Pro-Amnesty Socialists Flood Murrieta City Hall
Encouraged By Prayer & Disingenuous Speech
From Catholic Priest
Published on Jul 9, 2014
In Murrieta, California, where residents turned back buses carrying illegal aliens into the city, pro-amnesty supporters, many of whom from out-of-town, flooded City Hall to demand that America erase its borders.
SEE OUR PREVIOUS POST ABOUT THE POPE'S DESIRE TO HAVE NO BORDERS:
Gov Sponsored Catholic Church
Changes It's Story on Aid to Illegals:
Published on Jul 13, 2014
Kit Daniels Interviews the Director of Communications Catholic Diocese of San Bernadino at St. Josephs Catholic Church in Fontana, California about the illegals that are being transported to their location by DHS. According to what he said in his interview they receive no federal support, nor give money to the illegal immigrants that are being released to them. But that is not what has been reported by other media outlets. They report that the church is giving them travel money to get to their destinations in the interior of the US. What is the real truth behind this story?
SEE:
CATHOLIC CHURCH CHANGES ITS STORY ON AID GIVEN TO ILLEGALS
Diocese apparently backtracks from statements revealing
amount of assistance offered
EXCERPTS:
The Catholic Diocese of San Bernardino told Breitbart that the church provides “travel cash” to illegals heading on journeys elsewhere in the country and it also told NBC4 Southern California that Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials initially reached out to the church for help.
But in an interview with Infowars, the diocese’s spokesperson John Andrews said that illegal immigrants were traveling “at their expense” and that church officials met with the government because they wanted to know how they could be of assistance, as if they were already willing to help without being asked.
But the Catholic leaders dipped into politics last year when they heavily pressured Congress into passing amnesty and in 2012, Pope Benedict XVI asked Catholics to “welcome waves of new immigrants, to provide them with pastoral care and charitable assistance, and to support ways of regularizing their situation.”