Refugee Crisis in Syria Raises Fears in South Carolina

Oct 16, 1999
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DUNCAN, S.C. — The worried citizens gathered in the high school cafeteria, about 200 strong. Patriotic songs played on the stereo, a man in a blue blazer from the John Birch Society hovered by a well-stocked literature table, and Lauren L. Martel, a lawyer from Hilton Head, told the crowd that 25 Syrian refugees were already living among them.

“The U.N. calls it ‘refugee resettlement’ — the Muslims call it hijra, migration,” said another speaker, Jim McMillan, a local businessman. “They don’t plan to assimilate, they don’t plan to take on our culture. They plan to change the way of American life.”

The United States government has pledged to increase the number of worldwide refugees allowed in the country each year from 70,000 to 100,000 by the year 2017; earlier this month, the Obama administration said it would take in at least 10,000 Syrian refugees over the next year. But the anger and anxiety here show just how hard this might be in some parts of the country.

None of Syria’s four million refugees have been resettled in this part of South Carolina in the last year, according to the State Department. Since May, a Christian nonprofit group, World Relief, has placed 32 refugees in the region, but most of them were Christians fleeing troubled countries like Myanmar and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Even so, in South Carolina’s Upstate region, as its conservative northwest corner is known, the crisis has divided those who want to welcome new waves of huddled masses from those who question the federal government’s ability to weed out Muslim extremists. Some critics, echoing concerns in towns across the country, fear the newcomers will burden local government agencies or alter the character of their communities.

The criticism here has encompassed both sober-minded questions about local school funding and warnings about global conspiracies. It began this spring when the Baltimore-based World Relief, one of nine nonprofit agencies that work with the federal government to resettle refugees, prepared to open its new office in Spartanburg, a city of 37,000 close to a major BMW auto plant.

Lynn Isler, a stay-at-home mother, was among those who pushed back. She created a short-lived Facebook page that warned of the “perfect storm that the Syrian refugees will bring.” She has also warned that Communists had infiltrated some elements of the Christian Evangelical movement that supports refugee resettlement.

Elected officials have weighed in as well. Representative Trey Gowdy, a Republican whose district is part of the Upstate region and who leads the House select committee investigating the attack on the American diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, has complained that the federal government did not sufficiently coordinate with local officials before allowing the current crop of refugees to arrive.

State Senator Lee Bright, who represents Greenville and Spartanburg Counties, has called for “open hearings” on the resettlement effort, echoing the concerns of some fellow Republicans who say it is difficult to perform background checks on Syrian refugees, given the chaos that has engulfed their country. Many critics point to the congressional testimony of Michael Steinbach, assistant director of counterterrorism for the F.B.I., who told a House committee in February that Syria lacked systems that could provide information to evaluate refugees.

At the meeting in the cafeteria Sunday evening at James F. Byrnes High School in Duncan, a small city near Spartanburg, State Representative Mike Burns, a Republican from Greenville County, spoke more broadly of immigration policies that were threatening traditional American culture.

“This immigration fiasco that we’re in the middle of is going to take away the very things that we’re dear about,” Mr. Burns said.

Evan Mulch, the field coordinator for the John Birch Society, the right-wing group, told the crowd the resettlements were “part of the New World Order game plan.” Another speaker worried that the refugees would stress the state’s already stretched Social Services Department.

The United States, Ms. Martel said, is “a Judeo-Christian nation.”

“We are not a Muslim nation, and those two things cannot coexist,” she added.

During a question-and-answer session, a woman asked if the refugees could be sent home on “troop ships.” A man asked if they could be sent on a plane to Saudi Arabia. When he was told that they could not, his frustration mounted.

“Do we shoot them?” he asked, to laughter and applause. “Come on! I mean, this is crazy.”
More:
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/26/u...yria-raises-fears-in-south-carolina.html?_r=0

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pcgeek11

Lifer
Jun 12, 2005
21,868
4,793
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To be honest, it isn't just South Carolina or just the Red States that has groups of people worried about these hundreds of thousands of refugees coming here to the US.

