At a CGI meeting earlier this the year, globalist Clinton floated the idea to let Syrians rebuild the ruins of Detroit.
The idea that the United States should import immigrants to do the jobs “average Americans won’t do,” goes back to the days when America were still colonies and slave ships traversed the Atlantic.
Later, immigrants were important during the westward expansion to help build railroads, work in coal mines and fuel the textile industry.
It should come as no surprise, then, when former President Bill Clinton floats idea to bring in Syrian refugees to help rebuild the desolate ruins of Detroit. Yet, it seems to have slipped through the cracks of the mainstream media.
At a Clinton Global Initiative meeting in February, Clinton discussed the migrant crisis with billionaire and mass migration enthusiast Hamdi Ulukaya of the Chobani yogurt empire.
Ulukayam, Breitbart notes, “has become a figure of controversy for his decision to fill his yogurt plants with foreign refugees rather than unemployed Americans.”
Although the unemployment rate among African Americans in Detroit (as it is elsewhere) is still double the national average, Clinton apparently sees the importation of refugees to rebuild the city as a viable option to be explored.
“This is an enormous opportunity for Americans,” Bill Clinton said about the Syrian migrant crisis.
Detroit has 10,000 empty, structurally sound houses—10,000. And lot of jobs to be had repairing those houses. Detroit just came out of bankruptcy and the mayor’s trying to do an innovative sort of urban homesteading program there. But it just gives you an example of what could be done. And I think any of us who have ever had any personal experience with either Syrian Americans or Syrian refugees think it’s a pretty good deal.
As the government quietly fulfilled its goal of importing 10,000 Syrian refugees into communities around the United States this week, often without knowledge of local authorities, there is a growing outcry from local officials.
Today, the U.S. met @POTUS’s commitment to resettle 10,000 Syrian refugees fleeing terrorism and violence. #RefugeesWelcome
— Homeland Security (@DHSgov) August 29, 2016
However, that has done little to stop the federal government from placing the Syrians into communities the feds choose and, perhaps coincidentally, the top destinations for the Syrian refugees are California and Michigan.