AUSTIN, Texas – U.S. Border Patrol agent Marco Gonzales running through the heat last June, one night near his hometown of Del Rio, when he saw four or five Mexicans fresh from the Rio Grande. Once among them, he saw that everyone had symptoms of Covid, his 23-year-old daughter Catherine Gonzales told the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS) last week.
The 49-year-old Border Patrol veteran, 15, told his circle of relatives that he still loaded Mexicans into his vehicle, out of service, and took them to the Acuña-Del Rio International Bridge to deport them to Mexico, the existing title. 42 fitness code procedure used to keep detention centres away from Covid.
Subsequently, the officer claimed that he believed these Mexicans had transmitted the coronavirus to him that night despite the gloves and mask that all Border Patrol officials receive. He soon complained of headaches, fatigue and loss of taste and smell. It lasted a few painful weeks in the hospital with ventilation. Towards the end, he was so swollen that “you could no longer see her eyes,” said Catherine, who is one of Agent Gonzales’ three children and has two.
They kept in touch via Facetime and then, after entering the fan, via SMS. Staff put the phone on Facetime for nonverbal consultation and response sessions; couldn’t communicate with the fan. Catherine asked him if he kept fighting “and he would nod.” But soon, doctors warned that the end is near. Finally, on July 23, his father “just let go.” Catherine read her last texts on July 18.
“I love all my grandchildren. Lots of hugs and kisses and more to come when I pass out.
And this last text to Catalina, in capital letters: “I LOVE YOU MY FILLE”. You buried him as the fallen soldier on Thursday, border patrol guard honor at your attention.
New CBP Covid containment operation to thin green line
The death of Agent Gonzales and at least 10 CBP staff members, whose acting CBP commissioner Mark Morgan recently declared they were “dead in the line of duty due to Covid,” highlights a trend that has been negligently ignored as a racist notion. It is, as indicated in Townhall, that the borders of the U.S. From Texas to California they have Covid-19 battlefields, as other people who are legally and illegally crossing ruined hospitals in Mexico to seek medical attention in the United States, or attempt to dodge Title deportations. 42 of the Border Patrol to paintings inside the nation.
The deaths on the CBP line and, according to Commissioner Morgan, the quarantine of piles of exposed or inflamed officials by close contact with “high-risk” migrants, highlight a fatal danger that is about to worsen dramatically for many more frontiers. patrol officers.
CBP has just begun a 60-day acceleration operation in which many agents across the country will be redistributed to the critical points of the Texas-Mexico border for illegal and illegal immigration, CIS reported exclusively on August 14 the historic goal of its mission, according to two CBP officials who asked for anonymity, Array will have to catch and deport 42 inflamed illegal immigrants who would otherwise escape the Border Patrol paintings within the United States, spreading the virus in the Latin American communities they join.
At least 400 CBP and up to 1,000 others head to the Rio Grande Valley in Texas and the Laredo region of Texas to, as one CBP official wrote in a communication, counter “Covid-19’s public fitness threat if those illegal entries continue unceasingly “and” mitigate the effects of public fitness on the U.S. public public in the midst of the ongoing global pandemic.” Five border communities in South Texas, from Brownsville to Laredo, have the highest rates of new infections in the country, and 4 have the highest mortality rates. The region is also plagued by a sharp increase in illegal immigration from Mexico as the harvest season accelerates.
CBP does not publicly promote its operation to involve the virus and should not do so without delay in press releases, a spokesman said, who refused to give additional details.
But Acting Commissioner Morgan announced the operation in Texas at his August 6 press convention at which he said that inflamed illegal immigrants (between an existing escalation of apprehensions that reached 40,000 in July alone) were escape tactics “for their own economic efforts.” They ignored without thinking orders to remain in the house of Mexico, seeking to evade the border patrol’s Title 42 rollback policy, and continued to infect large numbers of illegal migrants fleeing elsewhere.
“Run. They’re fighting. They are doing everything they can to avoid being apprehended,” Morgan told reporters, who did not report the comments. “Even if some of the illegal alien beings know or strongly suspect that they have Covid … they’re coming. They disclose to all other people they come into contact during their trip, as they seek to enter this country illegally.”
It is not known whether contacts or other internal government data help Morgan’s attractive statement that Mexican immigrants who are positive to Covid infect Latin American populations elegantly. But it is undeniable that the virus has ravaged active Latin American communities in the southwestern United States that paint in fields, poultry and hospitality, economically without being able to refrain from painting and living in situations conducive to the spread of the virus.
Should loopholes close at the closure of Trump’s borders?
The CBP operation is the only sign that the national leadership is stopping an incoming Covid tide from Mexico that appears to be happening.
Although President Donald Trump ordered the closure of the southern and northern borders on March 20 to all “non-essential” traffic, the board exempted Mexicans with legal permanent residence in the United States, those who had dual nationality and border crossing cards and American expats. .
Substantial evidence, adding media reports, statements from hospital administrators, public fitness officers, nurses, doctors, and the patients themselves, shows that a large number of other inflamed people in Mexico have contributed to the overwhelming number of border hospitals in California, Arizona, and Texas.
“At McAllen Medical, we get a lot of patients from Mexico,” Dr. Ivonne Lopez, medical director of mcAllen Hospital Group at McAllen Medical Center in South Texas, told a local reporter. “They come because their resources there are also limited, so they come to our domain to receive medical care and, by law, we have to provide it.
Research through CIS’s David North has shown that the closure of Trump’s border is much less effective in Mexico than with Canada, which has instituted a much more regulated Covid response. Southern border crossings after the order fell from 8.3 million to 3.3 million, which still had physical power in May at the five largest access ports, while Canadian entrances fell much more dramatically from 2.4 million to just 88,000, according to Department of Transportation data. California’s access port to San Ysidro admitted another 1,019,5554 people by car and 295,421 more pedestrians in May, all of which were obviously declared “essential” due to the closure of the border.
But now the Trump administration, knowing that exemptions have contributed to the hospitalization crisis in border states, is preparing to sew them up. Last week, a leaked White House memo to the New York Times revealed that President Trump envisages revised regulations that would allow border inspection officials to temporarily ban legal U.S. citizens and U.S. citizens living in Mexico if an official “reasonably believes that the individual would have been exposed or inflamed with communicable disease.” The prohibitions would apply “when necessary in the interest of public health,” the memo says.
It is not known when these measures will come into force, however, it would harden the closure of the border, which has become problematic after its drafting.
Green line soldiers deployed in an undeclared war zone
Of the 1,867 CBP painters who tested positive for Covid-19, 773 paintings in Texas and 491 paintings in the California-Arizona distribution, according to CBP’s online statistics.
His infections, as well as the tragedy of Agent Marco Gonzales and several other Covid agents who died in South Texas, such as Agent Agustín Aguilar of Eagle Pass and Agent Enrique J. Rositas of the Rio Grande Valley, serve as a reminder to Americans. that new Border Patrol agents who now flood Texas rule will put their lives at risk to prevent Covid from entering the country.
Most of the country, however, is alien to what is happening, almost intentionally misinformed through the media that have not even announced that a primary CBP operation is being carried out to involve the virus.
None of this lately considers Catherine Gonzales. In her pain, Catherine bluntly said that she had long been born from the dangers of her father’s profession, which he enjoyed very much.
“It’s your job … protect,” he says. “Every day is a life of threat to them. He said it was his job. That’s what Array is, we don’t blame anyone.”
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