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Metsfanmax wrote:Phatscotty wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Most arguments against loosening of immigration restrictions fundamentally rely on a dislike for the foreign. It's largely an emotionally driven argument.
We get the current situation under control first if we want to be taken seriously on anything.
Emotions are not the only thing to consider
So if we balanced the budget tomorrow, would you consider loosening immigration restrictions?
BigBallinStalin wrote:"So, again, how are we gonna ask for respect for our new looser immigration policies, when there is no respect for our policies now? What's gonna change that?"
This makes no sense (sincerely, I don't get it). Please explain.
Phatscotty wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:"So, again, how are we gonna ask for respect for our new looser immigration policies, when there is no respect for our policies now? What's gonna change that?"
This makes no sense (sincerely, I don't get it). Please explain.
Okay.....
Do you believe illegals have respect for our borders and our policies at the moment?
BigBallinStalin wrote:
BigBallinStalin wrote:Phatscotty wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:"So, again, how are we gonna ask for respect for our new looser immigration policies, when there is no respect for our policies now? What's gonna change that?"
This makes no sense (sincerely, I don't get it). Please explain.
Okay.....
Do you believe illegals have respect for our borders and our policies at the moment?
What do you mean? American citizens on a regular basis have no respect for policies like speeding limits or hiring people without eating the expensive costs of hiring (e.g. I hire a guy to help me work some lawn).
In other words, framing this issue in terms of "respect" doesn't clarify the issue.
(If you mean "respect to the law," then you'll have to explain how The Law is independent of Morality and Economics).
BigBallinStalin wrote:
Phatscotty wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:
mrswdk wrote:A lady round my way got molested by some immigrants. I suppose BBS's calculations would deem her nightmares and crippling fear of leaving the house worth less than a nice, cheap Rogan Josh.
Welcome to capitalism.
notyou2 wrote:In the states they have security in the corner stores guarding the union made Twinkies.
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
BigBallinStalin wrote:
Falkomagno wrote:Immigration is crucial to development of culture and society as a whole. The focus should be in having strong principles as foundations of every society, in the most basic things as respect for each other’s life and protection of the vulnerable (children, older, the sick) instead of blocking borders to avoid something that cannot, (nor should be) avoided
PLAYER57832 wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:
The problem is that no everyone wants to move here for positive reasons. Many people actually (gasp) want to do us serious harm, to benefit their home country, to "defend" their religion (not referring to people seeking to freely practice their religion, but those who see opposing religions as a threat worthy of violence), or have more personal harmful intent (whether drug dealing, extortion, or merely to make a lot of money by polluting/paying low wages, etc.).
PLAYER57832 wrote:Point is, pretending that we should just open our borders up to anyone without any adherence to responsibility won't work. That said, there is a HUGE difference between people who are just coming here to work and people coming for other reasons, including to live here permanently.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Both you and Phattscotty don't seem to want to disintinguish between people's motives.
PLAYER57832 wrote:As a minimum, the huge influx of Mexicans and other Latinos has had a very serious impact on our society. Go all over CA and you will find people who feel their culture is being threatened or overrun by what is generalized as "Mexican" culture. In CA it is more poignant because it once was a Mexican territory. There are places where it is more common to hear Spanish than English. While that might seem OK on a culturally diverse front, it is problematic in terms of public policy and in being a unified nation.
PLAYER57832 wrote:There ARE many who will benefit from having a divided society, but that is not average middle class America. Previous groups came here to become part of the US, to become part of the culture. This new wave often wants nothing of that. That IS something to be concerned about. "Concerned" does not mean excluding out of hand, but it does mean that there are a lot of issue to be thought out.
BigBallinStalin wrote:mrswdk wrote:A lady round my way got molested by some immigrants. I suppose BBS's calculations would deem her nightmares and crippling fear of leaving the house worth less than a nice, cheap Rogan Josh.
Welcome to capitalism.
Sounds like a problem of policing.
Welcome to capitalism for private security and socialism for government-provided security.
mrswdk wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:mrswdk wrote:A lady round my way got molested by some immigrants. I suppose BBS's calculations would deem her nightmares and crippling fear of leaving the house worth less than a nice, cheap Rogan Josh.
Welcome to capitalism.
Sounds like a problem of policing.
Welcome to capitalism for private security and socialism for government-provided security.
Yeah, the problem is that the police fail to turn foreign devils away at Arrivals.
Welcome to Miami.
BigBallinStalin wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:
The problem is that no everyone wants to move here for positive reasons. Many people actually (gasp) want to do us serious harm, to benefit their home country, to "defend" their religion (not referring to people seeking to freely practice their religion, but those who see opposing religions as a threat worthy of violence), or have more personal harmful intent (whether drug dealing, extortion, or merely to make a lot of money by polluting/paying low wages, etc.).
No one is denying that all immigrants must be good.PLAYER57832 wrote:Point is, pretending that we should just open our borders up to anyone without any adherence to responsibility won't work. That said, there is a HUGE difference between people who are just coming here to work and people coming for other reasons, including to live here permanently.
Who's pretending that everyone--regardless of criminal record or desire to work--should be allowed in place X?
Sometimes you have, but most of your comments lately do not. You lump all immigrants into one lump... only qualifying it later, when challenged. You even (as noted below) try to claim that interstate movement is somehow identical to movement between countries!BigBallinStalin wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Both you and Phattscotty don't seem to want to disintinguish between people's motives.
False.
BigBallinStalin wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:As a minimum, the huge influx of Mexicans and other Latinos has had a very serious impact on our society. Go all over CA and you will find people who feel their culture is being threatened or overrun by what is generalized as "Mexican" culture. In CA it is more poignant because it once was a Mexican territory. There are places where it is more common to hear Spanish than English. While that might seem OK on a culturally diverse front, it is problematic in terms of public policy and in being a unified nation.
What's so great about nationalist arguments? Unification can easily be maintained by xenophobic policies, but... why do that?
You should be. You should wonder WHY that hatred exists.BigBallinStalin wrote:[I'm not that concerned about people hating on other subcultures.
BigBallinStalin wrote:[PLAYER57832 wrote:There ARE many who will benefit from having a divided society, but that is not average middle class America. Previous groups came here to become part of the US, to become part of the culture. This new wave often wants nothing of that. That IS something to be concerned about. "Concerned" does not mean excluding out of hand, but it does mean that there are a lot of issue to be thought out.
That's doubtful. It depends on the changes in relative prices brought about by the positive change in immigration, which affects various labor markets and thus product markets. Do you think the average middle class American has benefited on net from the minimal restrictions on interstate migration?
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