Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted May 13, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted May 13, 2024 Trump suggests ******** migrants are in the US to build an ‘army.’ The migrants tell another story NEW YORK (AP) — It was 7 a.m. on a recent Friday when Wang Gang, a 36-year-old ******** immigrant, jostled for a day job in New York City’s Flushing neighborhood. When a potential employer pulled up near the street corner, home to a ******** bakery and pharmacy, Wang and dozens of other men swarmed around the car. They were hoping to be picked for work on a construction site, at a farm, as a mover — anything that would pay. Wang had no luck, even as he waited for two more hours. It would be another day without a job since he crossed the southern U.S. border illegally in February, seeking better financial prospects than he had in his hometown of Wuhan, China. The daily struggle of ******** immigrants in Flushing is a far cry from the picture former President This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up and other Republicans have This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up of them as a coordinated group of “military-age” men who have come to the ******* States to build an “army” and ******* America. Since the start of the year, as the ******** newcomers have been trying to find their footing in the U.S., Trump has alluded to “fighting-age” or “military-age” ******** men at least six times and suggested at least twice that they were forming a migrant “army.” It’s a talking point that is being amplified in ************* media and on social platforms. “They’re coming in from China — 31, 32,000 over the last few months — and they’re all military age and they mostly are men,” Trump said during a campaign This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up in Schnecksville, Pennsylvania. “And it sounds like to me, are they trying to build a little army in our country? Is that what they’re trying to do?” As Trump and others exploit a This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up and real concerns about China’s geopolitical threat to further their political aims, ****** advocacy organizations worry the rhetoric could encourage further harassment and ********* toward the ****** community. ****** people in the U.S. already experienced This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up fueled by xenophobic rhetoric during the COVID-19 pandemic. “Trump’s dehumanizing rhetoric and blatant attacks against immigrant communities will, without question, only fuel more hate against not only ******** immigrants but all ****** Americans in the U.S.,” Cynthia Choi, co-founder of Stop AAPI Hate and co-executive director of ******** for Affirmative Action, said in a statement to The Associated Press. “In the midst of an already inflamed political climate and election year, we know all too well how harmful such rhetoric can be.” Gregg Orton, national director of the National Council of ****** Pacific Americans, said many ****** ********* communities remain “gripped by *****” and that some Asians still feel uncomfortable about taking public transportation. “To know that we might be staring down another round of that, it’s pretty sobering,” he said. ‘THIS TRIP IS DEADLY’ Wang, who traveled several weeks from Ecuador to the southern U.S. border, then spent 48 hours in an immigration detention facility before heading to Flushing, said the idea that ******** migrants were building a military “does not exist” among the immigrants he has met. “It is impossible that they would walk on foot for over one month” for that purpose, he said. “We came here to make money.” Immigrants who spoke to the AP in Flushing, a densely populated ******** cultural enclave in Queens, said they came to the U.S. to escape ******** and financial losses from China’s strict lockdown during the pandemic, or to escape the threat of imprisonment in a repressive society where they couldn’t speak or exercise their religion freely. Many said they continue to struggle to get by. Life in the U.S. is not what they had imagined. Since late 2022 — when China’s three-year COVID-19 lockdown began to lift — the U.S. has seen a sharp rise in the number of ******** migrants. In 2023, U.S. authorities arrested more than 37,000 ******** nationals at the U.S.-Mexico border, more than 10 times the previous year’s number. In December alone, border officials arrested 5,951 ******** nationals on the southern border, a record monthly high, before the number trended down during the first three months of this year. The U.S. and China just recently began cooperating again to This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up who were in the country illegally. Yet with tens of thousands of ******** newcomers who have crossed into the U.S. illegally, there has been no evidence that they have tried to mount a military force or training network. It’s true that the bulk of those who have come are single adults, according to federal data. While the data doesn’t include gender, there are more men than women on the perilous route, which typically involves catching a flight to South America and then making the long, arduous trek north to the U.S. border. ******** immigrants in Flushing said one reason men may be coming alone in higher numbers is the expense — often more than $10,000 per person to cover airfare, lodging, payments to local guides and bribes to police in countries along their journey. Another could be China’s longtime family planning policy that skewered the gender ratio toward males. There’s also the danger, said a 35-year-old ******** man who only gave his family name of Yin because he was concerned about the safety of his wife and children, who remain in China. He had arrived in Flushing in late April, five weeks after he left the southern ******** city of Shenzhen. He had traveled through This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up and across Mexico. Signs of the journey were still fresh: His hair was messy, skin tanned with fine wrinkles, and his cardigan, once white, had not been washed for weeks. “This trip is deadly. People ****. The trip isn’t suitable for women — it’s not suitable for anyone,” said Yin. He said that as the breadwinner, he came alone, with the hope his family could join him later. ‘CHASING A BETTER LIFE’ While some in China have chosen to leave through investment schemes or