President Donald Trump’s temporary ban on travelers from seven countries originally designated by the Obama administration as posing a particular danger has caused an uproar among the Left — it has also resulted in an unprecedented entry of corporations into politics.

Companies Airbnb, Google, Lyft, Starbucks, and Uber have promised publicly to fight Trump and would rather support the interests of alien migrants over the safety and security of the American people.

“One misses the supposed Michael Jordan business philosophy that says ‘Republicans buy shoes too.'”

Starbucks Chairman Howard Schultz said the company would hire 10,000 refugees around the world over the next five years. “I write to you today with deep concern, a heavy heart and a resolute promise,” Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz said in a letter to employees posted on the company’s website Sunday.

“We are living in an unprecedented time, one in which we are witness to the conscience of our country, and the promise of the American Dream, being called into question,” Schultz added.

Uber announced the creation of a $3 million legal defense fund “to help drivers with immigration and translation services,” while Google announced the establishment of a $4 million “crisis fund” to sustain the globalist dream of never-ending mass migration.

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Lyft, meanwhile, pledged a $1 million donation to the ACLU. Why the American Civil Liberties Union is spending time and money attempting to gift constitutional rights to non-American citizens is anyone’s guess.

Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky pledged to house migrants in Airbnb properties. “Open doors brings all of US together … closing doors further divides US,” Chesky tweeted. “Not allowing countries or refugees into America is not right, and we must stand with those who are affected,” he said.

The behavior of these companies that would spend millions of dollars putting the interests of aliens over the interests of their fellow Americans is a prime example of the corporate, left-wing axis in action.

Companies like Uber, for example, rely heavily on cheap immigrant labor. “Uber Technologies, Inc. has filed 986 labor condition applications for H1-B visa and 167 labor certifications for green card[s] from fiscal year 2014 to 2016,” reports the website myvisajobs.co, which helps visa applicants locate jobs in the U.S.

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According to the site, Uber is the country’s 124th most prolific visa sponsors. In 2016 alone, Uber had 505 H-1B visas certified with the average salary of over $124,000. And while Lyft and Airbnb don’t rely on immigrant labor nearly as much as Uber, they do rely fundamentally on a young, urban customer base — a base which leans decidedly towards the Left.

“Trump is the worst thing to happen to corporations since Teddy Roosevelt, but in this case, when you look at the companies involved, this is a big fat pander to their millennial clientele,” Eddie Zipperer, an assistant political science professor at Georgia Military College, told LifeZette.

“One misses the supposed Michael Jordan business philosophy that says ‘Republicans buy shoes too,'” Zipper continued. “But the truth is, people from the red areas of the 2016 election map don’t use these companies, with the exception of Starbucks,” Zipperer noted.