Latest pro-migrant scheme gives exclusive 'opportunities' to New York's replacements
Meanwhile, native New Yorkers continue to suffer as the number of recently arrived migrants tops 7 million nationally.
A new pro-migrant initiative—created to link hundreds of third-world migrants with employers seeking cheap labor—was announced to be operating in Rochester on Friday.
Known as the “Ellis Island Initiative,” the program is said to bring “labor, business, and faith groups” together to hand out racially exclusive “opportunities” to the state’s latest batch of non-White replacements.
Initially unveiled on Rochester’s WHAM, the Initiative promises to link 3rd world migrants bussed in from America’s deteriorating southern border with up to 500,000 jobs said to be available in New York State. In Rochester, more than 100 of these non-White migrants are currently living inside the city limits, many of them at the Holiday Inn on State Street.
The initiative tracks alongside Governor Kathy Hochul’s own push to lower speech and education requirements for State government jobs in a bid to “fast-track” migrants into working roles ASAP. The move does little to help natural-born American citizens, who, on the basis of their race, are excluded from these opportunities.
Resturantauer Aaron Metras, the owner of Salena's Mexican Restaurant, is just one of many local employers hoping to cash in on the influx of cheap foreign labor flooding the human marketplace in New York, calling it an opportunity to hire “dedicated” individuals.
“In my experience working with newly arrived immigrants, every time I have met or worked with someone who is new to our country, they have been some of the hardest working, most dedicated individuals that we have ever met," said Metras.
The lived experience of a wealthy chic “dining experience” owner appears to contradict the reality that many working-class New Yorkers are forced to engage with. Since migrants first became a topic of controversy in the Empire States, wages and job satisfaction have continually failed to meet workers’ expectations, unable to match skyrocketing inflation and the soaring price of even essential goods.
This conflux of consumer worries has made the job marketplace exceedingly competitive, and with migrants now expected to get a leg up over native Rochesterians, that marketplace is expected to become even more contested. According to data tracked by the New York State Federal Reserve, American workers have become discerning in the workplace, with some figures suggesting that most workers would only accept a job if it promised $78,645 or more in annual pay.
This, of course, is to say nothing about crime, a concern that looms at the back of every White worker’s mind. Food delivery drivers, for example, have come under attack numerous times in the city of Rochester, making it one of the most dangerous jobs in the United States. In October, Two delivery drivers were robbed at knifepoint and pepper sprayed in two different areas of the city in two completely separate incidents.
While crime is already high in Flower City, the introduction of migrants has only made the issue worse. Since migrants were first introduced to the region by way of Texas Governor Greg Abbott (R), the National Guard was called into police migrant areas in places like Rochester’s own Monroe County, Buffalo, and New York City.
Under threat of bayonet, the migrant resettlement efforts have continued unabated, bringing with them a series of protests, violent attacks, rapes, and acts of petty violence against American citizens. Many of these non-Whites are even believed to be members of a Venezuelan prison gang, whose growth can be directly attributed to lax policing of the southern border.
Despite the grim realities, Migrants in New York still receive an exorbitant amount of aid from local, state, and federal benefactors. A new pilot program in New York City is currently handing out $10,000 prepaid gift cards to non-White migrant families completely free of charge. While no such initiative is currently in place in cities like Rochester, one can only speculate if and when this becomes a reality here.
The future, however, appears bleak. At the time of press, over 7 million migrants and so-called “asylum seekers” have entered the United States since 2021. The number does not include an additional 1.8 million illegals who have successfully eluded law enforcement. Some experts believe this number to be as high as 14 million people, as DHS estimates show that in any given year, 35-60% of border crossers go undetected or unencountered.
Until something can be done to stop the tide of non-White migrants into the country—and, by extension, the state—any attempt to capitalize off of the surge can only be met with harsh rebuke for what it truly is: a clever union-busting strategy to divide solidarity among the already stressed White working class by using diversity as a cudgel.
It seems clear that the State can enact the policies that it desires to promote. Anyone who thinks the State is stupid or inept doesn't understand that what is occuring is that the State simply has other priorities.