According to a new report, internal DHS data has revealed how the Biden administration has flown hundreds of thousands of “inadmissible” migrants into U.S. cities — and the top 15 cities are eye-opening. The controversial CHNV mass-parole program has used YOUR tax dollars to send migrants who have claimed refugee status all over the country. But the administration has brought the most migrants into the country BY FAR through airports in (of course) the red state of Florida. This is ON TOP of the record-high illegal immigration that we have seen under the Biden administration. So, what’s the goal here?
Transcript
Below is a rush transcript that may contain errors
GLENN: New internal DHS data reveals 45 US cities that hundreds of thousands of migrants that have felony into via the Biden administrations, controversial CHMV mass parole program.
It shows that the top 15 cities that migrants were flown into, on your tax dollar. On our airlines. Which you have to take your shoes off.
They have to know. I mean, come on over here.
Yeah. Every third person, we do a rectal exam.
Yeah. And now -- now we're just flying these people. Without knowing, who they really are. Doing it in the middle of the night.
Now, these aren't the people who go across the border.
Are these the ones who the United States government went out to, hey. Is anybody -- refugee. If you're a refugee, I've got free tickets to America.
So the top 15 cities, Miami, Florida, 91,000 people were flown in from January through August 2023.
Eight months. Eight months. Miami, Florida, Florida. 91,000.
Ft. Lauderdale. Which is the same city.
I mean, it's Miami Ft. Lauderdale.
STU: Yeah. I used to live in Ft. Lauderdale.
GLENN: It's part of Miami.
STU: It's a little bit of a drive to Miami. It's like Dallas/Fort Worth.
A couple cities close to each other.
GLENN: So Ft. Lauderdale got 60,000. And then New York City is number 3. They got 14,000. Wait a minute.
Wow! That's quite a spread there.
So, you know, they get 150,000, just in Miami, Ft. Lauderdale. And then 14,000 in New York. Houston --
STU: And think about what Eric Adams has said.
GLENN: Oh, I know.
STU: They're overrunning our communities, we can't do anything. Half the cities on this list are on one state. And New York City can't handle this.
GLENN: Yeah. They have 14,000. Then Houston has 8,000.
Orlando has 16,000. Another Florida.
Los Angeles, three. Tampa, another Florida. 3200. Dallas, Texas, is 2200.
San Francisco, 2,000. Atlanta, 2,000.
Newark, New Jersey.
I mean --
STU: Oh, people love Newark.
GLENN: Honestly, if you're like in some other place.
I don't care if they're torturing you. And they say, you want to come to the United States?
Sure. Where am I headed?
Newark, New Jersey. No, I'm going to hang out. I'm good. I'm good.
Put me back on the rack. It's false alarm. I'm not going anywhere.
STU: How are these decisions made?
GLENN: What do you mean?
STU: Do you know -- if you're someone coming in, you're an illegal immigrant, you're on this parole program.
And you come in. Do they say, hey. Here is your -- they have fliers come visit Orlando out there. Look through them until you pick one. Do they assign a city to you? Is it wherever your relatives are?
GLENN: I don't know. It's taken us forever, to get just this information.
STU: I know. It's true. It could be, that these people are like, look, I don't want to go to Newark. So I will pick Tampa or Orlando or Ft. Lauderdale.
My guess is, do you know anyone who lives there?
Yeah. My brother lives in Miami.
So they're flying them to Miami.
I don't know. Regardless, wouldn't the opposite be obvious, if you were honest here? If you're the Biden administration, you keep telling everyone that people in the south and the red states hate immigrants. They're racists. They're, you know, xenophobes. They don't have any programs for them.
So why would you continue to keep bringing them to Florida and Texas. Why?
Wouldn't you bring them to the cities, that have all these wonderful programs that you've passed. Why not?
GLENN: Well, unless you're trying to make sure that you fly them into a city, like Miami, Ft. Lauderdale. That's usually run by Democrats.
And you can have them vote.
STU: But -- but, again, it's not run currently by tells me.
GLENN: Miami, Ft. Lauderdale.
STU: Republican mayor. Remember, he ran for a short time, ran for president.
GLENN: I don't remember that. It was very short. Very short.
STU: Very short. But unless you have enemies, in red states and you realize that what you're doing is a punishment, right?
The same kind of thing that, you know, Greg Abbott did in Texas. You know what, we will send these people up to you guys. You guys deal with them.
Because we're being honest with them here. This is a strain on our society. And so we shouldn't be responsible for them. Because we want them to be stopped before they come in.
Right? All these other people are saying, we're welcoming. You're welcomed here. You will always be welcomed in New York City. I don't know if that one is expired. But that's what Eric Adams was saying when he was running for election.
GLENN: San Francisco.
STU: San Francisco. All these things. We went through and found all the quotes from these mayors.
All of them, welcomed with open arms, illegal who didn't notice. And invited them to come. And now when they actually show up, they realize what the situation is. You're taking a bunch of people who have no current path to earn enough to -- to house themselves. To feed themselves.
To give themselves basic humanitarian aid.
And then you're going to put that on the state, or local -- local communities.
GLENN: Imagine. Imagine your city. Knowing how large you are. You have an influx of 150,000 people.
Where are those jobs?
Where are the jobs for those people? You don't have a deficit of 150,000, you know, employees.
STU: Where do they work?
GLENN: Where are they working?
Where are they working?
By the way, a recent pew poll found that nearly two-thirds of Americans have little or no confidence that Joe Biden is physically fit to be president.
That's two-thirds. When you're talking about the immigration thing, 80 percent of America, wants them to be sent back home.
Okay?
They're starting to get really.
Quite, quite intense object the immigration thing.
And that's Republicans and Democrats.
Everybody knows that the economy is in flames.
Again, two-thirds have little or no confidence that Joe Biden is even physically fit to be president.
What the hell, how is this so close?
How is this so close?
I just -- it doesn't -- it doesn't make sense.
STU: People are not making judgments based on what's in front of them.
GLENN: No. They're not.
STU: They're these partisan. You know, these partisan lanes you get in. And it's impossible to escape them. I don't know. For 80 percent of people, at this point.
We would like to think it's some rare thing.
But it's pretty much everybody who looks at this. And doesn't seem to be spending any time to make this instigation.
Decision was made for them, years ago, decades ago, and they're going and checking the boxes.
Yes. He has mean tweets. But you had a job. We had a country. I mean, yeah. But I know those mean tweets are really, really horrible.