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- Verified Buyer
Malkin takes no prisoners in her exposé of the illegal immigrant hustlers. She comes down hard on George Soros, billionaire Hungarian globalist who finances organizations and politicians that advocate open borders and decry illegal immigration enforcement. An appendix in the book lists the myriad of such organizations.One of the organizations, to which Malkin devotes an entire chapter, is the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). This organization won big victories against the KKK many years ago. But since then it has morphed into a money-making machine, Malkin says. Its list of so-called hate organizations names hundreds of organizations which the SPLC doesn't like or doesn't agree with. This list is taken as gospel by many influencing persons and companies. Some Silicon Valley stalwarts, like Google, Twitter and Facebook, use the "hate" list to censor the use on their platforms of such listed entities. And such Silicon Valley big shots, like Twitter, have even censored conservative individuals, such as Diamond and Silk, until those two black women exposed what Twitter was doing to them and their Twitter account, at which point Twitter reinstated their account.Malkin goes after the Catholic organizations too for their pro-immigrant stance. She points out that the church is against walls except around the Vatican. Same for the Hollywood elite, like the Clooneys. Rich Hollywood stars are for no walls and open borders, yet they esconch themselves behind walls with security devices and personnel. Such hypocrisy, Malkin notes.Malkin takes Trump to task too, as to his Hire American slogan. Under the Trump administration, the number of H-2B visas, which apply to temporary, low skilled, non-agricultural workers, was increased dramatically; Trump uses such workers at his Mar-a-Largo resort.You'll learn about coyotes charging on average $5000 a head to take an illegal Mexican across the Rio Grande. For Central American illegals, the fee averages $7000. From these coyote fees, the drug cartel controlling the border crossing charges the coyotes between $1000 and $1500 a head. It's a lucrative business for coyotes and drug cartels. But many Central Americans have come to the United States, and not all of them illegally. Over 9 percent of the population of Honduras is in the U.S. With El Salvador, it's 22 percent. The annual revenue from the southern border smuggling enterprise is between $3.7 billion and $4.2 billion, says Malkin. The estimated cost to American taxpayers (at local, state, and federal levels) is annually between $16 billion and $54.5 billion, she states.The book is heavily footnoted. Malkin has done her homework. I've read many of the sources she uses in those footnotes, and they do back up Malkin's assertions. The book is an eye opener. You'll never think of the illegal caravans the same anymore. Or about the persons and organizations that support them either with money, aid or rhetoric.