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Sunday, January 12, 2025

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Here are the Republican governors who betrayed Trump and their voters by asking for refugee resettlement in their states

If you are a resident of Arizona, Arkansas, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, or West Virginia who voted Republican in your state’s last gubernatorial race, were you also hoping that your vote would facilitate facilitate the voluntary admission of more third-world refugees? If not, too bad, because that is exactly what has happened, thanks to an astonishing level of moral, guilt-induced gloating by eighteen (and counting) RINO squishes who are all too elated to put foreigners above the citizens who elected them to office.

“But, but, but,” you ask, “shouldn’t Republicans be standing up for their constituents, not the people of the world?”

Oh, you’re probably thinking of a time long, long ago and far, far away… in 2015, when Republicans at least pretended to take a stand against former President Barack Obama’s policy of accepting and dispersing Syrian “refugees” across the country, and public acceptance and even adequate facilities and funding should go to hell. But now, when our side has real power, when a Republican president actually signed implementing regulation requiring state and local approval before they can simply throw refugees out there, suddenly they get cool feet. It’s kind of like Obamacare 2.0, only worse, much, much worse – because, as American Majority founder Ned Ryun said during Performance on Friday night on Tucker Carlson Tonight: “This is how red states turn blue and America stops being America.”

As you might expect, the left is paying attention. In article for Washington Monthly titled “Republican Governors Reject Trump’s Anti-Refugee Agenda,” Nancy LeTourneau seems surprised, even as she boasts about the 15 governors who have signed on. “We are witnessing a group of Republican governors (many of whom represent very red states) rejecting Trump’s white nationalist-inspired anti-refugee agenda,” LeTourneau writes.

If you want to contact any of them, here is a growing list of GOP governors who have outright rejected Trump’s agenda on the issue and called for refugee resettlement in their states:

Doug Ducey, Arizona

Asa Hutchinson, Arkansas

Brad Little, Idaho

Eric Holcomb, Indiana

Kim Reynolds, Iowa

Larry Hogan, Maryland

Charlie Baker, Massachusetts

Mike Parsons, Missouri

Pete Ricketts, Nebraska

Chris Sununu, New Hampshire

Doug Burgum, North Dakota

Mike DeWine, Ohio

Kevin Stitt, Oklahoma

Kristi Noem, South Dakota

Bill Lee, Tennessee

Gary Herbert, Utah

Phil Scott, Vermont

Jim Justice, West Virginia

That’s 18 of 26 GOP governors, but perhaps more telling is that not a single Republican governor has explicitly asked to be disqualified. My own governor, Bill Lee of Tennessee, even ignored the disapproval of state GOP leaders to ask to resettle refugees in his state. For his actions, Lee earned the enthusiastic support of a “pro-life Christian” – a guest columnist for the Memphis Commercial Appeal, who he thanked Governor for “courageously living his faith by choosing to love refugees as fellow humans and continuing to serve the refugee resettlement program in the great state of Tennessee.”

Lee, like most other governors, based his decision at least in part on his Christian faith. It’s a line of thinking that sounds great on the surface, even noble, until you dig a little deeper. First of all, as Fox News host Tucker Carlson astutely asked during his aforementioned conversation with Ryun, these governors “are not actually housing refugees in their own homes or paying with their own money, so how can it be a Christian virtue to take other people’s money by force and give it away? I don’t accept that part of the gospel.”

In reality, Lee’s so-called “Christian values” are costing state taxpayers a lot of money, to the melody more than $80,000 per refugee in the first five years of resettlement, which includes social assistance, housing assistance, and other forms of social assistance and services. It also costs low-income workers in the state forced against their will to compete with an influx of inexpensive labor.

However, if you look closer, you will find… Groups funded by George Soros such as World Relief and the Evangelical Immigration Table, which have been lobbying governors demanding to accept refugees. In reality, refugee “contractors” such as these, along with the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), Church World Service (CWS) and others, whose budgets depend to resettle as many people as possible, have been lobbying governors, mayors, and local officials for months to accept refugees. Their pitch, no doubt, includes helping these well-meaning governors be “good Christians,” but what they are selling comes from the depths of hell.

“We already have over 20 million illegal immigrants living here,” Carlson said in his Friday segment on the subject. “The last thing that many struggling communities need is more low-skilled migrants who can be wonderful people but have a lot of needs. They are straining schools and social programs and not fully integrating. That’s simply the truth, and anyone who has lived in a community where this has happened will tell you it’s true. As with illegal immigration, the long-term goal of refugee resettlement is of course to bring in future Democratic voters.”

“Refugee resettlement has nothing to do with Christianity and everything to do with the immoral behavior of these governments, and quite frankly, it’s a perverse incentive for these government-funded charities to act as refugee contractors, defrauding the American taxpayer,” Ryun said, adding that these contractors are paid “$2,100 per refugee” by the U.S. State Department, “of which they get to keep 45 percent.”

Let’s face it, tens of millions, if not billions, of people would come to the United States if they could. With a massive debt burden, crumbling infrastructure, strained social services, and a social fabric that is on the brink of collapse, there is no logical argument in the world for the United States to accept vast numbers of third-world refugees, especially when helping them where they are makes so much more sense.

In truth, there is absolutely nothing “Christian” about helping Soros-funded groups fill America with future Democratic voters who will ultimately facilitate turn our country into a quasi-communist state. In fact, it is the least Christian thing possible.

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