A 95-year-old Korean War veteran who was living in an assisted-living facility in New York City was recently evicted so that the city might utilize it to accommodate illegal immigrants.
Veteran Frank Tammaro had lived at the Island Shores retirement facility on Staten Island.
According to Fox News, Tammaro was informed just weeks ago that he would be removed from the facility, which had been sold and will now be used as a hotel for migrants to stay at taxpayer expense.
Tammaro fought communism for his homeland.
Millions of American men like him battled to maintain the border that divided South Korea from its communist neighbor to the north from 1950 to 1953.
Thousands of them never returned from the war. But how has he been compensated for his efforts in establishing a permanent border on the Korean peninsula at the 38th parallel north?
VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNELDemocrats who refuse to protect the country’s borders prioritize illegal immigrants, many of whom are military-aged men, over folks like Tammaro.
This Thursday, the gallant retiree talked at a press conference about how his life has been turned upside down. He spoke alongside his congresswoman, New York Republican Rep. Nicole Malliotakis.
Malliotakis represents the 11th congressional district of New York, which includes Staten Island and parts of Brooklyn.
Should this facility be repurposed as an assisted-living facility?
She organized a forum for Tammaro to explain to media what happened to him as his community has been swamped with immigrants that open-borders city leaders are unable to handle.
“The thing I’m annoyed about is how they did it; it was very disgraceful what they did to the people in Island Shores,” Tammaro said of his eviction from the facility, according to Fox.
He also stated that he and other residents were not given a say in the conversion of their home into a free residence for illegal immigrants. He learned about his impending eviction via a bulletin board at Island Shores.
“I think that gave us like a month and a half to find out where we were going to go,” he said at the conference. “I thought my suitcases were going to be on the curb because I’m not that fast.”
Tammaro, despite his treatment by a country in which he served in combat, is one of the fortunate. He claimed to have a place to stay once New York’s Democrats sought to make him homeless.
“If it wasn’t for my daughter, they would’ve been on the curb,” he said of his belongings. “That was it. I said, ‘No, no, no, no, you’re not moving me,’ and they said, ‘Yes, yes, yes we are.’”
WATCH:
NYC Kicked a 95-Year-Old Korean War Veteran Out of His Home To Move in Illegal Aliens
The Korean War veteran also said that there was no transparency in the decision to dismiss him in favor of persons who had no right to be in the nation.
“Everything was done behind closed doors – we didn’t have a chance to actually make any attempt to stop them because there wasn’t enough time,” Tammaro stated.
A society can be judged by how it treats its seniors.
The elderly serve as a link between a country’s past and future, and their role in society is critical.
Tammaro and other now-former Island Shores inhabitants were viewed as disposable by New York’s government, who allowed immigrants to take over their houses.
By refusing to block the country’s border when the crisis began, the country’s leaders failed them and millions of other Americans.
No one in New York’s leadership complained about the situation until unlawful border crossers clogged public services. They have reacted by permitting people like Tammaro to be thrown out on the street like rubbish.
New York is a haven for everyone except those who created this country into the worldwide superpower that Democrats are deliberately destroying. Tammaro and others resisted assaults into South Korea by soldiers equipped and assisted by the Soviets and Chinese.
Seven decades later, the man has been displaced within his own country as a result of an invasion that no one in authority in Washington is even somewhat interested in halting.




















