Readers: Increase the Number of Syrian Refugees Coming to St. Louis
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Most would agree the influx of Bosnian refugees to St. Louis 20+ years ago was positive — we had plenty of room — still do.
The Bosnian population in St. Louis, Missouri, numbers over 60,000, making it the largest Bosnian community outside of Bosnia. Nearly all of the members of this community came to St. Louis as a result of the war and genocide perpetrated in Bosnia between 1992 and 1995. Bosnians were allowed to immigrate to the U.S. as refugees, and St. Louis became a preferred destination due to the availability of jobs and inexpensive housing. St. Louis’s population has continued to grow due to secondary migration of Bosnian refugees from other parts of the U.S. Increasingly, what began as a refugee community is becoming a part of the social fabric of St. Louis, as Bosnian refugees have become citizens, and as a younger generation has increasingly self-identified as Bosnian-American. (Fontbonne University)
The fact the majority identify as Muslim hasn’t been an issue. Yet, somehow, people desperately trying to escape religious extremists in Syria are unwelcomed by our own religious extremists. Thankfully the majority of this blog’s readership is open minded:
Q: Should the number of Syrian refugees coming to St. Louis be changed?
- Increased significantly 27 [45.76%]
- Unlimited 13 [22.03%]
- Kept unchanged 7 [11.86%]
- Increased somewhat 6 [10.17%]
- Cut to zero 4 [6.78%]
- Unsure/No Answer 2 [3.39%]
- TIE 0 [0%]
- Reduced significantly
- Reduced somewhat
This was sort of a trick question — no specific number has ever been set. The Slay administration seems open to as many as possible. Available housing, jobs, etc all play a role.
Be cautious about your sources, especially if they’re seeking the GOP nomination:
Fiorina said the “vast majority of (Syrian) refugees are young, able-bodied men looking for work.”
She repeated the essence of a claim that wasn’t accurate a month earlier and isn’t accurate today. A slight majority of Syrian refugees are female, and men age 18 to 59 comprise about 22 percent of all Syrian refugees.
We rate Fiorina’s claim False. (PolitiFact)
I agree with Sen. Elizabeth Warren — we cannot turn away Syrian refugees.
— Steve Patterson