It is people in the North South East and West. As we all should be concerned about the implications of another poorly thought out and executed plan.
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
73,735
6,499
126
Instant Islam's gonna get you
Gonna knock you right in the head
You better get immigration laws together
Pretty soon your gonna be dead
 

MongGrel

Lifer
Dec 3, 2013
38,466
3,067
121
Heh, I didn't even realize the John Birch Society was still a thing.

Silly me.
 
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Jaskalas

Lifer
Jun 23, 2004
34,397
8,445
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Perhaps the good citizens know how insane US policy is, and they are voicing their concern for what will obviously be hundreds of thousands that will be invited here.
 

Newell Steamer

Diamond Member
Jan 27, 2014
6,894
8
0
Perhaps the good citizens know how insane US policy is, and they are voicing their concern for what will obviously be hundreds of thousands that will be invited here.

The reality is 10,000; http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/11/w...ion-to-accept-10000-syrian-refugees.html?_r=0

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asylum_in_the_United_States

Our total is 70,000 (from MULTIPLE regions, not just the middle east - read the wiki link) for 2015.

Where are you getting hundreds of thousands of refugees being invited into the US from Syria? Do you work for the White House? For the Obama administration? Do you have information that is contrary to what is already out there?
 

TheSlamma

Diamond Member
Sep 6, 2005
7,625
5
81
Who cares, as long as they don't expect us to abide by any primitive Islamic abracadabra BS just like their competitions primitive laws that do not apply to the 21st century either.

Edit: I better clarify for the limited brain cells here.. Competition = Christianity
 

Tombstone1881

Senior member
Aug 8, 2014
486
161
116
During a question-and-answer session, a woman asked if the refugees could be sent home on “troop ships.” A man asked if they could be sent on a plane to Saudi Arabia. When he was told that they could not, his frustration mounted.

And these people vote, while others stay home to allow these people to choose our government. :|
 

brycejones

Lifer
Oct 18, 2005
28,282
27,776
136
Perhaps the good citizens know how insane US policy is, and they are voicing their concern for what will obviously be hundreds of thousands that will be invited here.

So you buy into the opinions voiced at the meeting referenced in the OP?
 

ivwshane

Lifer
May 15, 2000
32,887
15,958
136
Stupid appears to becoming it's own religion and Americans appear to be joining at an ever increasing pace.
 

NAC4EV

Golden Member
Feb 26, 2015
1,882
754
136
[FONT=&quot]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SRhI0Xqv5Rc

[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]The rest of the real story in Hungary....[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]The food and water were provided by the Red Cross and was not acceptable because - the Cross is a "Christian" symbol. Perhaps also the water was not certified Halal!!

[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]Why was it not on TV ? They discard food and water and why is there a predominance of young men?[/FONT]
 

Vic

Elite Member
Jun 12, 2001
50,422
14,337
136
I'm looking forward to all the Syrian restaurants that will be opening over the next few years.
 
Nov 25, 2013
32,083
11,718
136
To be honest, it isn't just South Carolina or just the Red States that has groups of people worried about these hundreds of thousands of refugees coming here to the US.

It is people in the North South East and West. As we all should be concerned about the implications of another poorly thought out and executed plan.

Refugees accepted by the US:

Fiscal year 2012 the US accepted 58,238 (out of a possible 76,000 cap).
Fiscal year 2013 it was 69,927 (out of a possible 70,000 cap).
Fiscal year 2014 it was 69,926 (out of a possible 70,000 cap).
Fiscal year 2015 the cap is, again, 70,000.

You find those numbers scary?

https://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/RL31269.pdf
 

Pocatello

Diamond Member
Oct 11, 1999
9,754
2
76
I welcome our new Islamic overlord. Joking aside, they should move west to California, or states which are more open to immigrants.