Government
Mass Exodus Begins As Illegal Immigrants Abandon Texas Bridge Camp For Mexico To Avoid Deportations
Mass Exodus Begins As Illegal Immigrants Abandon Texas Bridge Camp For Mexico To Avoid Deportations
Authored by Charlotte Cuthbertson and Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times,
Some of the thousands of illegal immigrants who have amassed…

Authored by Charlotte Cuthbertson and Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times,
Some of the thousands of illegal immigrants who have amassed near the Texas border are leaving the United States, going back to Mexico to pick up supplies or avoid being deported back to their home countries.
Haitians and others were witnessed Monday crossing the Rio Grande River to enter Acuna, Mexico, as they consider their options following a U.S. crackdown on the illegal immigrant camp under the international bridge just north of the border in Del Rio.
Phanel, a Haitian who has been living in Chile for three years, was one of the immigrants who went to Acuna. He told The Epoch Times he was stocking up on supplies, including water and fruit, after hearing around camp that everybody who stayed would get deported.
Phanel, an illegal immigrant from Haiti, points to supplies he picked up in Acuna, Mexico, on Sept. 20, 2021. (Charlotte Cuthbertson/The Epoch Times)
Phanel, who declined to give his last name, said he was considering what to do next.
Yaneth, 32, whose husband is Haitian, also expressed concern about being deported. She planned to venture back to Del Rio to get her family, including her partner, and return to Acuna to try to formulate a plan.
Yaneth, an illegal immigrant, is seen in Acuna, Mexico, on Sept. 20, 2021. (Charlotte Cuthbertson/The Epoch Times)
Recounting a harrowing journey from Chile, Yaneth said that most women who travel through the Darien jungle get raped. “I’m not going back,” she said, adding that the family would likely go to a different part of the U.S.-Mexico border and try to cross there.
People carry supplies from Acuna, Mexico, on their way back to Del Rio, Texas, on Sept. 20, 2021. (Charlotte Cuthbertson/The Epoch Times)
Nader Alth, 39, was not as certain of heading to a different spot on the border. The Haitian native, who was with his 9-year-old son, was looking for a shelter in Mexico and said he’d stay there for now.
“It’s not an option to back to Haiti,” he told The Epoch Times.
“I can’t go back, they’ll kill me.”
Nader Alth, an illegal immigrant from Haiti, is seen in Acuna, Mexico, on Sept. 20, 2021. (Charlotte Cuthbertson/The Epoch Times)
The Del Rio area has become the epicenter of the Biden administration’s border crisis, which has built up since the president took office in January and abruptly reversed or altered key Trump-era policies like the Migrant Protection Protocols, the border wall, and the expulsion of illegal immigrant children through pandemic-era powers.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas traveled to the area on Monday to get an on-the-ground operational update and see firsthand the huge, litter-ridden camp that sprung up under the international bridge in the Texas town.
Mayorkas said the surge in immigrants was “rather sudden” and “rather dramatic,” prompting a large scale response that has included moving some 6,500 immigrants to other parts of the border in the last several days to ease the burden on the overtaxed agents in the Del Rio Border Sector while sending approximately 400 agents and officers to the sector.
From Mexico side of Rio Grande: A new border crossing area has formed downstream between the US and Mexico as the weir dam was blocked by US law enforcement.
— Charlotte Cuthbertson (@charlottecuthbo) September 20, 2021
Many leaving US to avoid deportation, others getting supplies from Acuna, Mexico. pic.twitter.com/V5y4ZAL3Gi
The Department of Homeland Security conducted three repatriation flights from Del Rio to Port-au-Prince, Haiti on Sunday, flying 327 Haitian nationals back to their home country. The agency expects to conduct one to three such flights per day for a while, and is attempting to secure additional planes to carry out more flights.
Mayorkas denounced what he described as “false information” driving the surge. He said the message to people thinking about making the journey from the south is that:
“Our borders are not open and people should not make the dangerous journey.”
“if you come to the United States illegally, you will be returned. Your journey will not succeed and you will be endangering your life and your family’s life,” he said, adding that many of the immigrants would be deported.
