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It looks like many Americans are paying attention to what is happening along the border. And they aren t happy with President Biden.
A new poll is out on how Americans feel about the job President Joe Biden is doing when it comes to the border and his handling of the situation along the United States-Mexico border. According to Quinnipiac, just 29% of Americans approve of the job Biden is doing on the border. 55% disapproved according to the poll that was released on Wednesday.
I’m pretty sure the 29 percent of people who like the job Biden is doing on the border consists of people who are for open borders, people who have no clue what is going on, and possibly people who just arrived in the United States by crossing illegally. Otherwise, who could approve of the job that the President is doing. Record numbers of illegal immigrant children caught. Record numbers of adults caught, and it’s not getting any better.
According to a news release, students are asked to submit original artwork and an entry form, located on Jackson s congressional website, to his Amarillo or Wichita Falls office by 5 p.m. April 23.
On the wall above the exit of the Amarillo Art Institute, which is located in the Arts in the Sunset, the following words are in bold: “We inspire, educate and enrich lives through art.
The status of the Arts in the Sunset, which previously housed studio spaces for numerous artists and hosted monthly art walks and exhibitions, has been in limbo since the tenants were vacated in 2019 to help the Crouch Foundation obtain tax-exempt status from the Internal Revenue Service and become a nonprofit organization.
But with construction and renovations currently occurring at the space, officials with the Amarillo Art Institute are hopeful that the Arts in the Sunset will once again be able to inspire, educate and enrich lives through art on a larger scale.
Ana Hernandez fights back tears as she explains why she and her two-year-old-son, Matteo, made the hazardous journey from Honduras to seek asylum in the United States. There is no work in my country, she says in Spanish. You cannot find food. My family wants a better life.
The petite 25-year-old and her toddler were transported by people-smugglers known as coyotes in lorries, buses and vans during a long and gruelling journey through Guatemala and Mexico, before crossing the Rio Grande river by raft under cover of night and surrendering to officers of the U.S. Border Patrol.