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The speaker asserts there is a historic immigration crisis because Kamala Harris initiated policies to undo Donald Trump's border policies, including 94 executive orders suspending deportations and decriminalizing illegal aliens. This allegedly increased asylum fraud and opened the floodgates, leading to increased fentanyl entering the country. The speaker connects this to personal experience with a mother who struggled with opioid addiction and emphasizes the need to stop the bleeding to prevent depriving others of a second chance due to fentanyl entering communities at record levels because of Harris' policies.

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We are being conquered by a complete resettlement of America with millions of people bringing different cultures and beliefs. This will permanently change the country unless there are massive deportations.

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Most Americans believe the administration is failing on the border issue as the number of people attempting to cross the southern border is at a record high. The speaker acknowledges the broken immigration system and emphasizes the need for a safe and humane border policy in the short term. They also highlight the importance of addressing the root causes of migration in the long term. The speaker urges Congress to take action and stop playing political games, encouraging them to be part of the solution.

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Mexico struggles to handle a sudden influx of millions of people, despite the desire to welcome them. Many have lived in the U.S. for decades, building lives and families there. The idea of deporting them back to Mexico, where they may find nothing left and face violence, is unrealistic. This situation could lead to a significant crisis, as these individuals cannot simply return to a life of lower wages and instability.

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The speaker asserts that the United States federal government is the world’s largest child sex trafficking organization in modern history, stating that thousands of unaccompanied alien children (UACs) are being raped at this very moment. He is a retired Border Patrol deputy patrol agent in charge in the San Diego sector, with 24 years of service, who worked under five presidents and says only one president secured the border: Donald Trump. He contrasts the border era under President Joe Biden as the opposite, describing Biden’s first day as the start of 94 executive orders that cascaded from Washington, obliterating immigration policy that had secured the border. He claims Biden, through Department of Homeland Security secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, created policy out of thin air, ignored federal immigration law, and facilitated “the largest mass invasion into America that the world has ever seen.” The speaker contends that the United States will spend hundreds of billions of dollars in four years to fund the needs of over 50,000,000 illegal aliens who populate the nation, and that “between one in six and one in seven residents in America is an illegal alien,” describing the demographic shift as the greatest in modern history. After his Border Patrol career, he wrote a bestselling book titled The intentional destruction of American immigration system and produced two documentaries. He asserts that Biden, Harris, and Mayorkas intentionally, strategically, and purposely weaponized illegal immigration as a tool to transform America, and that within this invasion, the unspoken evil of child trafficking—specifically child sex trafficking—has flourished. He projects that by the end of this administration, the number of trafficked children will have grown to over 550,000 UACs. He notes that these children are arrested, released into America, and then lost. To illustrate, he contrasts CBP data: in Trump’s last year, CBP arrested 30,557 UACs who were accounted for and not lost; in Biden’s first year, CBP arrested 147,975 UACs, most of which are unaccompanied and lost. In 2023, Health and Human Services officials Javier Bacera and Robin Marcos are said to have admitted that their agency had no contact with over 85,000 UACs. He asserts that DHS, HHS, and ORR did nothing to correct this humanitarian disaster; instead, they created policies to increase the efficiency of moving UACs from the border to the interior of the United States to unknown and unbonded sponsors, with unaccompanied alien children being handed off to total strangers. A year later, the inspector general overseeing DHS released a report stating the number of lost UACs was not 85,000 but over 320,000. The speaker and his business partner, Ryan Matt, spent six months traveling across America filming a documentary titled “What Is Treason Trafficked?” through which they spoke with officers, agents, and whistleblowers from various agencies. They say the federal government knowingly and actively facilitated these criminal acts.

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The speaker criticizes President Biden for allowing an influx of migrants into the US, referring to it as a "Biden invasion." He accuses Biden of bringing in potentially dangerous individuals from various countries, labeling it as "Biden migrant crime." The speaker expresses concern over the impact of this influx and predicts a potential increase to millions of migrants during Biden's term.

