Testimony to the US State Department from Earl in Tennessee, Posted by Ann Corcoran on June 3, 2016
Editor: Here comes another one! We haven’t seen them all yet! I am still sorting my e-mail in search of the testimony
you sent to the US State Department in response to the DOS request for public
comment on the “size and scope” of the UN/US Refugee Admissions Program for
FY2017.
The day before the deadline for
submission of testimony I noticed (maybe you were all ahead of me and noticed!)
that the dates were wrong in the Federal Register. I happened to see a
comment sent by lawyers to the DOS asking that the comment period be re-opened
because citizens, who might like to have testified, didn’t think the notice was
for a comment period this year, but for last year. See here. So far no sign that the State Department is re-opening
the comment period. Have any of you seen a new notice?
From Earl who obviously spent a great
deal of time researching:
Testimony re: 2017 Refugee Resettlement
Program
The Syrian refugee situation is merely
“the tip of the iceberg” – a tiny part of the real issue. The “iceberg,” itself
is the Federal Refugee Resettlement Program (RRP). The RRP was established by
legislation in 1980, and so is far older than the Syrian situation, and the
Fedral Government has illegally and dramatically expanded the program’s
hegemony since then.
There is so much seriously wrong with
the current form of the RRP that it would take a book to cover it all. Some of
its major critical problems (drastically condensed) include:
1. The RRP is unconstitutional.
a. It forces states to fund state
programs resulting from a Federal program without their agreement – a violation
of states’ rights that the U. S. Supreme Court has already ruled unconstitutional.
b. It gives over a billion dollars a
year to nine commercial contractors (called VOLAGS – “Voluntary Agency”) most
of which are religious organizations. What this means is that the Federal
Government is taking taxes from all Americans, and donating them to religious
groups selected by the government. The Federal Government has no right to
select which religious charities anyone has to support, but that’s exactly
what’s happening. The Constitution clearly requires separation of church and
state; a requirement grossly ignored by the RRP.
c. There is no part of the
Constitution’s “enumerated powers” which compels or even allows the Federal
Government to finance, arrange, or promote immigration from anywhere.
2. The RRP is illegal.
The 1980 RRP legislation clearly and
narrowly defined who can be considered a refugee for purposes of the program –
people who can prove they have or are subject to persecution because of their
political views or because of membership in a racial, ethnic, religious, or
social group.
The vast majority of refugees seeking
asylum in the U. S. are economic (“seeking a better life”) refugees, or are
fleeing war zones – neither condition qualifies them for refugee status.
Therefore, the RRP is violating its own
establishing legislation because Congress has ignored the legal definition of
“refugee.”
3. The RRP is dangerous.
a. On October 8, 2015, FBI Director James Comey testified
before Congress that the FBI cannot guarantee Islamic terrorists won’t get into
the US in the Syrian flow that is about to start. On October 21, 2015, Director
Comey informed the House Homeland Security Committee that it is impossible to
screen Syrian refugees entering the U. S.
b. During a
speech at the National Defense University, U.S. Rep. Michael McCaul, head of
the House Homeland Security Committee, reported that intelligence officials
have revealed that it’s no longer just a threat, but an actual occurrence –
ISIS terrorists have tried to use the refugee program to enter the United
States.
c. Membership
in a U. S. – registered terrorist group is not a bar to entry through the RRP
as long as the refugee was not thought to be a “direct participant” in
“terrorist” activity. What an absurd standard!
d.
Approximately 95% of U. S. – bound refugees are selected by the U. N. High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) or were relatives of U. N. – picked refugees.
