2018 Migrant caravan

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The 2018 migrant caravan was organized in Honduras several weeks before the 2018 Midterm elections.[1] WND reported,
"The caravan is organized by a group called Pueblo Sin Fronteras [Village Without Borders], but the effort is supported by the coalition CARA Family Detention Pro Bono Project, which includes Catholic Legal Immigration Network (CLIN), the American Immigration Council (AIC), the Refugee and Immigration Center for Education and Legal Services (RICELS) and the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA) – thus the acronym CARA," WND reported. "At least three of the four groups are funded by George Soros' Open Society Foundation."[2]
The purpose of the group is to storm U.S. border control enforcement around election day.[3][4] Similiar tactics have been used against the peoples of Europe,[5] overwhelming border control checkpoints with thousands of illegal migrants daily.[6] Liberal mainstream media, the New York Times, and alleged "Fact Checker" sites immediately tried to debunk the claim.

Soros front groups are known to have paid human trafficers and have sponsored the migrant invasion of Europe since 2013.[7][8] Some migrants even arrived with ATM cards provided by the Soros-funded Mercy Corp organization. [9] Mercy Corp has been implicated in human trafficking.[10]

Soros has in the past called for regime change in the United States.[11]

Genesis

On Saturday October 13, 2018 Bartolo Fuentas left the city of San Pedro Sula, Honduras with 700 people, carrying banners with anti-Honduran government slogans. Fuentes previously organized a caravan from Honduras on March 25, 2018, which he joined up with in Mexico on April 8. In the town of Cofradia, Fuentes provided buses to move people to Santa Rosa de Copan. In that city Fuentes was assisted by people to assemble a larger group in the town's sports center. Fuentes restarted the march leading in his vehicle, while the mayor provided buses to carry the people to Agua Caliente. The deception of organizers was apparent, assuring the people that by boarding the buses they could finish the route.

References