….we are harmless, we smile, we just make jewelry and hope to get a business loan via the federal taxpayer so we might help our people.
Here is how the gushy story from Nashua, NH begins (hat tip: Jeannine):
NASHUA — They are stateless: persecuted in their own country, shunned in others. Most Americans have never heard of them.
But a small circle of refugee women has been quietly weaving a new life here for their families and, perhaps, their people.
“Stateless” is the buzzword these days for an easy ticket to refugee status. Stories like this one (about women refugees) are meant to soften you up—after all, how threatening can a bunch of women be who weave jewelry in New Hampshire?
But, where are the men and when are they coming? Surely these young women won’t be marrying into the local New Hampshire population.
Right now, their men are busy waging immigration Jihad in Australia and Indonesia. PR articles like this one are meant to soften you up for the next wave.
To its credit, the US State Department resisted for years taking Rohingya Muslims from camps in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar and elsewhere in the region, but as we have reported here now on several occasions, we are resettling Rohingya.
Indeed, at last year’s State Department meeting, the US Conference of Catholic Bishops cited the Rohingya as a potential new source of “refugee” bodies to resettle (they are paid by the head for the refugees they bring to your towns).
For new and ambitious readers, we have 143 previous posts on Rohingya here.