Unhingery returns to the Show Me state on Monday as Trump does his final 2018 election rally in the town where Limp Gasbag dropped out of college. Lie-fest or some co(s)mic convergence in Southeast Missouri in prime-time. Of side interest is the apostasy of the above billboard in St Louis, and whoever paid for it.
WHAT TRUMP SAID
“Birthright citizens, in turn, can then bring their entire extended family into our country through chain migration. That’s another beauty. Chain migration. You come into the country, you’re, like, 2 months old and you’re going to take your brother, and your sister and your mother and your father. You’re going to bring them all.”
False.
This is impossible. American citizens must be at least 21 before they are eligible to petition for their parents to live in the United States, and there is a long queue for family-sponsored immigration, or what the president labels chain migration.
After a petition is filed and approved, would-be immigrants are given a so-called priority date and can apply for a green card only when the State Department calls it up. For example, this month, brothers and sisters of adult American citizens can begin to apply for a green card if their priority dates were before March 22, 2005 — a waiting period of more than 13 years.
Mr. Trump also made numerous other claims that The New York Times has previously debunked:
www.kmov.com/…
...there is a “Make the Gospel Great Again” facebook page with the same images. Very few followers. Perhaps one of those Russian fake sites to stir up animosity? But if so, then the billboard is an extreme way to commit to the fraud.
The FB page that featured the image has now been deleted from Facebook: it was titled @MaketheGospelGreatAgain and linked a SoCal GOP pastor Craig Huey, who wants to "Make California Great Again", a page from Franklin Graham, and a "former LGBT" story from CBN. The FB Page was created on October 8, 2018, and the last URL goes to a Russian language search. Who bought the outdoor advertising space?