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In the transcript, Speaker 0 asserts that the surge from Mexico during the Biden administration occurred due to two explicit actions. First, after Joe Biden won in November 2024, AMLO, the president of Mexico, convened Mexican legislators and enacted legislation that they knew would radically encourage mass migration to the United States, specifically acknowledging that this would be the effect they sought. Second, governments in Nicaragua under Daniel Ortega allegedly responded by allowing anyone from anywhere in the world to obtain a visa if they fly to Nicaragua, and then they would be taken to the border to head north toward the United States. According to the speaker, millions of people from Africa, Latin America, and Asia flew to Nicaragua on chartered planes and then proceeded toward the U.S. border. The speaker characterizes these developments as intentional and directed.

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Immigration trends under Bush, Obama, and Trump's first term appear consistent. However, with Biden, the situation seems different, suggesting a lack of control at the border. Democrats may claim they oppose open borders, but the current circumstances imply otherwise. There are millions in South and Central America, and it's clear we cannot accommodate everyone.

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The speaker states that an historic flood of undocumented immigrants crossed the border during the first three years of the administration, with arrivals quadrupling from the last year of President Trump. The speaker asks if it was a mistake to loosen immigration policies. The other speaker responds that the policies proposed are about fixing a problem, not promoting one. The first speaker reiterates that the numbers quadrupled. The other speaker claims that they have cut the flow of illegal immigration by half, as well as the flow of fentanyl by half, but that Congress needs to act to fix the problem.

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Chairman Perry and members of the caucus, I thank you for inviting me to discuss what I describe as the most historic mass migration crisis ever to strike The United States. What has happened at the Southern border is history-making in scope with long-lasting second, third, and fourth order implications for American citizens. The mass migration that began around inauguration day 2021 calls for a broader public discussion about what it is and how it works. During its first year and now into its second, I interviewed hundreds of immigrants, most recently on an eight-day fact-finding journey to Tapachula, on the Guatemala–Mexico border. From my vantage point, there is one root cause most often cited by the immigrating foreign nationals for coming now: that President Joe Biden opened the American southern border wide to them. They see on social media, from hundreds of thousands who have gone before, secure quick releases and resettlement into America—the ultimate golden chalice—and they decide to gamble large smuggling investments that criminal smuggling gangs will get them in to stay too. With such an enticing return on smuggling investment, no thinking person should wonder why this global migration hit a national record of nearly 2,000,000 border patrol apprehensions in a single year with probably 500,000 more gotaways, an undercount. The caucus should know that nonprofit advocacy groups and, more notably, the United Nations appear to be working alongside the criminal smuggling organizations on the same mission. United Nations agencies such as the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) are providing hard cash, food, shelter, legal services, and psychological services along the migrant trails, which also materially facilitate journeys that everyone involved knows lead to illegal American border crossings. In various forms, the UN and the nonprofits it funds contribute to the current mass migration crisis. I found a UNHCR stamp booklet discarded on the Rio Grande riverbank on the Mexican side, and I observed handout cash debit cards to migrants in long lines. Workers reported that they give $400 every fifteen days to families of four, renewable every two weeks. The UN tells me only the most vulnerable receive this cash, yet in Reynosa and Tapachula, long lines at UNHCR offices revealed regular family units, many with debit cards, who said they might have to leave the migrant trail and go home without this money. The cards are part of a vast and escalating UN program called cash-based interventions along the migrant trail through Latin America, including unrestricted, unconditionally usable plastic cash cards, cash-filled envelopes in some areas, money transfers for lodging and pharmaceutical prescriptions, and something called movement assistance—transportation money to move forward when camps empty and reform further north. Credible reporting shows the UN is providing these forms of assistance along the trail from South America to Texas. On a Kakuta to Bogota, Colombia segment, the UN was seen handing out food, clothing, and necessities worth an estimated $200 to $300 per migrant per day. Non-cash assistance keeps migrants on the US trail; in Tapachula, Mexican asylum approval is important for permission to move legally beyond the southern provinces toward the US border. But many coming from Guatemala tell Mexican immigration they are seeking US jobs, which is not an eligible asylum claim, so they are denied. I did learn of a UN-funded migrant advocacy center where a full-time staff of certified psychologists helps migrants recover repressed memories of more eligible persecution. This manager said his group also trains migrants on how to pass muster with Mexican asylum interviewers the first time around, producing a 90% success rate for thousands a year. Other UN-funded psychologists offer similar work. If true, the UNHCR in Mexico has found another way to keep thousands more on the trail toward the American border. Some will defend this UN assistance as lifesaving; others will view it differently, and they will want to know more. Americans deserve to know the full extent of it, because the United States is the UN’s largest donor, and the US Congress appropriates a huge amount of money to the UN each year. Thank you. I note that the border is a national security concern. Recently, I reported a Venezuelan crossing the Rio Grande from Matamoros to Brownsville, and the FBI-wanted individual held in ICE headquarters here in Washington, D.C. intervened and demanded he be ordered released because he might get COVID in detention. He is now living freely pursuing an asylum claim in Detroit. Thank you.

