Lol, you ask the question that all anti-immigration characters ask, didn't think you had to get ridiculous, but guess you did. We are in our seventies, we don't offer our home to any strangers, whether needy migrants or homegrown terrorists. As I said, we need immigration reform and there will be some costs involved when asylum seekers come to America. I don't nitpick about cost, I also am in favor of Universal Healthcare, our taxes would be a bit higher, but overall it would save money for all citizens and it's the wise thing to do for this country.
Why wouldn't I ask how many of those illegals immigrants you would house? It's nice to want someone else to provide that but even you must have seen the crowded conditions where they are upon entry. I think now that the sanctuary cities are actually having to provide sanctuary the reality of doing what it takes is changing the minds of those not previously affected.
The acronym NIMBY might need to be NIMC Not In My City.
Even the liberal compassionate citizens of Denver & counties neighboring Denver are waking up to the reality of cost.
Denver has spent more than $32 million so far on migrants, and it could spend as much as $100 million in the next year, according to the mayor. With less than $1 million from the federal government so far and $9 million promised by the Department of Homeland Security, Johnston said, Denver could be forced to make some tough decisions.
“We are fighting hard to avoid any cuts to core services,” he said. “But we do know these were not expenditures we had planned in the budget.”
Johnston said the city would have to look at cutting shelter for migrants to avoid cuts in other key areas.
“We’d have to look at not doing things like hotel stays and doing less safe, less supervised congregate shelter sites. We’d have to do less in the way of ongoing housing, navigation or workforce training,” he said.
Two counties neighboring Denver have pushed back against the city’s hospitality toward migrants and have said they are not equipped to provide extra shelter space. The commissioners of Douglas County, south of Denver, passed a resolution demanding that Denver publicly renounce its sanctuary city status, which protects undocumented migrants in some ways from being handed over to federal immigration authorities.
Denver's mayor says he needs help from D.C. to get migrants off his streets