Although the caravan’s origin story remains somewhat opaque, the answer from many migrants here is that they had wanted to leave for months or years, and then – in a Facebook post, a television program, a WhatsApp group – they saw an image of the growing group and decided…
On Tuesday, they stopped to rest in the small southern Mexican city of Huixtla, washing their clothes in buckets of water, sending messages to their families from Internet cafes, accepting whatever donations local residents were willing to offer. There was word that hundreds more migrants from across Central America, drawn by the endless media coverage, were on their way.
The Honduran government claims that community activists, led by a former legislator named Bartolo Fuentes, were initially behind the group, intending to malign the country’s leaders. The bulk of the migrants here are still from Honduras.
“There’s clear evidence where it began. Bartolo was the person who was in front of the media; he was the face of this event,” Alden Rivera Montes, Honduras’ ambassador to Mexico, said in an interview.

…and George Soros is the man behind it.
Here he claims he’s “investing” $500.00 million dollars in “migrants”
“They were trying to show Honduras as a failed country, which is totally false,” Rivera Montes said…
Fuentes told The Post he was merely helping to connect small groups of would-be migrants who were already planning to travel north. In September, there were posts on Honduran Facebook groups about the plans for the caravan…
He said he was in touch with four groups of would-be migrants who were talking on WhatsApp and other social networks – in Tegucigalpa, the capital, as well as La Ceiba, Colon and San Pedro Sula – about the possibility of traveling together…
Fuentes had a long career as a political activist on the Honduran left. A former student leader who had protested against the U.S.-backed “contra” war to overthrow the neighboring Nicaraguan government, he was elected to the legislature in 2013 and hosted a radio show about migration called “Without Borders.” He is a staunch critic of President Juan Orlando Hernández.
A week before the caravan started, Fuentes posted on his Facebook page a flier about the caravan that read, “We aren’t going because we want to, violence and poverty is driving us out.” It called people to meet at 8 a.m. on Oct. 12 at the San Pedro Sula bus terminal…
The early days of the caravan received a surge of media coverage in Honduras, particularly from HCH, a popular television broadcaster in the country. By the time people started gathering at the bus terminal on Oct. 11 and 12, there were live streams on various Facebook pages. Before Americans had heard about it, the caravan had gone viral in Central America.
You either believe in nations with borders – homelands -or you don’t. So this could get ugly.
Of course SOROS is behind it!
The Evil Emperor is behind everything evil! DUH!