Bearing Honduran flags, demanding entry into our country; isn't that called an invasion? Supported by a fifth column of American leftists taught by American media and academia to hate our nation and all it has been.
When asked after the first Constitutional Convention what the founding fathers had given us, Benjamin Franklin's answer was, "A republic, if you can keep it".
It seems this generation of Americans no longer has the desire to keep it. The Tunnel Dweller
Taxing Remittances Can Build the Wall "Among the alleged asylum-seekers parked on the U.S. border is a contingent of Hondurans, allegedly fleeing persecution, poverty, crime, and oppression. If that is the case, then why is the Honduran government helping them, driving them northward under orders given to the Honduran ambassador, who is helping and escorting them?"
. . .
"Why is the country whose oppression they are allegedly fleeing helping them leave? The answer is remittances, the money sent back home by so-called "migrants." Asylum is in large part a colossal scam designed to provide Latin American countries with both a safety valve and a cash cow of foreign exchange. In 2017, remittances sent back to Honduras totaled $4.33 billion and make up a significant part of the Honduran economy:"
. . .
When asked after the first Constitutional Convention what the founding fathers had given us, Benjamin Franklin's answer was, "A republic, if you can keep it".
It seems this generation of Americans no longer has the desire to keep it. The Tunnel Dweller
Taxing Remittances Can Build the Wall "Among the alleged asylum-seekers parked on the U.S. border is a contingent of Hondurans, allegedly fleeing persecution, poverty, crime, and oppression. If that is the case, then why is the Honduran government helping them, driving them northward under orders given to the Honduran ambassador, who is helping and escorting them?"
. . .
"Why is the country whose oppression they are allegedly fleeing helping them leave? The answer is remittances, the money sent back home by so-called "migrants." Asylum is in large part a colossal scam designed to provide Latin American countries with both a safety valve and a cash cow of foreign exchange. In 2017, remittances sent back to Honduras totaled $4.33 billion and make up a significant part of the Honduran economy:"
. . .
Talk about a trade imbalance. We import alleged asylum-seekers and other illegal aliens, and they send home billions sucked out of a benevolent U.S. government and economy.
Trump's wall would do a lot to stop this, but the question is how to pay for it. One U.S. congressman has suggested a way to get Mexico to pay for it, and Honduras, and Guatemala, and the rest of them:
How do we tax it when they work on a cash basis?
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