by Nomad
With ignorance on full display, a Tea Party Leader in Texas has accused Catholic Charities for conspiring with the Obama Administration. How? By sheltering and caring for the flood of immigrant children.
What does this say about our self-image as a nation, as a "City on the Hill"? What does the reaction by some in the Tea Party about their Christian credentials ?
What does this say about our self-image as a nation, as a "City on the Hill"? What does the reaction by some in the Tea Party about their Christian credentials ?
Bud
Kennedy, columnist for the Ft.Worth Star-Telegram, has recently called out an East Texas Tea Party leader for jumping on the bandwagon and promoting nationwide yet another baseless
conspiracy. Their suspicions have targeted Catholic Charities for trying to
help with the influx of immigrant children.
Misguided Suspicions
One right-wing website, LibertyNews.com,
broke the story that the Obama administration had advanced knowledge of, as its writer put it, the planned invasion. This conspiracy, it seems, was based solely on what Kennedy
calls, one East Texas Republican’s "misguided suspicions."
So what is she basing this allegation on? The Longview Republican Terri Harris Hill points to federal records that show that the local
Catholic Charities received $350,000 last year for immigration services.
LibertyNews also noted that:
Between Dec 2010 and Nov 2013, the Catholic Charities Diocese of Galveston received $15,549,078 in federal grants from Health & Human Services for “Unaccompanied Alien Children Project” with a program description of “Refugee and Entry Assistance.
Based solely on this information,
LibertyNews has accused Catholic Charities in Texas of conspiring in “the invasion
currently underway.”
Kennedy quotes Hill telling a
phone interviewer:
“I think there is something suspicious because the government started awarding grants before the surge. I mean, how did they know?”
How indeed?
The answer is
remarkably easy to explain, according to the columnist.
Tens of thousands of foreign children each year come to the United States without a parent or legal permission. Under a quirk in a 2008 law, children from Mexico are returned, but Central American children stay in shelters or with families until a court rules if they are refugees or trafficking victims.