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Speaker 0, Speaker 1, and Speaker 2 discuss immigration and U.S. foreign aid policy, focusing on roots, outcomes, and political implications. They begin with a provocative assertion: immigration is a major issue, with Speaker 0 claiming, “mostly with immigration… I wish people knew that we’re letting in criminals daily.” The speakers note migration as a central concern for the region, describing large U.S. aid to Central America—“4,000,000,000 over four years”—and acknowledging migrants now arriving from other places, including Venezuela. The dialogue questions the end goals of policy, asking, “What is the end goal? Why are they allowing children?” and “So what does he say to that?” along with a reference that “a lot of children” are involved. Speaker 2 mentions aid directed to female prisons in Mexico and to work on training, and to gender issues in Pakistan, noting initiatives to recruit, retain, and advance more women in law enforcement. A lingering question is asked: should U.S. taxpayers’ money be spent in their own country on these issues when they are described as fatal or concerning to others. The conversation shifts to specifics of administration and oversight: “Secretary Lincoln, how close are you to him? Five degrees separation.” The group references briefings on the FY2025 budget request and budget cycles, then reiterates the migration issue with a call to “stop migration.” They discuss a “root cause strategy” involving funding to address migrants at their origins, “Central America, basically,” aiming to support development there. A critical point is the assertion of substantial U.S. funding to the region and the concern that migrants are still coming from elsewhere, notably Venezuela, which “looks bad for the administration.” The dialogue notes the difficulty of finding a clear answer, with a sense that the other side might benefit politically. The speakers reflect on the scale of the funding relative to past decades and acknowledge uncertainty about what is effectively changing. There is talk of internal discussions with colleagues who manage migration processes and foreign assistance, with admissions of confusion or lack of clear messaging: “I don’t know what we do… there’s no clear answer.” They touch on messaging about immigration, including a belief that “we’re letting in criminals daily,” and contrast the status of “good, honest, hard work” Mexicans who stay in Mexico with others who come to the United States. Towards the end, Speaker 0 argues that traditional Americans—“Nebraska… Americans that have my family’s been in United States for four hundred years”—are not leftists, while stating that Latin Americans are leftist, framing it as a broader political and societal divide connected to immigration policies. They propose a hypothetical: allowing 100,000 Mexicans a year if they are not in the country illegally and have no criminal record, suggesting a quality filter on entrants.

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One speaker believes there are two camps: one that views the U.S. as the world's policeman and another focused on domestic problems. One speaker believes the Biden administration has made decisions about the border, including flying people in using an app, which they find insane. They suggest a motivation for this is cheap labor, while acknowledging that some find the new Haitian workers in Springfield, Ohio, to be hard workers. However, they also claim this incentivized effort to move people into the country illegally will bring in gang members, cartel members, and terrorists, some of whom have already been arrested. Another speaker believes both Trump and Kamala Harris will have to act on the border, as the current situation is unsustainable. One speaker fears the goal is to give these immigrants a clear path to citizenship to buy their vote. They claim Democrats are incentivizing them with benefits like EBT cards and housing, which they are not giving to veterans and poor people in this country. They believe that if these people are given the opportunity to vote, especially in swing states, they will vote for the party that brought them to America.

