Posted on 08/25/2021 8:52:44 AM PDT by RandFan
A majority of Americans oppose the resettlement of more than 50,000 Afghans in the United States, according to a survey by Rasmussen Reports.
The August 18-19 survey of 1,000 likely voters was taken as President Joe Biden appears to be expanding the number of migrants he is flying to the United States, far above the initial predictions of 22,000 Afghans — plus family members — who worked alongside the U.S. soldiers who were supporting Afghanistan’s government.
“Enormous numbers of [Afghan] people are trying to jam themselves into that [airlift] funnel right now,” said Ken Cuccinelli, who served as the deputy chief of homeland security for President Donald Trump. Even if President Joe Biden does not want to raise the inflow, Cuccinelli added, “there are plenty of people in this country, of both parties, who would be more than happy to use this excuse to just grab another 50,000 or 100,000 immigrants through this unusual pipeline at this deadly moment.”
(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...
Who cares about Americans?
Do Republicans care?
Doesn’t matter what America opposes. Rats gonna do what Rats gonna do. More votes for the Dems.
Don’t you love farce?
My fault, I fear
I thought that you’d want what I want
Sorry, my dear!
But where are Afghans?
Send in Afghans
Don’t bother, they’re here!
Bush League Republicans have made it clear they do not care what the citizens want.
They refused to fund the fence and enforcement when Trump was in office.
Countries reflect the character of the people who inhabit them. Bring a few, you get the personal character of the individuals. Bring many, and you get the country they fled.
So they’ll just dump ‘em in Mexico so they can walk in!
Not just Democrats, Assistant Democrats in R jerseys have kept the borders open and the laws unenforced for 30 years.
By 2014 Flimsey Grahamnesty had voted for amnesty and a permanent Democrat majority THREE times and stupid SC voters re-elected him TWICE since then.
‘Countries reflect the character of the people who inhabit them. Bring a few, you get the personal character of the individuals. Bring many, and you get the country they fled.’
very wise statement. Thank you.
We’re all going to have time to reflect on whether helping the Afghans keep the Talibs out of Kabul was worth the cost.
Similar to whatever it costs to keep Kim out of Seoul. Is it worth it? There’s one easy way to find out.
What about the Americans over there? Are they hostages?
BUT we gotta get out all those Americans trapped at Kabul Disney!
Bush even wanted massive immigration after 9/11/01 !!! He is pathologically anti-American values.
The whole Afghan army worked with us and the whole Afghan army stood down at the sight of the Tali’s. You think we owe the whole Afghan army refuge?
By the wording from biden and the biden friendly media..those who wish to leave..meaning many? are choosing? to stay.
It almost sounds like they’ve all been converted to Muslim and or the women turned into sex slaves..?
MIDDLE EAST: The Taliban Now Controls a U.S.-Made Super-Surveillance System
For 20 years, biometric surveillance served as a substitute for a civil society and the rule of law. Now, those tools are in the hands of the Taliban.
Albert Fox Cahn: Updated Aug. 24, 2021 7:12AM ET / Published Aug. 24, 2021 3:37AM ET
In Kabul, checkpoints are now manned by Taliban fighters using bio-metric scanners paid for by the American people to hunt down civilians who worked and fought alongside us, in what should be a reckoning for everyone who sold bio-metric surveillance as a tool for good.
Over the last 20 years, Afghanistan became a technological training ground. It was the place America experimented with new weapons of war, like the Predator drone, often with horrific results. It’s also where we experimented with new forms of surveillance, both militarized and humanitarian. By going community to community, scanning Afghans’ bio-metric data indiscriminately, the U.S. hoped to create new counter-insurgency tools.
That effort failed to create anything that could stop the Taliban, but it did create things that are incredibly dangerous in the Taliban’s own hands.
Approximately 80 percent of the country, roughly 25 million people, were targeted for inclusion in the U.S. military’s biometric database. Now, the Handheld Interagency Identity Detection Equipment can scan Afghans’ fingerprints, faces, and irises to reveal biographical information. The Microsoft-powered device can also tap into a much larger national database of information on millions of Afghans collected by the United States over two decades of war.
With that technology, the Taliban will take control of one of the most sophisticated state surveillance systems on the planet.
It gets worse. While few expected the U.S. military to focus on promoting Afghans’ civil rights, many expected better from the United Nations, particularly the UN Refugee Agency. Instead, the UNHCR drove a nearly two-decade long campaign to require bio-metric data to receive aid, creating yet another dangerous database for the Taliban to control.
Since 2002, Afghanistan served as a de facto testing ground for new bio-metric technology, including one of the earliest iris scanning systems in the world. For aid agencies, this was a way to not only confirm the identities of employees, but to track who received food and other staples, blocking recipients from receiving too much food under multiple names. Privacy and civil rights complaints were dismissed as alarmist—as they so often are—but now Afghans will pay the price.
As in countless other low-income countries, bio-metric surveillance became a substitute for civil society and the rule of law. Yes, fraud and embezzlement are real problems. Yes, we must ensure that aid gets to those most in need. But when we respond to humanitarian crises with dystopian tools like facial recognition and iris scans, we’re undermining the very democratic principles we were supposedly fighting to support.
Every time bio-metric surveillance became more embedded in Afghan society, the risks for abuse grew, but the pushback was ignored. When facial recognition became the entry fee for casting a ballot, those on the ground and their supporters around the world pushed back, only to once again be ignored.
Today, the elaborate network of bio-metric surveillance that was largely bought and paid for with American taxpayer dollars is now one of the Taliban’s most terrifying tools. Aid workers, interpreters, and other American allies can get forged papers, they can wipe their phones, but they can’t change their faces. And for those risking their lives to get to the Kabul airport and the last fleeting hope of safety, every Taliban checkpoint brings the risk of a facial scan, and deadly repercussions.
Most countries don’t face the same risk of collapse that the Afghan government did, but the lessons still apply. Whenever we let any company or government capture our bio-metric data, we give them the one form of information that will haunt us for life. You can change your name but not your iris or DNA.
Even if we trust our own government with such tracking tools (and we should not), what about everyone else who can take the data? Nearly 200,000 Americans’ faces were taken in just one Department of Homeland Security hack in 2019, but that’s infinitesimal compared to the millions of federal employees whose data was stolen in the 2015 Office of Personnel Management hack.
It doesn’t take a governmental collapse to see our bio-metric data transformed from a tool used by police into one used by criminals and militants. And so far, there is only one surefire way to protect our bio-metric data and prevent it from being repurposed: not collecting it in the first place.
In Kabul, checkpoints are now manned by Taliban fighters using bio-metric scanners paid for by the American people to hunt down civilians who worked and fought alongside us, in what should be a reckoning for everyone who sold bio-metric surveillance as a tool for good.
That effort failed to create anything that could stop the Taliban, but it did create things that are incredibly dangerous in the Taliban’s own hands.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-taliban-now-controls-a-us-made-super-surveillance-system
Good grief.
No. I’m not talking about rank and file soldiers. It’s the interpreters, etc., that will be targeted. They are the ones at high risk to whom we made promises
I get that, but I am hearing numbers like 50,000 Afghans we need to rescue. I cant believe we owe 50,000 Afghans refuge. I cant believe its 10,000. Maybe 2000 of those that really put themselves out there. Not every one who ever worked in a US base laundry or PX.
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