Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
May 28, 2018
While we are now finally talking about mass illegal immigration on our southern border from countries other than Mexico, the fact that many of these people are actually Moslems has not yet entered the conversation.
Where have you seen the fact that hundreds of people from Bangladesh entered the US illegally in the last year?
Laredo Sector Border Patrol agents found a migrant’s lifeless body in the Rio Grande River earlier this month. Medical examiners and the Missing Migrant Project teamed up and identified the migrants as a Bangladeshi national who attempted to illegally enter the U.S. by crossing the river.
Laredo Station riverine agents found the body floating in the Rio Grande River border with Mexico on May 12, according to information obtained by Breitbart Texas from Laredo Sector officials. It appeared the man had failed in an attempt to illegally cross the border from Nuevo Laredo.
Should have learned to swim before trying to swim across a massive river, probably.
The agents recovered the body and turned the remains over to the Webb County Medical Examiner for the painstaking task of identification.
The medical examiner’s office worked with the Missing Migrant Project and U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s Border Protection Laboratories and Scientific Services for weeks and eventually identified the man as a Bangladeshi national.
The only way they could have identified the national origin of a body is by using the racist pseudoscience of so-called “DNA.”
Jewish sociologists long-ago proved that race is nothing more than a social construct, thus disproving the existence of “genetics.”
More than 250 Bangladeshi nationals have illegally entered the U.S. this fiscal year by crossing the Rio Grande River in south Laredo with the assistance of cartel-connected human smugglers, officials previously stated.
The Bangladeshi nationals used a channel of cartel-connected human smugglers to make their way from their home country to the U.S. Their journey takes them from Bangladesh to South America, where they begin their northward trek to Mexico and then to the U.S., Border Patrol officials told Breitbart Texas in recent interviews. The smugglers are allegedly paid up to $27,000 for each Bangladeshi, officials said.
Just so you understand, the average yearly income in Bangladesh is about $1300.
Meaning that $27,000 is 21 years of work for the average Bangladeshi individual.
So who are these people who have that money to get into the US?
Really makes you think…
Bangladesh has been described by many as a hotbed of terrorist activity. In March 2017, the British government issued a travel advisory for Bangladesh to its citizens warning of potential terror attacks. The warning cited several incidents of terrorist activity in the months leading up to the travel advisory’s issuance.
U.S. Border Patrol Agent Hector Garza told Breitbart Texas in his capacity as president of the National Border Patrol Council 2455 that we do not know the intentions of these people who come to the U.S. from countries with ties to terrorism. “What we do know is that if the cartel-connected smugglers can bring people with good intentions across the border, they can also bring people with bad intentions.”
“We have been lucky to catch these groups but there is no telling how many other people from countries that sponsor terrorism could be utilizing that same pipeline,” Agent Garza stated.
Yeah, that is the point.
Nobody has any idea who is crossing the border, because the border is still wide open.
And while the Europeans can argue that the Moslems crossing their own border are simply poor people looking for welfare handouts, you cannot argue that thousands of people from Bangladesh and other Islamic nations having tens of thousands of dollars on hand for a three-continent journey into America is not an extremely suspicious situation.
Americans are still allowed to hate Moslems.
It is still within the bounds of normie reality.
So whether or not these are actually terrorists crossing the border, it should be an issue of focus for the right.