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Biden’s Parole Pipeline Frees Almost 900K Foreign Nationals into U.S. — Outpacing Populations of 4 States; Dem Border Sheriff: Border Like ‘Open Door’ — Most Crossing Will ‘Have a Hard Time’ Finding Work Due to Lack of Skills

Biden’s Parole Pipeline Frees Almost 900K Foreign Nationals into U.S. — Outpacing Populations of 4 States:

President Joe Biden’s parole pipeline at the southern border has released almost 900,000 foreign nationals into the United States since its inception in January 2023 — outpacing the populations of Wyoming, Vermont, Alaska, and North Dakota.

On Friday, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) released figures for February, showing Biden’s parole pipeline is continuing to successfully import tens of thousands of foreign nationals via the U.S.-Mexico border every month.

From January 2023 through February 2024, more than 893,000 foreign nationals have been released into the nation’s interior thanks to Biden’s parole pipeline, which includes the migrant mobile app known as “CBP One” and so-called “humanitarian parole.”

The CBP One app, whereby migrants schedule appointments at the border for release into the U.S. interior, has brought more than half a million migrants into the country. Likewise, more than 386,000 migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela have arrived in the U.S. on humanitarian parole. —>READ MORE HERE

Dem Border Sheriff: Border Like ‘Open Door’ — Most Crossing Will ‘Have a Hard Time’ Finding Work Due to Lack of Skills:

During an interview released on Thursday’s edition of the “Fox News Rundown” podcast, Maverick County, TX Sheriff Tom Schmerber (D) stated that now the border has “changed a lot. This is kind of like an open door.” And said that “the majority of the people that are coming in have no skills. … I think they’re going to have a hard time trying to find a job.”

Host Jessica Rosenthal asked, [relevant exchange begins around 7:20] “I wonder, can you compare what you’re seeing now as a Sheriff in Maverick County, 2023-2024, to what you dealt with as an agent back after 9/11?”

Schmerber responded, “Before that, it was just…immigrants that were coming to work…and not to stay. The majority were not here to stay. But now, it’s changed a lot. This is kind of like an open door. Some people come here to stay, and, of course, with that, the criminal element took advantage and we had drugs coming through here, burglaries, and we had one situation where an immigrant from Honduras raped one of the senior citizens. … So, it changed a lot, very different.” —>READ MORE HERE

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