Biden administration officials have emphasized the message for months, but it’s been undercut by some of the worst border numbers in history and by officials allowing a large portion of the immigrants to stay in the United States as well as the rollback of various immigration enforcement schemes, such as the protocols.
Mayorkas later denounced smugglers, saying: “It is tragic to see families, vulnerable individuals, who have been deceived by treacherous and exploitative smuggling organizations. It is tragic and it is heartbreaking.”
International
Stock Market Today: Stocks turn lower as Treasury yield rise mutes earnings gains
A mixed set of big tech earnings, alongside modestly higher Treasury yields, has stocks moving lower into the start of the Wednesday session.

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International
People in Europe ate seaweed for thousands of years before it largely disappeared from their diets – we wonder why?
The decline of seaweed as part of the staple diet in Europe remains a mystery.

How are we sure people ate seaweed?
We identified several types of molecules in the dental calculus that collectively are characteristic of seaweed. We refer to these as “biomarkers”. They include a set of chemical compounds called alkylpyrroles. When we detect these compounds together in calculus, we can be fairly sure where they came from. The same goes for other compounds characteristic of seaweed and freshwater plants. To have become embedded in dental calculus, the seaweed and freshwater plants had to have been in the mouth and most probably chewed. Biomarkers do not survive in all our samples, but where they do, they’re found consistently across many individuals we analysed from different places. This suggests seaweed was probably a routine part of the diet.Perceptions of seaweed
Today, seaweed is often seen as the scourge of beaches. It accumulates at the high-water mark where it can create a slippery and sometimes smelly barrier to the sea. But it is a wondrous world of its own. There are over 10,000 species of seaweed worldwide living in the intertidal zone (where the ocean meets the land between high and low tides) and the subtidal zone (a region below the intertidal zone that is continuously covered by water). Around 145 of these species are eaten today and in parts of Asia it is commonplace. Seaweed is edible, nutritious, sometimes medicinal, abundant and local. Although overconsumption can cause iodine toxicity, there are no poisonous intertidal species in Europe. It is also available all year round, which would have been particularly useful in the past, when food supplies were less reliable.Reconstructing ancient diets
Reconstructing ancient diets is challenging and is generally more difficult as you go back in time. This helps explain why we’ve only just realised how much seaweed was being eaten by ancient Europeans. In archaeology, evidence for ancient diets often comes from physical remains: animal bones, fish bones and the hard parts of shellfish. Evidence for plants as part of the diet before farming, however, is rare. Techniques to study molecules from archaeological remains have been around for some time. A key method is known as carbon/nitrogen (C and N) stable isotope analysis. This is widely used to reconstruct ancient human and animal diets based on the relative proportions of these elements in bone collagen. But the presence of plants has been difficult to identify, due to their low nitrogen content. Their presence is masked by an overwhelming signal for animals and fish.Hiding in plain sight
The evidence for seaweed had been present all along, but unrecognised. Our discovery provides a perfect example of how perceptions of what we regard as food influence interpretations of ancient practices. Seaweed was detected in chunks that had been chewed (and presumably spat out) at the 12,000-year-old site of Monte Verde, Chile. But when it is found at archaeological sites, it is more commonly interpreted as having been used for things other than food, such as fuel and food wrappings. In European archaeology, there is a longstanding perception that Mesolithic hunter-gatherers ate lots of seafood, but that when people started farming, they focused on food sourced from land, such as their livestock. Our findings hammer another nail into the coffin of this theory. Today, only a few traditional recipes remain, such as laverbread made from the seaweed species Porphyra umbilicalis in Wales. It’s still not clear why seaweed declined as a staple source of food in Europe after the Middle Ages.What are the implications?
Our unexpected discovery changes the way we understand past people. It also alters our perceptions of how they understood the landscape and how they exploited local resources. It suggests, not for the first time, that we vastly underestimate ancient people. They had a knowledge, particularly about the natural world, that is difficult for us to imagine today. The finding also reminds us that archaeological remains are minute windows into the past, reinforcing the care required when developing theories based on limited evidence. The consumption of plants, upon which our world depends, has been habitually left out of dietary theories from our pre-agrarian past. Rigid theories have sometimes forgotten that humans were behind these archaeological cultures – and that they were probably similar to us in their curiosity and needs. Today seaweed sits, largely unused as food, on our doorstep. Making the edible species a bigger component of our diets could even contribute to making our food supplies more sustainable.