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The speaker discusses the immigration crisis at the southern border, highlighting the role of NGOs in facilitating illegal migration. They express concern over the influx of migrants, particularly military-aged men, and the potential national security risks posed by Chinese migrants. The speaker criticizes the Biden administration's open borders policies and warns of the consequences if the situation is not addressed. They emphasize the need for action to prevent America from being overrun by illegal immigrants.

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The speaker addresses the historic mass migration crisis at the US Southern border, asserting its root cause is President Biden's open border policy, as perceived by immigrating foreign nationals via social media. They are motivated by the success of those who came before them. This has led to record border patrol apprehensions and significant "gotaways." The speaker claims that UN agencies like IOM and UNHCR are materially contributing to illegal border crossings by providing cash, food, shelter, and legal/psychological services along migrant trails. They cite examples of cash debit cards given to migrants, and psychologists helping migrants recover memories of persecution to pass asylum interviews. The speaker suggests this UN assistance, funded partly by the US, keeps migrants on the trail to the US. They also raise national security concerns, citing an example of an FBI watch-listed Venezuelan released by ICE and now pursuing asylum in Detroit.

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A speaker argues that allowing young men from countries where women aren’t treated as equal to live in four-star hotels and work illegally leads to attitudes toward women that are completely different and have appalling social effects. A second speaker recounts a case in Warwickshire, England where a 15-year-old girl was raped by two asylum-seeking Afghan men. The attackers’ lawyer blamed the assault on cultural differences, saying his client was not used to a society where women are free and deemed equal to men. The speaker says this defense illustrates why those young men shouldn’t have been in that country in the first place, and suggests that a similar mindset should be applied in the United States to prevent such things from happening here. The speaker asserts that if one sees someone getting hit by a car, it should remind us not to walk into the road, implying we should act to prevent harm before it occurs. The argument continues that action is needed now, not once it becomes widespread in the United States. This is offered as a justification for borders and for ICE, and a warning against those who advocate getting rid of ICE or removing borders. The position is that borders and immigration enforcement are necessary to keep the country sustainable economically, arguing against importing “the whole world.” The speaker contends that immigration should be controlled to prevent overwhelming the systems, and that people who do not share the country’s cultural values should be kept out or removed and sent to another country. The speaker then promotes a free email newsletter, noting it is sent every morning around 7 AM Central and occasionally covers specific topics in more depth. The link is stated to be in the speaker’s profile; readers are invited to subscribe. In closing, the speaker signs off, indicating they will see the audience in the next video.

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Speaker 1: Mentions there are many things she wishes people knew, but mostly with the administration she wishes people knew that “we're letting in criminals daily.” Speaker 2: States the big issue for the region is migration, noting “we poured a lot of money into Central America,” amounting to “4,000,000,000 over four years,” but migrants are now coming from elsewhere, including Venezuela. Speaker 3: Asks, “So what is the end goal?” Speaker 1: Asks why aren’t they allowing children, noting “a lot of children travel to The United States, David.” Speaker 2: Explains aid goes to female presence in Mexico, training women, and mentions working with gender issues in Pakistan, aiming to recruit, retain, and advance more women in law enforcement. Asks whether US taxpayers’ money should be spent in “our country on this issue,” implying women may not care about certain aspects. Speaker 2: Asks how close Secretary Lincoln is to him, “five degrees separation,” and notes migration is a niche industry that flies under the radar; the average American doesn’t know what they do. Speaker 1: Thanks the chairman, ranking member, and members for the opportunity to testify. Speaker 2: Mentions upcoming briefings in two weeks on the FY 2025 budget request on the Hill. Speaker 0: States migration is the big issue for the Hill and asks, “Stop migration. What are we doing to stop migration?” Speaker 1: Responds that he’s not accountable for that and says, “We do stuff,” referencing the root causes strategy, which is about giving money to support and help people at the origins of migrants so they feel they can stay there instead of migrating. It’s “Central America, basically.” He says they poured a lot of money into Central America, and again mentions “4,000,000,000 over four years.” Speaker 2: Asks if it’s doing anything; response: yes, for them, but migrants are now coming from elsewhere like Venezuela, and acknowledges that outcome looks bad for the administration and for politics in general. Speaker 3: Seeks the end goal and asks again why there’s a limit on who’s allowed in. Speaker 1: Cites changes in demographics in the United States; notes that Nebraskans are traditional Americans not leftists, while Latin Americans are described as leftists, framing it as a system to try to change demographics.

