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10th December 2025 03:48
Link to Post #1
Avalon Member
Somali Scam Answers America’s Most Uncomfortable Question
When a group of Somali immigrants commit fraud on an epic scale, it lays bare questions that people are uncomfortable discussing. What happens when the fraud is exposed, and people begin to understand that this same group has made minimal effort to assimilate, and they have clearly retained their Somalia-first attitude?
I think everyone can agree that those convicted should be deported, but beyond that, what is the best course of action for the larger immigrant group? Trump announced via Truth Social that he was terminating Protected Status for Somalis in Minnesota "effective immediately. Was this the right thing to do? Was Trump right to restrict immigration from 17 additional countries after this fraud was exposed? Some of the mainstream media have said that Trump is targeting Somalis. Is it acceptable for Ilhan Omar, who is a Somali immigrant and a Representative of the House from MN, to preach open borders and DEI orthodoxy in the U.S., but back home in Somalia, she preaches ethnic purity? These are all issues that really need discussion.
Below is an excerpt from the Daily Caller article that brings up many questions about immigration that need to be addressed, not just by the government but the public as well. When you read this article, you will see it answers one very uncomfortable question, but there are many more that need discussion.
Somali Scam Answers America’s Most Uncomfortable Question
It used to be an understood reality that if you entered the U.S. legally with the expectation that you would become a citizen and reap the benefits that come along with being an American, your allegiances must shift from your home country to the U.S. Additionally, you must work to further the U.S. socially, economically, and otherwise. Is empathy towards these immigrants helping or hurting. What should be done with a group has committed such fraud.
The Somali fraud case isn’t just an ironic situation. It’s the result of third-world immigrants shamelessly displaying loyalty to their corrupt and failed home states while guilting Americans into endless generosity.
“Different cultures lead to different outcomes,” Chris Ruffo wrote in the City Journal. “In the absence of strong assimilation pressures, the fraud networks aren’t so surprising; they reflect the extension of Somali institutional norms into a new environment with weak enforcement and poorly designed incentives.”
The left has such a hard time understanding this because their suicidal empathy requires that they embrace the fraudsters and denounce their fellow citizens. So when our president rightly states that it’s time they go back to where they came from, they fall in line, dancing alongside the men and women who harmed them. They can’t see that condemning fraud in this case isn’t anti-Somali; it’s pro-American.
Our government not only has the right but also the responsibility to recognize when immigrants fail to assimilate, and to protect and enforce justice against all groups that actively harm Americans.
Is it acceptable to be America First? The scandal unwittingly answers this with a resounding “yes.”
To Read the full story - https://dailycaller.com/2025/12/09/s...re-laundering/
Last edited by rgray222; 10th December 2025 at 13:25.
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10th December 2025 08:14
Link to Post #2