
According Lee
16.7K posts

According Lee
@AccordingLee
Research, research & re-re-research Opinions r my own based on my knowledge from multiple sources & what I have personally witnessed & experienced + intuition








Student visas for Africa’s best and brightest were canceled by the Trump administration, leaving empty seats and broken dreams. on.wsj.com/4bQHsMI






























In 2024, there were 10,000 entry-level jobs at Amazon that were given to foreign students through the OPT program. Amazon doesn't have to pay payroll taxes on these employees. It is a massive incentive to ignore American grads.

DEMOCRATS IN THE BIDEN ADMINISTRATION OPENED THE BORDERS FOR POLITICAL GAINS THEY PUT THESE IMMIGRANTS THROUGH FINANCIAL, PHYSICAL, SEXUAL AND EMOTIONAL TORTURE BY CARTELS JOE BIDEN, KAMALA HARRIS & ALEJANDRO MAYORKAS HAVE BLOOD ON THEIR HANDS The journey through the dense, unforgiving jungles of the Darién Gap for millions of Latin American migrants seeking refuge in America during the Biden administration was a descent into chaos, where every step courted death. Families from Venezuela, Honduras, and beyond, fleeing economic collapse and violence, embarked on this perilous trek, often starting with overcrowded buses or boats that dumped them at the jungle's edge. The physical ordeals began immediately: navigating swollen rivers that could sweep away the unwary, trudging through mud-slick trails infested with venomous snakes and insects carrying deadly diseases like malaria. Exhaustion set in quickly, with migrants carrying heavy packs under relentless rain, their feet blistering and rotting from constant wetness. Many succumbed to dehydration, starvation, or injuries from falls into ravines, their bodies left behind as grim markers for those who followed. Cartels, the shadowy overlords of these lawless routes, turned the migration into a brutal extortion racket, demanding exorbitant fees at every checkpoint. Financially, migrants were bled dry—paying thousands of dollars per person for "safe passage," only to face additional shakedowns for food, water, or even the right to rest. Those without cash were forced into debt bondage, compelled to smuggle drugs or perform menial labor for the criminals. Physically, the encounters were savage: beatings for non-payment, sexual assaults on women and children as a form of control, and outright murders of those deemed troublesome. The cartels' enforcers, armed and ruthless, herded groups like cattle, abandoning the weak or executing rivals in front of terrified families, turning the jungle into a theater of terror where survival meant submitting to their whims. Emotionally, the toll was shattering, eroding the migrants' spirits long before they glimpsed the American border. Parents watched helplessly as children cried from hunger or illness, haunted by the guilt of endangering their loved ones for a distant dream. The constant fear—of cartel violence, of getting lost in the endless green hell, of never making it—fostered paranoia and despair, with survivors recounting nightmares of abandoned companions' pleas echoing in their minds. Yet, amid the heartbreak, a fragile hope persisted, driving them onward through the psychological wreckage, only to arrive at the U.S. frontier battered, broke, and forever scarred by the human cost of their quest for a better life.


DEMOCRATS IN THE BIDEN ADMINISTRATION OPENED THE BORDERS FOR POLITICAL GAINS THEY PUT THESE IMMIGRANTS THROUGH FINANCIAL, PHYSICAL, SEXUAL AND EMOTIONAL TORTURE BY CARTELS JOE BIDEN, KAMALA HARRIS & ALEJANDRO MAYORKAS HAVE BLOOD ON THEIR HANDS The journey through the dense, unforgiving jungles of the Darién Gap for millions of Latin American migrants seeking refuge in America during the Biden administration was a descent into chaos, where every step courted death. Families from Venezuela, Honduras, and beyond, fleeing economic collapse and violence, embarked on this perilous trek, often starting with overcrowded buses or boats that dumped them at the jungle's edge. The physical ordeals began immediately: navigating swollen rivers that could sweep away the unwary, trudging through mud-slick trails infested with venomous snakes and insects carrying deadly diseases like malaria. Exhaustion set in quickly, with migrants carrying heavy packs under relentless rain, their feet blistering and rotting from constant wetness. Many succumbed to dehydration, starvation, or injuries from falls into ravines, their bodies left behind as grim markers for those who followed. Cartels, the shadowy overlords of these lawless routes, turned the migration into a brutal extortion racket, demanding exorbitant fees at every checkpoint. Financially, migrants were bled dry—paying thousands of dollars per person for "safe passage," only to face additional shakedowns for food, water, or even the right to rest. Those without cash were forced into debt bondage, compelled to smuggle drugs or perform menial labor for the criminals. Physically, the encounters were savage: beatings for non-payment, sexual assaults on women and children as a form of control, and outright murders of those deemed troublesome. The cartels' enforcers, armed and ruthless, herded groups like cattle, abandoning the weak or executing rivals in front of terrified families, turning the jungle into a theater of terror where survival meant submitting to their whims. Emotionally, the toll was shattering, eroding the migrants' spirits long before they glimpsed the American border. Parents watched helplessly as children cried from hunger or illness, haunted by the guilt of endangering their loved ones for a distant dream. The constant fear—of cartel violence, of getting lost in the endless green hell, of never making it—fostered paranoia and despair, with survivors recounting nightmares of abandoned companions' pleas echoing in their minds. Yet, amid the heartbreak, a fragile hope persisted, driving them onward through the psychological wreckage, only to arrive at the U.S. frontier battered, broke, and forever scarred by the human cost of their quest for a better life.














