duns wrote:You seem to be conflating immigrants with "non-productive people, criminals, drug addicts and similar". Most immigrants want to come to the USA because they subscribe to its principles of free enterprise. In other words, they just want a job in a better environment than they could have at home. And America needs their services. There is a shortage of people in the USA trained as engineers, doctors, scientists, etc. and a shortage of people to hang drywall, mow lawns, and clean houses. The number of people crossing the border who are criminals or terrorists is a tiny fraction of the total. That's why it doesn't make much sense to try to keep out the criminals and terrorists by closing the borders to everyone. Trying to shut all foreigners out, good and bad, is an impossible undertaking. Remember that all the 911 hijackers were here legally -- not one of them had to sneak in across the Rio Grande. If you are an Al Qaeda member not yet on the US watch list, you can fly in freely, with minimal formalities, as a tourist, a businessman, or a student. Or if you have a needed skill, you can obtain a work visa. Or if you have investments in the USA, you can obtain a visa to come here to manage your investments.
The percentage of
illegal aliens who are otherwise not engaged in criminal behaviors is irrelevant, because they are
still engaged in the law-breaking behavior of entering the country illegally. The charge that those of us who want to control the border are bigoted against immigrants is an insupportable charge, and it is a red herring argument because it has nothing to do with wanting to control the border. It is the intellectual brother of "playing the race card" whenever there exists no other substantive argument to offer, and I resent the heck out of it.
I love immigrants. My own
mother is an immigrant. However, she came here legally. She is, by the way, a holder of a PhD, Summa Cum Laude, from the Sorbonne, and has published 14 books, and was a professor at Caltech until her retirement.... ....
AND, she came here legally. And even so, she was nearly denied re-entry to the country once, and nearly deported another time — despite the fact that she had been married to an American citizen for years, had given birth to three American sons, and had never knowingly broken any laws. Fortunately for our family, the worst did not happen, and we remained united as a family. Even so, I bear no hard feelings about it
because my government was doing its job!!!
Nobody denies the need for brick-layers and ditch-diggers anymore than they deny the need for chemical engineers and doctors (particularly now, since so many of our own doctors are being driven out of the medical profession by the communist occupying the White House, and his dogs in the Senate and House leadership). But you know as well as I do that the ditch-diggers and brick-layers could go through the legal process of entry just like anyone else, if they wanted to. They just don't want to, because it is "too hard." It requires some kind of accountability on their parts, and they don't want to have that burden. So, they break the law because it is inconvenient for them.
And by the way, the 19 hijackers may have entered legally (although it was later shown that they lied on their visa applications and to immigration interviewers about their purposes for entering the country), but they
stayed here illegally after their entry visas had expired. They just hadn't been caught up with for several reasons, among which were a feckless disregard by the national government for enforcing existing laws.
I'm not one of those who says we have to round up everybody and put them in concentration camps until we deport them. But I do believe that the national authority has a moral responsibility to protect the integrity of its borders; and once that has been accomplished, then to account for and deal equitably with those who are already here.
Some will have to be deported because they are by any rational measure undesirable. Others will have to be put on some kind of path to legal residency, and if they wish to earn it, citizenship. And this should not be without consequence, because there remains the fact that they broke the law to enter, and there should be, at the very least, a fine levied for doing so; and it should be paid before they can be allowed to get onto a path for legal residency.
And, by the way, this is a far more lenient approach than Mexico's own immigration policy.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
#TINVOWOOT