Tube4vids logo

Your daily adult tube feed all in one place!

Charming! Migrant wearing hoodie emblazoned with words 'F**k you all' is one of 1,500 dropped onto streets of San Diego after city officials ran out of cash to provide shelter

PUBLISHED
UPDATED
VIEWS

San Diego officials hit out at a migrant who was spotted wearing a hoodie emblazoned with the words 'F*** you all' - after the crisis at the border forced the city to shut its immigration center. 

City Supervisor Jim Desmond shared the image to X, stating the crudely dressed migrant was 'just one of the hundreds of illegal immigrants dropped on the streets of San Diego.'

The migrant was one of over 1,500 left on the streets of San Diego this week after its immigration center buckled under the weight of the border crisis

Desmond said the $6 million taxpayer funded facility ran out of money in just over four months, after it processed over 81,000 migrants since October 2023. 

It comes as border towns continue to bear the brunt of the Biden administration's failure to crack down on illegal immigration, with December 2023 smashing the record for border encounters at almost 250,000.

A migrant in the latest wave of illegal border crossers was seen wearing a hoodie emblazoned with 'F*** you all' - as the border crisis continues to hamper cities across America

A migrant in the latest wave of illegal border crossers was seen wearing a hoodie emblazoned with 'F*** you all' - as the border crisis continues to hamper cities across America 

The border crisis forced San Diego's immigration center to shut last week, leading groups of migrants (pictured) to be dropped onto the streets as they had nowhere else to go

The border crisis forced San Diego's immigration center to shut last week, leading groups of migrants (pictured) to be dropped onto the streets as they had nowhere else to go 

After the forced closure of San Diego's immigration center, Supervisor Jim Desmond slammed the debacle as 'entirely the fault of the Federal Government for its open border policies.' 

In footage shared from where the migrants were being dropped off, he noted how the group was made up of 'no families, no children, predominantly single adults.' 

'We've just seen a bus drop off a bus full of migrants here at the Iris Avenue station,' he continued. 

'Most of them males, adult males, being dropped off here.'

He claimed he a migrant from Guinea then approached him and 'asked how to get to Virginia', before 'another person asked me how to get to New York.' 

'There's not many people down here to help get these people to their final destinations,' he added, noting how the group are always 'mostly confused.'

'(They are) wondering where they are and how they get to where they're trying to go throughout the country,' he said.

Desmond shared the footage as he condemned the impact the border crisis is having on his city, one of many being hampered by unfettered illegal immigration.

Upwards of 1,500 people were flooding San Diego's immigration center every day in recent months, forcing non-profit SBCS to shut the facility for good last week.

'As the number of migrants arriving at the center has increased significantly over the last few weeks, our finite resources have been stretched to the limit, leading to the closure of the center on February 22,' CEO Kathie Lembo said in a statement.

'When we accepted the challenge of this work in October of last year, we knew two things: that it spoke to the heart of our mission, and that it was for a limited time.'

'Leading this effort has been an honor. We will continue working with the County and our partners in hopes of identifying additional resources to keep the center open, preventing hundreds of individuals a day from being stranded in San Diego without the support they need to continue their journey.'

San Diego Supervisor Jim Desmond vented his fury at the migrant crisis crippling his city, noting that the thousands flooding over the border have 'no families, no children,' and are 'predominantly single adults'

San Diego Supervisor Jim Desmond vented his fury at the migrant crisis crippling his city, noting that the thousands flooding over the border have 'no families, no children,' and are 'predominantly single adults' 

A migrant from China holds up his passport and paperwork as he is photographed by a U.S. Border Patrol agent in an open-air holding area as they prepare to board a bus to a processing facility near to the small, desert San Diego County border community of Jacumba Hot Springs in December 2023

A migrant from China holds up his passport and paperwork as he is photographed by a U.S. Border Patrol agent in an open-air holding area as they prepare to board a bus to a processing facility near to the small, desert San Diego County border community of Jacumba Hot Springs in December 2023

The San Diego migrant center SBCS (pictured) has been forced to close amid the influx, after services were stretched to breaking point with up to 1,500 people flooding in per day

The San Diego migrant center SBCS (pictured) has been forced to close amid the influx, after services were stretched to breaking point with up to 1,500 people flooding in per day

San Diego's migrant welcome shelter blew through $6 million within months as it processed over 81,000 people in October

San Diego's migrant welcome shelter blew through $6 million within months as it processed over 81,000 people in October 

The border crisis was initially exacerbated by the expiration of immigration order Title 42 last year, which led many local governments to prepare for an influx of migrants.

San Diego appropriated $6 million for the SBCS center, which was intended to keep it open for over six months. The money ran out months early. 

'With the receipt of that money there was expectations that it would be used until the end of March, so ending a month early does raise concerns and questions for me,' Lembo said. 

On Friday, local station Fox5 San Diego said it watched hundreds of migrants being transported to the city's airport, where SBCS was checking them in for flights across the country. 

The migrants being bussed around the nation has become a common sight in many large cities in recent months, with almost 100,000 transported to New York City last year. 

Desmond said he is pleading with the federal government to halt border crossings as there is 'nowhere for them to go.'

In January, a small poll among the migrants by the San Diego Union-Tribune at the immigration center found that just 0.43 percent said they expected to stay in San Diego.  

A group of Central American migrants - travelling in a caravan - are seen after crossing the Mexico-US border fence to San Diego County in 2018

A group of Central American migrants - travelling in a caravan - are seen after crossing the Mexico-US border fence to San Diego County in 2018

Migrants are seen near the San Diego border as Title 42 regulations come to an end - which triggered much of the influx still hampering the border today

Migrants are seen near the San Diego border as Title 42 regulations come to an end - which triggered much of the influx still hampering the border today 

One of those seen by Fox5 told the station that he was planning to fly to New York, despite having no money after spending over $11,000 on his journey through several countries on his way to the US.

Mustapha Micradi, from Morrocco, said he crossed the border in a large group, was processed by Border Patrol, and was then taken to a transit center to be bussed to the airport. 

The lack of resources led him to spend a 'really not good' five days sleeping outside the airport - with his predicament noted as one that is common for migrants who were sold a dream that didn't match up to reality. 

Pedro Rios of American Friends Service Committee said his method was 'a faster way of entering into the United States, however it’s a very dangerous way of doing so, and often times it’s the only real option that people have.' 

'We’ve got a legal system in place, where people can apply online throughout the world, they can go to an embassy, they can come in with dignity, without having to cross through a fence or go through a river,' Desmond added. 

'And right now, what we’re allowing to happen is, we’re allowing people who just walk across the border to jump ahead of the line. 

'And I don’t blame them for doing it if we’re allowing it to happen. Why apply legally, if you can just jump ahead of the line.' 

Comments