New York City Is Kicking Illegal Immigrants Out To Make Room For New Illegals, Even Families

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New York City Is Kicking Illegal Immigrants Out To Make Room For New Illegals, Even Families Being Evicted

-Single adults get kicked out after 30 days
-Families have a 60 day time limit

Migrants Are Missing “That's 80,000 people who are gone, and nobody knows where they are”…
12:58 PM · Mar 20, 2024
https://fxtwitter.com/WallStreetApes/status/1770450165733953849
New York City Is Kicking Illegal Immigrants Out To Make Room For New Illegals, Even Families Being Evicted

-Single adults get kicked out after 30 days
-Families have a 60 day time limit

Migrants Are Missing “That's 80,000 people who are gone, and nobody knows where they are”

“Which is why even families with children are having to be evicted. Single adults get kicked out after 30 days. Families have a 60 day time limit. The city says this is done to to free up bed space for new arrivals. And of course, whenever the city moves someone out of the shelter, they claim it as a victory.

That person has now learned to self sustain. But the reality is that the city doesn't keep track of what happens to people after they leave. They could be anywhere, and critics say the fate that befalls someone who gets kicked out, it puts them in a terrible position. This article says that half the families who get kicked out never end up coming back to the shelter system. And that's especially scary when you consider that over a 180,000 have come here, but only 65,000 remain in the city shelters.

That's 80,000 people who are gone, and nobody knows where they are. But before we get into the scary reality of what happens to those who leave the shelters, consider the immense challenges that people living in the shelters face. They're in a new country where they don't speak the language and they don't have approval to work legally. How does that person leave and provide for themselves? After they move out of the shelter, they're still gonna be relying the group has been recruiting migrants who recently arrived in the city to do his dirty work.

They're using stolen mopeds to ride up behind innocent New Yorkers to steal their cell phones. So this gang member, he was running an operation that involved people using mopeds to snatch handbags and phones from unsuspecting New Yorkers all over town. And not only did he have operations in New York and in Miami, apparently, many of those he recruited had residences residences in the New York City shelter system. And when arrested, the leader of this gang said that the problem of organized crime is much bigger than him. And he's right that because the shelter system itself gave him an unlimited number of people he could approach to recruit into his operation because it's trapping people, and so is he.

And although many asylum seekers just want a better life, after becoming trapped in the shelters, to many, crime seems like the only way out. And that's why the next person So this might not look like much, but it's an abandoned storefront. There are thousands of these throughout the city, and they're part of the problem too. Because recently, criminals have been using these abandoned facilities as unofficial shelters. They throw down a bunch of beds in an old restaurant or an old furniture store and then start charging people to live inside these illegal dwellings.

And remember, the city has a missing vanishing population of around a 100,000 people. That's a massive illegal market for housing. The gang leader, for example, he had a network of illegal apartments all over town that he was letting people stay in as long as they would join his gang and commit crime so that he could earn money and afford the place where they live. And in the shelters, you've got many people who are young, they're idle, they can't work, they can't earn a living, and he's saying, hey, just work for me for a little bit, and then you can leave and go live a normal life afterwards. And at best, the people who end up leaving the shelter system are looking at a very long road to legal self sufficiency if they can even work for a living.

This article mentions that many asylum seekers illegally work under the table, and that's probably not a high enough paying endeavor for someone to afford New York City rent. After all, rents here are some of the highest in the entire country.”

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