4/11/14, "The Legacy of Obama's Illegal Alien Aunt," Michelle Malkin, Townhall
.
"Zeituni Onyango, President Obama's illegal alien aunt, died this week
of cancer and other complications. I hope she rests in peace. America,
however, should be up in arms.
Auntie Zeituni is an enduring
symbol of all that is wrong with this country's immigration "policy" --
or rather, its complete lack of a coherent, enforceable system of laws
and rules that puts the national interest first. She was a beneficiary
of the welfare state run amok, enabled by bipartisan fecklessness.
To
the bitter end, she bit the hand that fed her with predictable
ingratitude and metastatic entitlement. Zeituni's 14-year illegal
overstay is a reminder that our temporary visa program is an abysmal
joke.
Like millions of foreign students, business people and tourists to
this country, Auntie Zeituni obtained a short-term visitor visa in
2000. It had an expiration date. She was supposed to go back to Kenya in
two years after traveling here with her son, who had been accepted at a
college in Boston.
But like millions of other "temporary" visa
overstayers, Auntie Zeituni never went home. And despite billions spent
on homeland security and immigration enforcement, no one ever went
looking for her to kick her out of the country after her time was up.
Auntie
Zeituni had no job skills, no special talent, no compelling reason to
keep her here in America as an asset to our culture or our economy. She
didn't value the American Dream. She was a dependency nightmare. She
collected $700 a month in welfare benefits and disability payments
totaling $51,000. Somehow, Auntie Zeituni also drummed up money to apply
for asylum and finagled her way into both federal and state public
housing in Boston.
She contributed nothing to this country. The
only "work" she did was gaming the system, complaining about her lot and
blaming everyone else for her problems while they subsidized her
14-year illegal overstay.
Auntie Zeituni's ridiculous asylum
application and what happened afterward are reminders that our asylum
and deportation systems are appalling jokes. Auntie Zeituni's bogus
request was rejected by the immigration court system. A judge ordered
her to return to Kenya in 2003. She appealed. She lost. A judge again
ordered her to leave in 2004.
But Auntie Zeituni never went home.
Like an estimated 700,000 other deportation absconders, she evaded the
judicial order for nearly a half-dozen years and continued to feed at
the government trough. When the Bush administration had the chance to
put the pedal to the enforcement metal in 2008, they caved. Pandering to
pro-amnesty forces, Bush officials issued a 72-hour cease-and-desist
order to all fugitive apprehension teams to spare Obama embarrassment
over his auntie right before Election Day.
As an Immigration and
Customs Enforcement source told me at the time: "The ICE fugitive
operations group throughout the U.S. was told to stand down until after
the election from arresting or transporting anyone out of the U.S. This
was done to avoid any mistakes of deporting or arresting anyone who
could have a connection to the election, i.e., anyone from Kenya who
could be a relative.
The decision was election-driven." Such stand-down
non-enforcement orders are standard operating procedure in Washington.
Auntie
Zeituni's illegal activity and ingratitude were rewarded time and time
again. She got multiple bites at the immigration court apple, where it
ain't over till the alien wins. Despite twice being ordered to go home,
the feds allowed her bogus case to be reopened. After breaking visa
laws, campaign finance laws (she donated illegally to Obama three
times), deportation rules and judicial orders, she was allowed to have
yet another hearing. Her manufactured claim of a "credible fear of
persecution" in Kenya made a mockery of every legitimate case for asylum
or refugee status.
"If I come as an immigrant, you have the
obligation to make me a citizen," Auntie Zeituni demanded. She griped
that America had "used" her and then cashed in on a book about her
travails called "Tears of Abuse." And then, after a decade of doing
absolutely nothing to enhance the well-being of our country, she
received a coveted green card in 2010.
Neither Republican nor
Democratic leaders in Washington had the will to kick this trash-talking
freeloader (or her drunk-driving, deportation-evading, amnesty-securing
deadbeat brother Omar Onyango) out of our home. Auntie Zeituni's story
is a disgraceful reminder that the only thing worse than the ingrates
thumbing their noses at our immigration laws are the people in power on
both sides of the aisle enabling them." via Free Rep.
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Comment: The US taxpayer would like to help billions of people in the world who need help. Since that isn't possible, how is it decided whom the US taxpayer should help and whom he/she should not help? Where is this written down?
.
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