Quote:
có bao giờ họ dừng lại và nhận ra đó chính là hành vi nhổ bọt vào quá khứ bản thân? con người vì những cái tôi, mượn danh chính nghĩa, mù quáng tôn sùng những thứ đi ngược cơ bản đạo đức, và trở điên cuồng, bạo lực khi ai đó vạch ra sự thật họ không muốn đối diện
Đa số là dân có đạo nữa chứ. Chả khác gì nhổ bọt vào chúa Giê xu và vị Giáo hoàng luôn luôn kêu gọi bác ái với nhân từ.
Quote:
When Carlos and Aaron reached the US point of entry in Tijuana, Mexico, in November 2017 he told the Customs and Border Protection officials that they came to apply for asylum. After two days in a crowded holding cell, father and son handcuffed together, Carlos says Aaron grew quiet, he couldn’t express himself as well as before and began to stutter.
On the fifth day, now in Ice custody, officials told Carlos to go collect his belongings because he would be moved to a detention center. When he returned, Aaron and the children of three other fathers had all been taken away to another facility.
“Because of what we were going through in El Salvador, I always looked for a way to keep us together,” Carlos said. “But sadly, what didn’t happen in El Salvador happened to us here.”
Carlos Aguilar still hasn’t seen his son in person, now 14, since the day they were separated. After seven and a half months in detention, Carlos was released in June. Since then he has been living on a friend’s couch in Detroit while his sons live with their mother in Chicago. About his sons, Carlos said: “They don’t want to talk to me because they feel I disappointed them. They’re scared it’s going to happen to us again. Separation destroys families.”