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The situation at the border is critical because it will fundamentally change the country. The core issue is who resides here, which directly impacts democracy and voting outcomes. Over the past 30 years, the U.S. population has increased by 100 million, a fact many Americans are unaware of. This demographic shift is seen as insufficient by those in power, leading to efforts to influence the electorate. By opening borders and granting citizenship and voting rights to newly admitted individuals, there is a clear intention to alter election results.

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The speaker was asked when the border situation became a crisis, and responded that the immigration system has been broken for a long time, even before the Trump administration. The speaker stated the system needs to be fixed and more resources are needed, such as more judges to process cases faster. Congress is the only place that can fix it. The questioner noted that many Trump border policies were rescinded and that the border patrol union supported a bipartisan bill, but also endorsed Donald Trump and called the current administration a failure on border security.

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A speaker claimed that only a handful of apartment complexes in America have been taken over by Venezuelan gangs and that Donald Trump is the solution, not Kamala Harris's open border policies. The speaker asserted that Americans are fed up and have a right to be. The speaker expressed concern over apartment complexes being taken over by violent gangs and emphasized the need to make American communities safe again. The speaker stated that letting millions of unvetted people into the country leads to problems. They blamed Kamala Harris's executive orders for undoing Donald Trump's border policies, leading to the current consequences. The speaker believes the situation will only improve if Donald Trump continues to call out these issues.

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The US president intentionally opened the border, leading to a catastrophe. This has caused his approval rating to plummet, with 60% of people disapproving. The failure of leadership has put the presidency at risk. The American people are fed up and demand border security. The president has the authority to act without Congress, but he refuses to do so.

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Speaker 0 describes a scene at the Rio Grande, stating: “The US side of the Rio Grande,” and that there is a mass of “several 100 illegal immigrants who have just crossed the Rio Grande.” They claim that “several 100 more [are] streaming across as we speak.” They report that they are on “a boat in the Rio Grande,” with the current location on “the Mexican side of the river right now.” The observer notes that it is a “never ending stream” of people, with “Hundreds of people crossing the Rio Grande basically every hour,” and that they are “heading over to the international bridge, which you can see in the background.” The speaker emphasizes the scale by saying, “Look at that massive people.” The posing concern centers on the impact at the border infrastructure, with the claim that “This is why the situation under the bridge continues to deteriorate.” The speaker repeats the characterization of the scene as “insane,” underscoring a perceived crisis level. They advocate for action by authorities, stating, “The federal government has to wake up.” In a brief aside, the other voice interjects, “Oh, you’re right.”

