Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Billions billed to taxpayers for refugees

Taxpayers Hand Over Billions For Cost of Refugees to Intl Org for Migration by Maggie at Maggie's Notebook


Have you wondered how the many refugees get to North America? Who flies them here? Who pays for it? Who decides who comes and who doesn't. The answers might surprise you.

In Canada, on arrival, the refugees are given food and water, and are processed in about three to four hours. That's "three to four hours" to complete "a lot of paperwork." The refugees began their journey from the Marka Airport in Amman Jordan. So far, haven't found the arrival point in the U.S.
At the airport, individuals who pass the checks will become permanent residents of Canada. All will then continue on to a welcome centre. In Toronto, that will be at the airport. In Montreal, it will require a short bus ride.

The facilities include food, water, a play area for children and prayer rooms. People will receive winter clothing and get a Social Insurance Number. They'll then be taken to a local hotel for an overnight stay and a meal before beginning the next step.

The Immigration Department says government-assisted refugees [those not privately-sponsored] will be transported to their destination communities over time. If those communities aren't ready for them, Syrians will be accommodated in what are being called "interim lodging sites."

Six sites have been identified at Canadian Forces Bases Kingston, Valcartier, Meaford, Petawawa, Trenton and Borden. Source: CBC
What I didn't realize and think many do not realize is that the United Nations does the 'picking.' The UN is the 'decider.'
In recent years up to 95% of the refugees coming to the U.S. were referred by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) or were the relatives of UN-picked refugees.  Until the late 90’s the U.S. picked the large majority of refugees for resettlement in the U.S.

Considering that the refugee influx causes increases in all legal and illegal immigration as family and social networks are established in the U.S., the U.N. is effectively dictating much of U.S. immigration policy. Source: Refugee Resettlement
Maybe that doesn't bother you? Look at this stat from 2013:
The state of Delaware [Joe Biden's state of residence] has resettled less than 10 refugees annually in recent years even though then Sen. Joe Biden was a sponsor of the 1980 Refugee Act – the bill which defines the refugee program we have today.

Upon entry, a network of private, “nonprofit” agencies (so-called “voluntary agencies”) selects the communities where refugees will live. The agencies are either headquartered in Washington DC or have lobbying offices there.

Washington DC took less than 200 refugees between 2007 and 2012.
In September 2015, Business Insider said the first 18,000 Syrians had been "chosen" for U.S. resettlement. The process takes eighteen to twenty-four months, and US State Department NGO contractors (Non-Governmental Officials) fly from Washington, D.C. to the camps where the 18,000 are waiting. This will make you feel so much better.
Officers from the Department of Homeland Security fly from Washington to the camps and conduct interviews with candidates, seeking to weed out what a US official called "liars, criminals and terrorists."
The BI article reports the US spent $1.1 billion in 2014 to resettle 70,000 people from around the world, but did not have an estimate for the screening processing costs for Syrians.

The State Department doesn't keep records indicating the reason for resettlement. Convenient for propaganda purposes.

Have you ever heard a Liberal say a negative word about Islam based on their hate for, and treatment of, homosexuals? I haven't, just as I've never heard a negative word from feminists about the treatment of women in these countries.

The International Organization for Migration gets your money and mine:
Not all of the millions of refugees who have resettled in the United States over the past several decades can afford the cost of travel to their new home country.

For the past 60 years, the U.S. has offered all refugees interest-free loans to cover the cost of their travel, but what exactly does this loan program entail? And how much, on average, do refugees have to pay back to the government?

Before refugees arrive in the U.S., they have already been through the most stringent background checks of any group entering the country. Prior to boarding a plane, they must sign a promissory note agreeing to repay the cost of their airfare to the U.S. government if they did not personally pay for their ticket.
The International Organization for Migration (IOM) covers the cost of U.S.-bound tickets with funding provided by the State Department’s Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration. The loan money repaid to the U.S. government is invested back into the U.S. refugee program, according to the State Department. Source: Newsweek (see some estimates of cost here)

This means we, the taxpayers, hand over funds to "The International Organization for Migration" (IOM). Visit the website. You'll see among the slideshow banner the words "Human Mobility at COP21" (Obama's Climate Summit in Paris a couple of weeks ago).
So who picks up the loans, most of which are not repaid? You do, of course.

The American people have been forced to pay untold millions for a ten-year CIA and Pentagon program to undermine and overthrow the Syrian government, and now we are supposed to pay millions more to provide welfare for the refugees Obama created.

In November 2015, Senator Jeff Sessions said the Syrian refugee plan will cost $55 BILLION. Double it, then triple it and cross your fingers.
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