Share
Commentary

Migrants Take Over San Diego Airport, Set Up Camp: 'There's So Many People'

Share

In the 2004 movie “The Terminal,” Tom Hanks played a traveler named Viktor Navorski who lived at JFK Airport in New York for nine months because his visa was not valid to enter the United States and a coup in his home country blocked him from returning home.

Hanks’ role was based on the real-life story of Mehran Karimi Nasseri. Nasseri was deported from his home country of Iran but claimed he had lost the necessary papers to get refugee status in the U.K. while he was in Paris, according to The New York Times. He spent 18 years at Terminal 1 at Charles De Gaulle Airport in Paris before he died last year.

If you were trying to get in or out of San Diego airport over the Thanksgiving break, you might have encountered a few migrants who are living in the airport as well — at least 100 of them, The San Diego Union-Tribune reported Thursday.

Trending:
Election Coverage 2024

In a Monday social media post, San Diego County Supervisor Jim Desmond indicated the number had climbed past 300.

Among the concerns raised by this influx of migrants is the lack of proper verification and identification procedures.

Is Biden responsible for the border crisis?

When migrants arrive at the border seeking asylum, there is no reliable process to confirm their identities, check their criminal backgrounds or ensure they do not pose threats to public safety. Most lack official IDs or documentation that could be cross-referenced.

But unlike Nasseri or his fictional counterpart, Navorski, a little thing like the lack of proper paperwork won’t stop these people from getting into the country. They are just waiting for flights to take them to wherever they want to go, courtesy of the Biden administration.

The San Diego welcome center, run by the nonprofit SBCS, has come under scrutiny for its role in the airport crisis. SBCS buses multiple groups of migrants to the airport daily, working closely with Border Patrol drop-offs, the Union-Tribune reported.

Some volunteers allege migrants are transported to the terminal directly after processing without confirmed travel plans.

“It’s almost becoming a second [migrant welcome] center because there’s so many people there,” Krystle Johnson, a volunteer with a group helping migrants at the airport, told the Union-Tribune.

Related:
Celebrity's Fast-Food Chain Suddenly Closes All Locations Following Minimum Wage Hike

Airport officials acknowledged there has been a “significant increase in the number of migrants” and said in a statement that they “have and will continue to coordinate with migrant-serving volunteer groups and nonprofit organizations as they help their clients navigate the airport.”

Immigrant Defenders Law Center attorneys said around 20 arrivals per day lack any flight booking. Nearly half scramble to secure tickets before nightfall, but some families reported being stranded for up to four days awaiting purchases from relatives, the Union-Tribune reported.

Additional travelers had prearranged flights but were prematurely delivered to the airport long before departure.

SBCS spokeswoman Mindy Wright denied the claim that migrants are taken to the airport without prior arrangements.

According to the Union-Tribune, since mid-September alone, more than 40,000 migrants have been released into San Diego.

They might not have the proper paperwork, but they won’t stay in the airport too long.

Pretty soon, they’ll be in other American states and cities among the other millions of unverifiable migrants for whom the Biden administration has opened the floodgates.


A Note from Our Deputy Managing Editor:

What if you woke up one morning and half of the people you count on had just vanished overnight?

That happened to me recently. I got up, came to work here at The Western Journal, and when I got to my office, literally half of our readers had vanished. They were just gone. We had been nuked by Facebook, and it had happened almost instantly.

But it was even worse. Facebook hit us at the same time 90 percent of advertisers had essentially boycotted us. "Brutal" is a word I’ve used a lot lately.

The fight for the truth is brutal. The fight for America’s soul is brutal. What the government is doing to Jan. 6 detainees is brutal. What surgeons are doing to confused children is brutal.

It’s a fight we must win. But we can’t win without you.

A membership to The Western Journal will go much farther than you think. It costs less than a cup of Starbucks coffee, and for that small price you get access to ALL of our content news, commentary, and premium articles you’ll experience a radically reduced number of ads, and most importantly you will be vitally supporting the fight against leftism.

Can I count on you to join today? We need your help. Benjamin Franklin summed up the situation we're all facing when he said, “We must all hang together, or, most assuredly, we shall all hang separately.”

We plan to hang in and fight. Please help us. Please become a member today.

Sincerely,

Josh Manning

Deputy Managing Editor

The Western Journal

Truth and Accuracy

Submit a Correction →



We are committed to truth and accuracy in all of our journalism. Read our editorial standards.

Tags:
, , , , , , ,
Share
Rachel Emmanuel has served as the director of content on a Republican congressional campaign and writes content for a popular conservative book franchise.
Rachel M. Emmanuel has served as the Director of Content on a Republican Congressional campaign and writes for a popular Conservative book franchise.




Advertise with The Western Journal and reach millions of highly engaged readers, while supporting our work. Advertise Today.

Conversation