Joe Biden’s deputies create border loophole for millions of ‘stateless’ migrants

President Joe Biden’s pro-migration border chief is opening a new loophole for millions of foreigners who say they are “stateless.”

“All over the world, people who are stateless live with fear and uncertainty … With this historic step, stateless individuals will be given the opportunity to apply for [U.S.] immigration protections and benefits,” said Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas.

Mayorkas’s statement said that there are “approximately 218,000 people residing in the United States who are potentially at risk of statelessness”

But the Department of State reported, “At the end of 2021, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees … counted 4.3 million stateless persons worldwide but estimated that the actual number may be over 10 million due to underreporting.”

“Every one of these actions that they do with what they believe are the ‘best of intentions’ inevitably end up having the worst of results,” countered Andrew Arthur, a former immigration justice who is now with the Center for Immigration Studies. “The devil is gonna be in the details about how they … define people as stateless,” Arthur told Breitbart News.

Biden has already imported at least six million migrants for economic purposes in less than three years. That economic policy has helped investors by inflating real estate prices and reducing Americans’ wages.

Biden’s huge inflow includes roughly two million legal migrants, plus 3.5 million illegal and quasi-legal migrants allowed through loopholes in the southern border, plus roughly 1.6 million unreported “gotaways” who sneaked over the border, plus hundreds of thousands of migrants who have refused to go home when their legal visas expire, plus at least two million temporary visa workers.

That massive inflow adds up to three migrants for every four Americans who turn 18 during the same period.

“Congress has provided guidelines in Section 241(b) of the Immigration Nationality Act for dealing with individuals who a country won’t take. It doesn’t mean they get to stay here,” Arthur said, referring to the small number of actually stateless people who enter the country.

“In the case of most stateless people — [such as] Palestinians — Jordan will generally take them …. [But] there are always going to be people who don’t have birthright citizenship in the country in which they were born, and there’s always going to be an issue with respect to you know, sending them back to those countries. But that’s a diplomatic issue. It doesn’t mean that you grant them [legal] status in the United States. If they’re removable, they’re removable, and they should be removed to a country that will take them,” he added.

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