Comments
autotldr t1_iy83hko wrote
This is the best tl;dr I could make, original reduced by 68%. (I'm a bot)
> The United States has seen a 4,500% rise in asylum requests from Russian nationals this year as Russia's war in Ukraine has forced critics to flee the country, The New York Times reported Monday.
> U.S. authorities processed 21,763 Russian asylum requests in October 2021-September 2022, compared with just 467 in the 2020 fiscal year, according to the publication.
> October 2022, the first full month after President Vladimir Putin announced a "Partial" mobilization of reservists, saw nearly 4,000 Russian asylum seekers enter the U.S. Russian asylum seekers and their lawyers interviewed by the newspaper said they faced mistreatment in immigration detention centers while awaiting their cases in court.
Extended Summary | FAQ | Feedback | Top keywords: asylum^#1 Russian^#2 immigration^#3 told^#4 detention^#5
[deleted] t1_iy805dd wrote
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[deleted] t1_iy8xiih wrote
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BlueMonkOne t1_iya8hog wrote
While my heart goes out refugees in general, my brain is asking how many of these are spies.
[deleted] t1_iyb3ikt wrote
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mycall t1_iy83ihg wrote
Everyone in ICE should be fired and all new guards to take their place, preferably immigrant themselves.
[deleted] t1_iy8wo3k wrote
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[deleted] t1_iyb3mwc wrote
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ARedditor397 t1_iybhxvn wrote
Yes because what we want is more spies and national security threats to be let in our borders.
MrBubbles226 t1_iyf7orr wrote
It's a bold take Cotton, let's see how it plays out
UniquesNotUseful t1_iyayq2b wrote
Be interesting to see the figures before mobilisation.
These are not people fleeing a country and war they opposed, these are people fleeing because it now impacts them.