The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
european europeInternational
EUR/AUD bearish breakdown supported by additional China fiscal stimulus and AU inflation
Weak PMI readings from the Eurozone, an increase in China’s budget deficit ratio, and renewed inflationary pressures in Australia may trigger a persistent…

- Weak PMI readings from the Eurozone, an increase in China’s budget deficit ratio, and renewed inflationary pressures in Australia may trigger a persistent bearish sentiment loop in EUR/AUD.
- Watch the key short-term resistance at 1.6700 for EUR/AUD.
- A break below 1.6250 key medium-term support on the EUR/AUD may trigger a multi-week bearish impulsive down move.
The Euro (EUR) tumbled overnight throughout the US session as it erased its prior gains against the US dollar recorded on Monday, 23 October; the EUR/USD shed -104 pips from yesterday’s intraday high of 1.0695 to close the US session at 1.0591, its weakest performance in the past seven sessions.
Yesterday’s resurgence of the USD dollar strength has been attributed to a robust set of October flash manufacturing and services PMI data from the US in contrast with weak readings seen in the UK and Eurozone that represented stagflation risks.
Interestingly, the Aussie dollar (AUD) has outperformed the US dollar where the AUD/USD managed to squeeze out a minor daily gain of 21 pips by the close of yesterday’s US session. The resilient movement of the AUD/USD has been impacted by positive news flow out from China, Australia’s key trading partner.
China’s national legislature has just approved a budgetary plan to raise the fiscal deficit ratio for 2023 to around 3.8% of its GDP which was above the initial 3% set in March and set to issue additional sovereign debt worth 1 trillion yuan in Q4. This latest round of additional fiscal stimulus suggests that China’s top policymakers are expanding their initial targeted measures to address the ongoing severe liquidity crunch in the domestic property market as well as to reverse the persistent weak sentiment inherent in the stock market.
In addition, the latest set of Australia’s inflation data surpassed expectations has also reinforced another layer of positive feedback loop in the Aussie dollar which in turn may put Australia’s central bank, RBA on a “hawkish guard” against cutting its policy cash rate too soon.
The less lagging monthly CPI Indicator has risen to an annualized rate of 5.6% in September, above consensus estimates of 5.4%, and surpassed August’s reading of 5.2% which has translated into a second consecutive month of uptick in inflationary growth.
In the lens of technical analysis, a potential bearish configuration setup has emerged in the EUR/AUD cross pair from a short to medium-term perspective.
Major uptrend phase of EUR/AUD is weakening
Fig 1: EUR/AUD medium-term trend as of 25 Oct 2023 (Source: TradingView, click to enlarge chart)
Even though the price actions of the EUR/AUD have been oscillating within a major ascending channel since its 25 August 2023 low of 1.4285 and traded above the key 200-day moving average so far, the momentum of this up movement is showing signs of bullish exhaustion.
Yesterday (24 October) price action ended with a daily bearish reversal “Marubozu” candlestick coupled with the daily RSI momentum indicator that retreated right at a significant parallel resistance in place since March 2023 at the 65 level which suggests a revival of medium-term bearish momentum.
EUR/AUD bears are now attacking the minor ascending support
Fig 2: EUR/AUD minor short-term trend as of 25 Oct 2023 (Source: TradingView, click to enlarge chart)
The EUR/AUD has now staged a bearish price action follow-through via the breakdown of its minor ascending support from its 29 September 2023 low after a momentum bearish breakdown that was flashed earlier yesterday (24 October) during the European session as seen from the 4-hour RSI momentum indicator.
Watch the 1.6700 key short-term pivotal resistance (also the 50-day moving average) for a further potential slide toward the intermediate supports of 1.6460 and 1.6320 in the first step.
On the other hand, a clearance above 1.6700 invalidates the bearish tone to see the next intermediate resistance coming in at 1.6890.
stimulus budget deficit us dollar euro yuan gdp stimulus european uk china