
The most significant source of human trafficking inside the United States is probably the continued border war. Since taking over the presidency in January 2023, the lady President Joe Biden has largely neglected that discourse in her reports, speeches, and additional work.
On the surface, Cindy Dyer, the U.S. Ambassador at large to monitor and combat trafficking in peoples ( TIP), appears qualified to lead that State Department office. Her standard bio boasts” three decades of experience working at the local, regional, and global levels to minimize and respond to human trafficking, sexual assault, and local violence” as well as her long track record as former vice president for individual rights at a nonprofit organization.
It’s safe to say that Dyer is no man to the circumstances that lead to abuse both domestically and abroad. That may explain why the Senate approved her as a 2022 human trafficking emperor. Somewhat missing from her job at the TIP workplace, however, is a focus on what has fast become the world’s biggest gateway for people trafficking: the southern border.
The Room’s Elephant
Up until a few years back, when corporate media began comparing human trafficking to the “far-right,” it was a major, nonpartisan issue. That change in perspective immediately corresponded with Democrats ‘ desire for unrestricted, illegal immigration. That makes talking about the widespread human trafficking at our damaged southern border like pulling teeth to persuade anyone in the regime, even the country’s direct woman at work.
However, it’s happening and, with the help of a large nonprofit organization technique, is funded with National tax money and enabled by American plans.
The majority of trafficking survivors in the United States were recorded as sexual border crossers in 2007. Yet our federal government acknowledges that “border smuggling often involves human trafficking” on the website of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection. Since the publication of that statement in 2007, there have been record increases in the number of men, women, and unaccompanied minors stowing themselves into pirates to allow illegal entry into the country.
Since the beginning of President Joe Biden’s president, at least 10 million improper border crossings have crossed the border into the US. Since illegal immigrants often get across the U. S. Mexico borders without paying a cost to cartels, those millions good shelled out thousands of dollars to assure their unlawful passage from Mexico into California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas.
The” coyotes,” the multibillion dollar human trafficking arm of the criminal organizations that control the Northern Mexico region, are the ones who are demanding these payments. Since Biden effectively legalized illegal border crossings after taking office in 2021, the profits and frequency of these cartels ‘ kidnapping and ransom schemes have increased.
In April 2023, Tara Lee Rodas, a representative for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services ‘ Office of Refugee Resettlement, stated to the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration Integrity, Security, and Enforcement that” children are being trafficked through a sophisticated network that begins with being recruited in their home country, smuggled to the US border, and ends when ORR delivers a child to… Sponsors,” who may be” criminals and
It can be argued that the US Government has become the intermediary in a large, multi-billion dollar child trafficking operation run by evil actors who want to profit from the lives of children, whether or not it is intended.
See Something, Say Nothing
Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Dyer’s 2023 Trafficking in Persons Report acknowledges that “human trafficking frequently occurs transnationally,” but it falls short of recognizing that the influx of illegal border crossingers welcomed under President Joe Biden contributes to the country’s modern slavery issues.
Instead of addressing the root causes of U.S. trafficking issues, Dyer claimed the State Department is focusing on “promoting equity” that prioritizes “diverse groups and marginalized communities” in foreign countries. This includes unfettered and incentivized access to the United States via a compromised border.
” Promoting equity with respect to race, ethnicity, gender identity, sexual orientation, and for marginalized communities is not only the right thing to do, it is the smart thing to do. When we partner to support vulnerable migrants, advocate for women’s rights, or enact legislation to protect LGBTQI+ individuals, we are creating a more just and equitable world that is also more impervious to human traffickers”, Dyer wrote in the report’s introduction.
Later in the 116- page document, Dyer also demanded foreign governments “re- double their efforts to proactively identify all victims, protect them, support survivors, prevent trafficking even in the face of new and complex challenges, and ensure that law enforcement holds traffickers accountable”. The report affirmed this by calling for “assistance” from the United States ‘ security and government for other nations that are perceived as in need of resources for trafficking prevention.
However, Dyer did not specifically address securing the U.S. border or tackling the problem of criminal trafficking that results from it in the report.
The United States Advisory Council on Human Trafficking Annual Report 2023, which was released under the supervision of the Dyer office, does not discuss the relationship between trafficking and border invasion and fails to link it to the Biden administration’s open border polices or make recommendations for serious measures to address the issue. Instead, the report merely suggests the Department of Homeland Security increase its “oversight”,” support”, and “awareness” of the issue.
Why has n’t Dyer focused her or her team’s attention on the ongoing border chaos despite the obvious link to human trafficking?
When she told Chairman Chris Smith, R-N. J., that her office supports the Biden administration’s goals of facilitating amnesty for illegal border crossingers rather than deportation in her testimony to the House Subcommittee on Global Health, Global Human Rights, and International Organizations in May 2023, she admitted the quiet part out loud.
The administration’s top priorities include addressing the issues of irregular migration, specifically providing protection to refugees and asylum seekers, and promoting legal immigration pathways, according to Dyer.
The Federalist contacted Dyer to inquire whether she thought securing the border and reducing the amount of human trafficking would result in a reduction in the risk of human trafficking.
Supporting criminal organizations by promising to provide citizenship for all does n’t just put illegal border crossings at risk of being exploited and hurt; it also puts Americans at risk. Simply put, the United States ‘ failure to address the border crisis is a direct result of human trafficking and suffering there.
Jordan Boyd is a co-producer of The Federalist Radio Hour and a staff writer at The Federalist. Her work has also been featured in The Daily Wire, Fox News, and RealClearPolitics. Jordanian received her bachelor’s degree from Baylor University, where she majored in political science and minored in journalism. Follow her on Twitter @jordanboydtx.