our great country has virtually stopped. Despite the radical left’s lies, new legislation wasn’t needed to secure our border, just a new president.
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