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Harris-Biden’s border policy causing educational setbacks for Logansport children


New York City’s migrant woes have gotten a decent amount of national attention, but the crisis caused by the Harris-Biden border madness has hit a lot of much smaller towns as hard or harder: Take Logansport, Ind.

The town of just over 18,000 has been slammed by a flood of non-English-speakers — with the county population growing perhaps 30% and the mayor guesstimating 2,000 to 3,000 Haitian migrants moving to town.


Tyson Foods employees come and go between shifts at the Tyson Food Processing Plant that is located in Indiana. Tyson has been accused of allegedly replacing citizen employees with migrant employees in an effort to decrease pay.
Tyson Foods employees come and go between shifts at the Tyson Food Processing Plant that is located in Indiana. Tyson has been accused of allegedly replacing citizen employees with migrant employees in an effort to decrease pay. LP Media

And it’s a major challenge for the public schools, where the number of Haitian migrants enrolled jumped from 15-fold, from 14 in 2021 to 207 in 2024 and local kids are being neglected as teachers’ attention is consumed by migrant students.

In response, some kids, like honors student Cheyanne Baker, 16, drop out to pursue education online.

In her words: “It’s like the teacher is so busy with them that no one else gets to learn anything.”

Kids who don’t drop out get stuck in a system with ever-decreasing standards and expectations, as teachers focus entirely on the needs of a minority of students who are far behind their peers.

That’s not just unjust; it’s a travesty — an entire generation of the town sacrificed to Harris-Biden’s political goals.


Tyson Foods employees transitioning between shifts at their Indiana processing plantSource link

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