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Chairman Perry and members of the caucus, I am here to discuss what I term the most historic mass migration crisis ever to strike The United States, noting that what has happened at the Southern border is history making in scope and will have long lasting second, third, and fourth order implications for American citizens. During its first year and now into its second, I have interviewed hundreds of immigrants, most recently on an eight day fact finding journey to the Guatemala–Mexico border city of Tapachula. From my vantage point, there is but one root cause that the immigrating foreign nationals most often cite for coming now: that President Joe Biden opened the American southern border wide to them. They see over their cell phones, social media, hundreds of thousands who have gone before, secure quick releases and resettlement into America, the ultimate golden chalice, and they gamble huge smuggling fee investments that criminal smuggling gangs will get them in to stay too. With such an enticing return on smuggling investment, no thinking person should wonder why this global migration hit the all time national record of nearly 2,000,000 border patrol apprehensions in a single year with probably 500,000 more gotaways, and that’s an undercount. But the caucus should also know that nonprofit advocacy groups and, more notably, the United Nations appear to be working side by side with the criminal smuggling organizations on the very same mission. United Nations agencies such as the International Office of Migration (IOM) and the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) are providing hard cash, food, shelter, legal services, psychological services along the migrant trails, which also materially facilitate journeys that everyone involved very well knows despite any protestations to the contrary always lead to an illegal American border crossing. In whatever small or large way the United Nations and the nonprofits it funnels money to can reasonably be said to contribute to the current mass migration crisis. I found my first clue on a Rio Grande riverbank on the Mexican side, a discarded UNHCR stamp booklet. Hand out cash debit cards to migrants in long snaking lines. The workers handing them out said they give $400 every fifteen days to families of four, renewable every two weeks. The UN tells me only the most vulnerable get this cash. But in Reynosa, and again most recently in Tapachula, Mexico, where I saw the same long lines at the UNHCR office, nothing about them indicated acute vulnerability. They were regular family units of the sort crossing by the tens of thousands right now. Some showed me their debit cards there too and said, were it not for this money, they might have to leave the migrant trail and go home. Further inquiry showed the cards are just part of a vast and sharply escalating UN program called cash based interventions all along the migrant trail through Latin America. According to the UN documents and migrants, these include the unrestricted, unconditionally usable plastic cash cards, but also cash filled envelopes in some areas. Never a good look cash filled envelopes. Money transfers for lodging, pharmaceutical prescriptions, and something called movement assistance, which means transportation money to move forward when camps empty and reform further north. Credible reporting shows that the UN is providing these forms of assistance all along the migrant trail from South America to Texas. On a Kakuta to Bogota Colombia segment, the UN was seen handing out food, clothing, and necessities worth an estimated 200 to $300 day per migrant. And then there’s important non-cash assistance keeping migrants on the US trail. In Tapachula, approval for Mexican asylum these days is important for permission to move legally beyond the southern provinces where I was, always to The US border, of course. But many coming in from Guatemala innocently tell Mexican immigration they’re going for US jobs, which is not an eligible asylum claim. So they get denied. But I found a UN funded solution recently. The manager of a UN funded migrant advocacy center told me a full time staff of certified psychologists help these migrants recover repressed memories of more eligible government persecution. This manager told me in a recorded conversation that his group also trains migrants on the front end of the process how to pass muster with Mexican asylum interviewers the first time around. He said these operations produce a 90% success rate for thousands a year. Other UN funded psychologists offer what sounds like similar work. If all this is true, the UNHCR in Mexico has found another way to keep thousands more on the trail over the American border. Many can and will defend this UN assistance as lifesaving, but others who learn of it reasonably interpret this in a very different way, and they wanna know more, of course. However, Americans wanna interpret this assistance to migrants, they undoubtedly know they are joining a historic mass migration. All Americans deserve to know the full extent of it because The United States is the UN’s largest donor, and the US Congress appropriates a huge amount of money to the UN every year. I’ll also mention that the border is a national security concern. Just recently, I reported that a Venezuelan crossed the Rio Grande from Matamoros to Brownsville and that the FBI wanted that FBI watch listed individual held in that ICE headquarters here in Washington DC intervened and demanded that he be ordered that he be cut loose because he might get COVID in detention. That individual is now living freely pursuing an asylum claim in Detroit. Thank you. I thank the gentleman.

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The speaker expresses extreme concern about the current situation, stating it's the biggest issue in their 40-year career. They cite fentanyl deaths of a quarter million Americans and a 600% increase in sex trafficking as contributing factors. They highlight arrests at the border and claim over two million "gotaways" have entered the country. The speaker believes anyone who doesn't think these individuals intend harm is a "moron." They express fear about the situation and believe every American should be scared. They are thankful that President Trump will address the issue "100%."

