Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Trump needs to understand why Sanctuary Cities exist in the first place: not the reason he thinks

Sanctuary cities exist for one reason: To prevent Crime and murder and rape and mayhem.

So, if you have a high concentration of Hispanic non-citizens in any U.S. area and they are afraid of the police they will never tell police anything about anything because they don't want to be identified and deported.

If they know the name of a murderer: They will NEVER tell the police
IF they know the name of a rapist: They will NEVER tell the police
IF they know any man, woman or child is being harmed or tortured: They will never tell the police

So, Sanctuary cities exist to protect everyone. They protect the Hispanic Non-citizens who are not afraid to talk to the police to tell them something is wrong or there is a murderer present.

Trump doesn't understand the real reason Sanctuary cities exist because he doesn't live in California or any of the other Sanctuary cities.

So, in order to prevent crime and violence in places with high concentrations of non-citizen Hispanics you either have Sanctuary cities or you have complete chaos all the time with AK-47s going off all the time and killing people and rapes and gang warfare and everything else bad without limit because no one is ever going to tell the police anything they need to know for fear of being deported.

This is just reality.

So, in order to prevent mass deaths sanctuary cities exist.

So, ending sanctuary cities is tantamount to letting criminals do whatever they want like gang warfare and gang rape all the time. 

PLACES LIKE SAN FRANCISCO AND LOS ANGELES ESPECIALLY ARE AWARE OF THIS FACTOR! OBVIOUSLY TRUMP IS COMPLETELY IGNORANT!

  • What is a sanctuary city? And what happens now?

    BEGIN QUOTE FROM:

    What is a sanctuary city? And what happens now?

    CBS News3 hours ago
    What is a sanctuary city and how might those cities be affected by Trump’s executive order? Sanctuary cities offer safe harbor for undocumented immigrants ... 

    What is a sanctuary city? And what happens now?

    Last Updated Jan 25, 2017 10:48 PM EST
    What is a sanctuary city and how might those cities be affected by Trump’s executive order?
    Sanctuary cities offer safe harbor for undocumented immigrants who might otherwise be deported by federal immigration law enforcement officials.  There are over 140 sanctuary jurisdictions -- cities and counties -- across the U.S., including at least 37 cities -- San Francisco, New York, Chicago, Miami and Los Angeles, among others.
    President Trump on Wednesday signed an executive order that would withhold federal grant money from sanctuary cities.
    ap-17025826672680.jpg
    Moina Shaiq holds a sign at a rally outside of City Hall in San Francisco, Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2017. President Donald Trump moved aggressively to tighten the nation’s immigration controls Wednesday, signing executive actions to jumpstart construction of his promised U.S.-Mexico border wall and cut federal grants for immigrant-protecting “sanctuary cities.” 
    AP Photo/Jeff Chiu
    “Jurisdictions that willfully refuse to comply” with federal immigration laws, the order says, “are not eligible to receive Federal grants, except as deemed necessary for law enforcement purposes by the attorney general or the secretary.”
    Many mayors, including Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, said they’d defy the order.
    “We’re going to stay a sanctuary city,” Emanuel said, according to the Chicago Tribune. “Wherever you came from, you’re welcome here.”
    The mayors of the Bay Area’s three largest cities, Oakland, San Francisco and San Jose, and the City of Berkeley spoke out against President Trump’s executive order on immigration.
    Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguín, San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee, San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo and Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf also vowed to take a regional approach to combat the impacts of any threatened cuts in federal funding
    The order does not specify how much or what kind of funding would be or could be blocked, although White House press secretary Sean Spicer said Wednesday that the homeland security secretary would “look at funding streams that are going to those cities and look at how we can defund those streams.”
    CBS News’ Carter Evans spoke with Pedro Trujillo, whose undocumented parents brought him to the U.S. when he was 7.
    “There’s anxiety going around, here’s a lot of worry ... Are there going to be raids coming our way in the coming months? We don’t know that yet,” Trujillo said
    In 2016, a Justice Department inspector general’s report investigated how much in Justice Department federal grants some sanctuary jurisdictions receive (as of Mar. 2016). Over 60 percent of the funding goes to 10 jurisdictions identified by the report:
    • Connecticut: $69,305,444
    • California $132,409,635
    • Orleans Parish, Louisiana: $4,737,964
    • New York, New York: $60,091,942
    • Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: $16,505,312
    • Cook County, Illinois: $6,018,544
    • Chicago, Illinois: $28,523,222
    • Miami-Dade County, Florida: $10,778,815
    • Milwaukee, Wisconsin: $7,539,572
    • Clark County, Nevada: $6,257,951

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