Deportation to South Sudan: Poetic and Providential Justice for Violent Criminal Illegal Aliens?
The Assistant Director of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) recently posted the article:
8 Barbaric Criminal Illegal Aliens Finally Deported to South Sudan After Weeks of Delays by Activist Judges
One of the questions that the article does not address—and something that came to my mind immediately—was this: Why would anybody who has even a semblance of fear and dread left in his otherwise completely seared conscience want to risk getting deported to South Sudan?
As the article pointed out, these criminals are so heinously bad that their countries of origin won't take them back. That leaves them with few options other than being deported to some human hell-hole of a nation like South Sudan. First, they can just take their chances and hope they will never get caught and deported from the United States. With recent SCOTUS decisions making that much less unlikely, and with no notable decrease in the Trump Administration's campaign to remove these worst-of-the-worst illegal alien criminals, just waiting it out in the U.S. does not seem like a great choice. Second, they can try to sneak their way out of the U.S. and sneak their way back into their countries of origin, in which many of them were already incarcerated when their countries realized they could set them free to go to the United States, thus ridding the country of the burden of keeping them incarcerated. Third, — and I would argue their best choice — they could try to sneak into some sanctuary(esque) country, where they will be safe until the puppy-dog citizens of those faux-altruistic countries have their eyes opened. I would suggest that the third option, deportation to South Sudan, is infinitely far worse than the first two options.
If you are a criminal illegal alien in the United States and you are reading this blog post (zero percent chance of that!), I have gone to the trouble of checking out what you might expect of your new life of incarceration in Sudan. And it's not pretty. Just click here.
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