I really appreciate my readers and the people who love my love

 I  want to  thank all my  friends and my  readers  . Even though I am sitting here at home.  I  am watching  the  beautiful strong intelligence tv show the residents  reminded me why I love  to advocate for people.   I am very passionate about helping people s.  I  went to the movies and mall  yesterday.  This is summer beach  beautiful  weather in September is  very inspiring  .I don't know if it iis  because of global warming or Allah  being  happy with  me even though I  far from perfect but I am  making the best of my life and happiness  is not  bought  it is  earned by  hard work and dedication time and consideration. Today  my  friend told me  that  it might be  hard to write my blog posts  every day . But I  told her not  really  I  write About everything  my dad  my feelings , my dreams and  my family and Egypt   Syrian refugees. I am just happy  gracefully amazed that  my  voice is reaching out to to so many  people lives around the world  without  Facebook.  I  love  writing it creates more opportunities to Express myself to the world and   limitless possibilities for me to  reach people. Thank you so much readers for  entertaining me  my story

Immigration and crisis in the Middle East are “hot topics” that have always resurfaced in every presidential election. However, this is the first election where we have a presidential candidate who wants plans? to unconstitutionally ban an entire race of people from entering the U.S because he assumes that all Muslims are terrorists.  In other words, he is committed to this unjustified action because he is arrogantly trying to cover up the fact that he does not know the difference between real Muslims who practice the peaceful religion of Islam and a large group of politically motivated radical extremists who kill their own kind. Also, the United States is trying to deal with an unprecedented issue of Syrian refugees coming to the United States to escape the Syrian Civil War.  
The Syrian civil war began in March of 2011, part of during the Arab Spring. The Syrian citizens caught in the war have been affected in many different ways.  First of all in the six years since the Syrian civil war The conflict has killed over 250,000 people, half of whom are believed to be civilians. Bombings are destroying crowded cities, and horrific human rights violations are widespread. Necessities like food and medical care are scparsce. Furthermore; , the U.N. estimates that 6.6 million people are internally displaced. When you also consider refugees, well over half of the country’s pre-war population of 23 million is in need of urgent humanitarian assistance, whether they remain in the country or have escaped across the borders. (Corps 1 2015). The Syrian refugee crisis began in April 2011 when 5000 Syrian refugees fled to Lebanon. (Syrian refugee timeline 1 2016)  Many Syrian refugees are living in Jordan and Lebanon, In August 2013, more Syrians escaped into northern Iraq at a newly opened border crossing. Now they are trapped by that country's own insurgent conflict, and Iraq is struggling to meet the needs of Syrian refugees on top of more than 1 million internally displaced Iraqis — efforts that we are working to support. An increasing number of Syrian refugees are fleeing across the border into Turkey, overwhelming urban host communities and creating new cultural tensions. (Corps 1 2016).
 There are hundreds of thousands of refugees THAT that are also attempting the dangerous trip across the Mediterranean Sea from Turkey to Greece, hoping to find a better future in Europe. . (Corps 1 2016).Not all of them make it across alive. Those who do make it to Greece still face steep challenges — resources are strained by the influx, services are minimal, and much of the route into Western Europe has been closed. Thousands of Syrians flee their country every day. They often decide to escape after seeing their neighborhoods bombed finally or family members killed. . (Corps 1 2016).The risks on the journey to the border can be as high as staying: Families walk for miles through the night to avoid being shot at by snipers or being caught by soldiers who will kidnap young men to fight for the regime. . (Corps 1 2016).
At first,   the United States was not letting Syrian refugees into the country.  Then in September 2015 President Obama made a pledge that the United States would accept at least 10,000 Syrian refugees in the following 12 months by the end of 2016.  Unfortunately he is way behind scheduleThere has been little progress on this pledge, because only about “1,300 Syrian refugees -- or some 13 %( KORAN 2016).” -- have been admitted In the United States and the number of Syrian refugees being admitted has been decreasing. (KORAN 2016).”  THE The new policy was greeted in Europe and the Middle East as a small but welcome step in addressing the worst humanitarian disaster in a generation, in which more than 4 million people have fled the country in less than five years. Since the announcement, however, the United States has resettled only 841 Syrians on its soil. If the current rate continues, it will take four years to reach Obama’s relatively modest goal. Almost 5 million Syrians have registered or are awaiting registration with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, which is leading the regional emergency response( corps  1 2016).

