Detention Centers

I don't know what you're trying to say here. U.S. law says that a certain number of people are permitted to enter annually. I suspect the situation is a lot more complicated than you're trying to make it seem.

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The United States allows up to 675,000 permanent immigrant visas each year across various categories, not including the unlimited number of visas available for immediate relatives of U.S. citizens. Additionally, there are no numerical limits on certain non-immigrant visas for tourists, students, and temporary workers. americanimmigrationcouncil.org PRB
OK what about the millions that did not get immigrant visas and were paroled into the US.

Under current law, immigration parole is intended to be used on a case-by-case basis for individuals with an urgent humanitarian need or who offer a significant public benefit. But under President Biden, Secretary Mayorkas granted parole to over 2.8 million aliens, bypassing visa procedures, dodging background checks, and overwhelming American communities.
 
He didn't say "asylum seekers", and the Biden administration's June 2024 rule (89 Fed. Reg. 44918, codified at 8 C.F.R. §§ 208.13, 1208.13, and 208.30 et seq.), imposed presumptive ineligibility for asylum if daily southwest border encounters exceed 2,500 (with exceptions for unaccompanied minors, trafficking victims, or lawful entrants).
At 0:06, "all those people are seeking asylum..." Listen to the whole thing again, he's talking about fleeing oppression.
 
What "oppression"?
This oppression.

"Latin America is undergoing one of its most profound human rights crises in decades. The region’s civic space is shrinking rapidly, from mass surveillance and arbitrary arrests to political repression, enforced disappearances and impunity for state violence.

The 2025 State of the World’s Human Rights report, released by Amnesty International, lays bare the magnitude of the challenge. Seven countries – Haiti, Nicaragua, Venezuela, Mexico, Colombia, Cuba and El Salvador – are at the epicentre of this authoritarian surge.

Donald Trump’s return to the White House in January has only deepened the problem. In a separate report published in the same week, Amnesty argues that Trump’s nationalist rhetoric and policy reversals have emboldened strongman leaders. These have undercut international accountability and accelerated rights violations across the hemisphere."

 
This oppression.

"Latin America is undergoing one of its most profound human rights crises in decades. The region’s civic space is shrinking rapidly, from mass surveillance and arbitrary arrests to political repression, enforced disappearances and impunity for state violence.

The 2025 State of the World’s Human Rights report, released by Amnesty International, lays bare the magnitude of the challenge. Seven countries – Haiti, Nicaragua, Venezuela, Mexico, Colombia, Cuba and El Salvador – are at the epicentre of this authoritarian surge.

Donald Trump’s return to the White House in January has only deepened the problem. In a separate report published in the same week, Amnesty argues that Trump’s nationalist rhetoric and policy reversals have emboldened strongman leaders. These have undercut international accountability and accelerated rights violations across the hemisphere."



That's not "oppression". It's people who don't like their democratically-elected government.

Kinda like Y O U.

Don't come to England seeking asylum, BTW. I had you put on a list.
 
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