Posted on 11/23/2018 4:32:45 PM PST by mdittmar
Central American asylum seekers who have reached the U.S. border are coming to grips with the reality that they will be on the Mexican side of the frontier for an extended stay.
(Excerpt) Read more at apnews.com ...
You are right.
“California is a Sanctuary State.”
Yes, but Trump’s plan renders that null. But I am sure it originally had a bearing on where the caravan lands.
Sanctuary State is the market pull here
An associate who watches FN noticed that FN forgot to mention the following regarding the most recent caravan migrant videos.
Associate claims that migrants were wearing summer clothing awhile back, but are now wearing winter clothing. If such is the case, did any Freepers notice migrants possibly carrying winter clothing in backpacks or whatever, possibly in beds of caravan support trucks?
Google shows migrants wearing short sleeve t-shirts as well as jackets.
With all due respect to the decent migrants, I surmise that George Soros takes good care of his useful idiots.
I hope Paul Ryano slips on a banana peel and cracks his head wide open.
My guess is, it’s the night time
temps of November. San Diego average
November nighttime temp is 54. In
Tucson, it’s 45, in El Paso/southern
New Mexico, it’s 29 deg. The warmest
region is Brownsville at 60 deg, but
is the most dangerous due to cartels.
Yes, I was thinking about weather as well . . .
Need to be shipped back asap to a Consulate of their choosing.
Mexico made them an Offer
But, but, but democrats told us the caravan was nothing... and it would take months to get here...
The areas AROUND San Diego proper are lower income. It’s insanely expensive to live there - and for what?
Well, the weather is 72 and sunny every day, so there’s that - plus the ocean. We were only there as my then-husband was in the Navy and stationed there. I headed back to Wisconsin, ASAP, LOL!
Many Wisconsinites feel the very same way!
The area south of San Diego includes San Ysidro and National City. Lower income and closest to the border. Chula Vista is mostly middle class.
North of SD is La Jolla and Del Mar hardly lower income. Houses up to 15 million.
If you don’t know why people love here, here’s a hint. Weather, military influence including retirees. Clean industry and research. Lots of recreation year round. I could go on, but it seems to me you don’t know what you’re talking about.
Oceanside, CA
did I mention, the ocean
Yeah, I mentioned all of that in my last post.
Just my personal observations from living there in the early eighties. I didn’t have money, so everyone looked better off than me, LOL!
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