The UNHCR signed a Cooperation Agreement with the Organization for Islamic
Cooperation (OIC) in 1988, according to an OIC statement. The OIC has been
described as the new Islamic Caliphate (world-wide government), although ISIS
has also laid claim to that title. What kinds of refugees do you think the OIC
pressures the UNHCR to select?
e. Refugees
are not tested for many diseases, such as HIV, and they also constitute
approximately half of the TB cases in America.
f. If you
look at news photos of the hoards of refugees flooding Europe, you’ll be struck
by the fact that 95% of them are men in the specific age bracket from which
most terrorists are drawn. They don’t look anything like the warm,
friendly-looking refugee families that our media and the Federal Government
portray as “typical.” Once the fickle media spotlight is off the refugee
situation, refugees coming here are almost certain to reflect the same young-male
Muslim demographic Europe is struggling with – a dangerous demographic.
g. The Obama
administration has repeatedly bragged about the extensive investigative process
used for refugees – supposedly taking from 12 to 18 months. Recently, the
process has been shortened to three months, proving that the process is merely
a political ploy to promote acceptance of dangerous refugees by a gullible
public.
4. The RRP is
incredibly expensive.
a. The
Federal Government spends about 1.2 billion dollars a year just to bring
refugees to the U. S. It pays the “VOLAGS” another approximately 1 billion
dollars a year to handle the distribution of refugees to the states. These
funds could assist 500 times as many refugees if safe havens were established
in refugees’ own or nearby countries. Why do you suppose that wealthy Arab
oil-producing countries refuse to accept any refugees whatsoever?
b. State and
Federal welfare programs are available to refugees the same as to citizens.
Refugees qualify for at least 14 welfare programs, the cost of which is never
counted or revealed. The total program cost is estimated to be 10 to 20 billion
dollars a year when welfare is included, and refugees use welfare at much
higher rates than citizens – four times higher for SSI, for example. The VOLAGS
grossly under-report welfare costs because they don’t actually track them –
they estimate them with absurd assumptions that are intended to conceal the
huge amounts – much of which comes out of state budgets.
c. The RRP is
laced with fraud and corruption at all levels, as is true for many, if not all,
U. N. enterprises. U.N. personnel often sell access to the program, and once
here, refugees make false claims of family relationships in order to bring
other “refugees” into the program. In effect, the RRP is a “stick in the
spokes” of U. S. foreign policy, because other countries can refuse refugees,
knowing that the U. S. will probably take them.
d. Our
country and states are hobbled by ancient, deteriorating infrastructure,
bloated social services, underfunded school systems, and inadequate fire and
police protection. State and Federal agencies are regularly asked to cut
spending. Eliminating the RRP could free funds desperately needed for more
worthy and delayed projects.
5. The RRP can destroy our communities.
a. Few Middle-Eastern
refugees/immigrants “assimilate” into their host communities. Paul Harpole,
mayor of Amarillo, Texas, says that, “…it’s a huge disservice to bring in
refugees that we’re not able to handle. We create small ghettos…. A group of
Somalis came in to say they had elected a mayor of their community…. Then
another faction claimed they had their own leader. We come to find out that
rival tribes – slaves and masters – were being settled together.” There are now
about 22 different languages spoken in the Amarillo schools by 660 refugee kids
who don’t speak English, and the U. S. Department of Education says they have
to be at grade level within one year. Many of these third-world kids don’t even
know how to use a bathroom. Plus, the federal Government pays schools only $100
per refugee student per year.
b. Refugees will work for minimum wage,
and, so, take jobs from Americans. In inflation-adjusted dollars, the
meat-packing industry used to pay about $20/hour to employees. Now, it’s closer
to $10/hour, on average, because of the refugees. The meat-packing industry is
a major lobbying group promoting higher refugee numbers, making campaign
contributions all over the country.
The Refugee
Resettlement Program must be rescinded. It is
immoral, unethical, and unconstitutional for the Federal Government to bring
Muslim refugees to the United States.
This is the twentieth testimony in our
series leading up to the deadline for comments to the Dept. of State on May
19th. Go here for where they are archived to see what your fellow
citizens have said. I intend to keep posting testimonies until I have exhausted
my long list! I had no idea so many of you would respond to my offer!
But,
thank you for your hard work! Don’t forget! If you sent testimony to the
State Department, be sure to send it to all of your elected officials and ask
that they look into the program and give you a response (it is not too late to
send it!). When corresponding with elected officials always ask a question and
try to force them to respond to you.
https://refugeeresettlementwatch.wordpress.com/2016/06/03/testimony-to-the-us-state-department-from-earl-in-tennessee/
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