The lies refugee resettlers tell about their lucrative business

Don’t be fooled by the churchy sounding names of NGOs that resettle refugees into American cities and towns

Leo Hohmann

These NGOs receive tens of millions of dollars each year from the federal government to distribute foreign refugees into American cities and towns. Many of them are put to work in meatpacking plants and other undesirable jobs. The Chobani yogurt plant in Boise, Idaho, has filled out roughly 30 percent of its workforce with refugee labor supplied over the years by the U.S. federal government working in partnership with the United Nations.
What we are talking about here is a legalized human-trafficking operation, the root of which starts at the United Nations’ International Organization for Migration (IOM). The IOM, under the leadership of former Biden aide Amy Pope, coordinates the flow of refugees from the Third World to the Western nations it seeks to topple.
If President Donald Trump is serious about fixing the immigration crisis in America and ending the extremely profitable human-trafficking operation known as refugee resettlement, he will pull the U.S. out of the United Nations and kick this global entity out of our country.
World Relief says close to 190 foreign refugees have arrived in Chicago alone over the past three months. While Trump is cutting off the flow of federal money the organization gets to resettle these refugees in America, its Chicago director, Peter Zigterman, says he and his staff will find a will find a way to continue their work. He told ABC News:

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