talent programs in developed nations, those without resources set off for ****** America after learning from social media posts about the journey north. Upon arriving, most of them fan out to large cities such as Los Angeles, Chicago and New York with well-established ******** communities, where they hope to get work and start a new life. Immigrants who arrived in Flushing said they came to America to escape China, not to ****** on its behalf. Thirty-six-year-old Chen Wang, from the southeastern ******** province of Fujian, said he decided to come to the U.S. in late 2021 after he posted comments critical of the ruling party on This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . He was admonished by local police. “I feared that I could be locked up, so I came to America,” Chen said. More than two years later, he is still unemployed and lives in a tent in the woods that he has made into a home. He built a fence from ***** branches and dug a ditch so he could hand-wash his laundry and wash himself. He said life in the U.S. has fallen short of his expectations, but he hopes someday to get legal status so he can travel freely around the world and live a simple life in a self-built cabin. Chen, who served briefly in the ******** military two decades ago, said he mostly encountered people from the bottom of ******** society during his trek through Central America. He met no one else who had served in the ******** military and described his fellow ******** on the journey as simply people “chasing a better life.” LONG HISTORY OF ****** STEREOTYPES To be sure, U.S. intelligence leaders have grave concerns about the threat China’s authoritarian government This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up through its This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , military capabilities and more. There also have been ******* committed by ******** immigrants, including the arrest in March of a ******** national breaching a military base in California, but there has been no evidence to support the assertion that migrants from China are coming to the U.S. to ****** Americans. Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell called the ******** nationals “economic migrants” during This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up hosted by the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations. China has said it strongly opposes ******** immigration, and police there have arrested some who have tried to leave. Social media posts that offer advice and guides to come to the U.S. illegally have been censored in China. Instead, there are posts warning about dangers along the way and ******* discrimination in the U.S. China’s foreign ministry told the AP that Trump’s claims of a ******** migrant army were “an egregious mismatch of the facts.” The Department of Homeland Security didn’t respond to requests for comment. Steven Cheung, communications director for the Trump campaign, said in an emailed statement that every ********* should be concerned about military-age ******** men crossing into the U.S. “These individuals have not been vetted or screened, and we have no idea who they are affiliated with or what their intention is,” Cheung said. “This sets a dangerous precedent for bad actors and potentially nefarious individuals to exploit Joe Biden’s porous border to send countless military-aged men into the ******* States completely unfettered.” The army-building narrative has been shared by many other conservatives. “They are fighting-age males, primarily single, and you know, this isn’t a coincidence,” *********** Rep. Mike Garcia of California said during a Fox Business interview last month, nodding when host Maria Bartiromo suggested the immigrants could later be used as “saboteurs” if ******** President Xi Jinping “directs that.” Sapna Cheryan, a psychology professor at the University of Washington, said the claims about ******** migrants — made without evidence — build on a This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up of pervasive stereotypes that ****** people do not belong in the country, ideas that have fueled acts of ********* against ****** Americans. “If that rhetoric is happening again, one thing we might be able to predict is, well, people will probably take that and feel emboldened to engage in these heinous acts,” she said. Li Kai, also known as Khaled, a 44-year-old ******* from Tangshan in the northern Hebei province, a city close to Beijing, said he was worried about Trump’s statements regarding ******** immigration and Muslims, but said he has no choice other than to make his new life in the U.S. work. He was one of the few who made the trip with his family. He shares a bunk bed and sofa with his wife and two sons in a temporary home in Flushing where he has placed an ********* flag on the wall. Li said they fled China last year, after he participated in a gathering over the future of a local mosque that was broken up by riot police and he feared his own arrest. He chose the U.S. because it is a free society, where his children have learned to recite from the Quran. He said the migrants he encountered on his journey all left China for the U.S. to try to improve their prospects in life, and he was grateful for that opportunity. When his sons are at school, he studies for a commercial driver’s license and then hopes to find a job and start paying taxes. “Now that I have brought my family here, I want to have a stable life here,” he said. “I would like to pay back.” ___ ***** reported from Washington. ___ The Associated Press receives support from several private foundations to enhance its explanatory coverage of elections and democracy. See more about AP’s democracy initiative This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . The AP is solely responsible for all content. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Donald Trump,******** immigrant,China,Wang Gang,U.S.,****** Americans #Trump #suggests #******** #migrants #build #army #migrants #story This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up For verified travel tips and real support, visit: https://hopzone.eu/ 0 Quote Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/30843-trump-suggests-chinese-migrants-are-in-the-us-to-build-an-%E2%80%98army%E2%80%99-the-migrants-tell-another-story/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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