


“There’s no business like show business,” Judy Garland once sang, but until recently the migrant business of foisting illegal aliens falsely claiming to be ‘refugees’ on Americans used to be very big business.
Sadly for illegal alien invaders and their profiteers, it’s going downhill.
The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops sued Trump claiming that $65 million had been allocated for 6,700 invaders and that with the funding cutoff, it’s on the hook for millions of dollars.
Reportedly it has laid off a third of its staff.
Catholic Charities in Houston, an epicenter of the invasion, announced it was laying off 120 workers.
In Dallas, Catholic Charities jettisoned 59 employees. A news story cited the help given to an Afghan ‘refugees’.
Episcopal Migration Ministries laid off 22 employees, Jesuit Refugee Services has laid off 400, and HIAS (formerly Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society) cut 22 staff members.
Church World Service Lancaster furloughed much of its staff. IRIS (Integrated Refugee and Immigrant Services) in Connecticut laid off 20% of its staff and the Catherine McAuley Center in Cedar Rapids dumped around half of its workforce.
Those are just sample stories from around the country but they’re crucial because forcing refugee resettlers to lay off staff makes it harder for them to reopen again and helps cripple the invasion pipeline.
Refugee resettlers lose, Americans win.