Other important issues in this election are the rise of Islamophobia and the ban on Muslims proposed by trumpTrump. Since July when trump Trump accepted the somatization nomination in July, he has not changed his position. After his nominatation, Trump said the country "must immediately suspend immigration from any nation that has been compromised by terrorism until such time it's proven that vetting mechanisms have been put in place. (Johnson 2016 1-4)" Trump made no mention of Muslims in the speech, leading many to conclude that Trump had formally changed his position — just as a number of his top allies, including his running mate, said he had. Johnson 2016 1-4)
According to the Washington post in an interview this weekend with (Johnson 2016 1-4) NBC’s "Meet the Press," host Chuck Todd asked Trump whether his comment should be interpreted as a "slight rollback. (Johnson 2016 1-4) “I don't think so. I actually don't think it's a rollback. In fact, you could say it's an expansion," Trump said. "I'm looking now at territory. People were so upset when I used the word 'Muslim': 'Oh, you can't use the word "Muslim."'(Johnson 2016 1-4) Remember this. And I'm okay with that, because I'm talking territory instead of Muslim. “(Johnson 2016 1-4) It is important remember this: Our Constitution is great, it will never abolish the first amendment with the ban.

              The lack of awareness and the willful ignorance many people have   is turning our once great meritocracy into a downward spiral of disappointment, unequally of gender, race, work, education, social class statuses, and uneven distribution of wealth around the world which leads to global poverty.  America is losing money, products, power, resources, fast pretty soon America will not the strongest nation In in the world. America will become a third world country. People need to act more progressively instead of over analyzing  problems and trying to be the “Hero” by helping to solve the problems of other nations like Egypt Iraq and China while America does not even attempt to solve Its its own problems. We need to work together in order to solve the problems we face in our society and then we can fix the world’s problems it is hard not impossible. The nation can get back on track America needs to stop lowering the goals, standards, expectations of youth and individuals who reach for the starts dream big... The world we live in is not normal, but then again what is normal anyway?  















Work Cited

Corps, M. (2016, June 21). Quick facts: What you need to know about the Syria crisis. Retrieved September 14, 2016, from http://www.mercycorps.org/articles/iraq-jordan-lebanon-syria-turkey/quick-facts-what-you-need-know-about-syria-crisis

Craig, H. (2015). Syrian Refugees in Jordan as an Opportunity for Development. JUIS: Journal Of Undergraduate International Studies1917-26.
Fakih, A., & Ibrahim, M. (2015, January 22). The impact of Syrian refugees on the labor market in neighboring countries: Empirical evidence from Jordan. Defence and Peace Economics, 27(1), 64-86. doi:10.1080/10242694.2015.1055936
FETCHER, H. J. (2016, February 22). The US Promised Refuge to 10,000 Syrians-We've Let in 841. Retrieved September 15, 2016, from https://www.thenation.com/article/the-us-promised-refuge-to-10000-syrians-weve-let-in-841/
GÖKTUNA YAYLACI, F., & KARAKUŞ, M. (2015). Perceptions and newspaper coverage of Syrian refugees in Turkey. Migration Letters, 12(3), 238-250.
Johnson, J. (2016, July 24). Donald Trump is expanding his Muslim ban, not rolling it back. Retrieved September 15, 2016, from https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-politics/wp/2016/07/24/donald-trump-is-expanding-his-muslim-ban-not-rolling-it-back/
Koran, L. (2016, February 22). Obama pledge to take 10,000 Syrians behind schedule. Retrieved September 15, 2016, from http://www.cnn.com/2016/04/01/politics/obama-pledge-10000-syrian-refugees-falling-short/

ŞIRIN ÖNER, N. A., & GENÇ, D. (2015). Vulnerability leading to mobility: Syrians' exodus from Turkey. Migration Letters12(3), 251-262.
Timeline. (n.d.). Retrieved September 14, 2016, from http://syrianrefugees.eu/timeline/







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