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Oscar Blue for Real America’s Voice reports on a large migrant caravan leaving the southern border, estimated at 2,500 to 3,000 people. The banner at the front reads “no more blood, no more migrant blood.” He notes this will be his twelfth caravan under the Biden administration, and describes the situation as ongoing crisis and tragedy for migrants. He explains the path migrants take to reach the point in Mexico, including extortion and loss of life in the Darien, and asserts that the current situation is influenced by open border policies and the Global Compact for Migration. Blue says migrants are incentivized by these policies and by political actors who view them as a resource for political gain. Mexican authorities are attempting to manage the situation and treat migrants with dignity, but Blue says the migrants are frustrated by delays in the CBP1/immigration appointment process, which can take three to six months, and thus decide to continue walking in caravans. He notes this is the fourth caravan leaving in less than a month from southern Mexico. Blue interviews the caravan’s spokesperson, a young man in his mid-twenties, who acknowledges concerns about infiltrated individuals inside the caravan who might extract information or influence the group for political purposes. The spokesperson states that there are infiltrated people, and that some seek to learn who is being paid by which party. Regarding the U.S. elections, the spokesperson says the situation is being used to send a message to the next administration to be more conscious of what is happening in the south. When asked about Donald Trump and Kamala Harris, he says, “we know that Donald Trump is a great businessman. He had the economy booming like no other president, but we know Kamala Harris is the one that is also accepting, and it is normalizing the entrance for more migrants to enter into The United States Of America.” The spokesperson adds, “We are not going to wait for political decisions; we just want to send a message to the next administration.” Blue reiterates that around 2,500 people are leaving today, on election day, with the caravan moving from the South Border toward Mexico City and then to the United States. He captures the caravan’s ongoing pattern, stating, “How’s everybody doing? … Behind me, you will see a migrant caravan of around 2,500 migrants that they're leaving the South Border in the intention to go to the city of Mexico from the city of Mexico to go all the way to The United States Of America.”

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The speaker describes a massive UN and NGO–driven immigration infrastructure in Mexico and Central America. In Tapachula, Mexico, the UNHCR is constructing a 75,000 square foot “illegal immigration mall” on Mexican land, with the UN and various NGOs under one roof. There is also a large tent city space, indicating a planned, long-term hub for migrants. The speaker notes similar NGO complexes in Colombia and Panama, where NGO villages resemble big swap meets with storefronts for different organizations and permanent billboards directing immigrants to resources needed to continue their journey. They claim hundreds of NGOs operate in the region, including US NGOs, European NGOs, and Latin American NGOs, many affiliated with Catholic dioceses or well-known groups like Doctors Without Borders. These NGOs are described as receiving substantial US taxpayer money to build a cross-border safety net, facilitated by UN agencies and then doled out to national NGOs via US appropriations from the State Department, USAID, and related sources. Financial figures are presented to illustrate the scale: $1.9 billion spent in 2024, $2.2 billion in the previous year, and about $45 billion over the last few years, with 2019 at $377 million in comparison. The speaker suggests this funding is intended to sustain a long-term, high-volume flow of migration from South America to the US border, with Tapachula identified as a key strategic city and the surrounding NGO towns on the migration corridor highlighted as part of the infrastructure. The speaker contends the operations are designed with an expectation of a political outcome, stating they are “betting on a Harris win” and that the system would halt “within an hour of his inauguration” if certain policies were enacted. Specifically, they claim the remain-in-Mexico policy could be immediately implemented, with orders to border patrol and possible invocation of Section 212(f) of the Immigration and Nationality Act to push back and deny asylum to 100% of border crossers. The claim is that this would deter migrants from attempting entry, and that the migrants themselves are closely watching US politics, with many believing that if Trump is in office, entry and asylum access would be substantially harder. The speaker observes that about 50,000 to 60,000 migrants arrive at the border monthly, noting a socioeconomic stratification: wealthier migrants tend to pay human smugglers to reach the border, while the poorer migrants—often from lower-income backgrounds—struggle to finance the final stages of the journey, sometimes needing to borrow or sell assets to reach Mexico, where the poorest end up on the streets in Tapachula. They remark that some nationalities, such as many Chinese and Venezuelans, are described as wealthier within this context.
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