I have difficulty understanding how enforcement of immigration laws “breaks up families” except by the CHOICE of the family members. If, say, one is an illegal immigrant from Mexico and is deported, there is nothing preventing him from taking his family back to Mexico with him.
Perhaps he does not choose to take his family back. Perhaps other relatives will help provide the citizen children with free public education better than they would receive in Mexico. Perhaps the children have Medicaid cards. Quite possibly the parent or parents fully intend to return illegally again. But whatever the reason, to the extent it’s “breaking up families” it’s a choice made by the parents.
So, while I understand how disappointing it might be to take one’s family back to, say, Mexico, even though the unemployment rate is lower than here, and the wages and cost of living are about 1/3 what they are here, and where the social benefits paid by people legally here are more generous, it’s still really an economic choice.
Some countries of origin really are miserable. Guatemala comes readily to mind in that regard. But Mexico is about 13th among nations in average wages. It’s not “third world” at all, and certainly not in the way Guatemala is.
Yes, it’s better to make American wages that go a lot further in one’s home country, just as it is for those oil workers who go to Kuwait to make the “big bucks” and return here eventually well “ahead of the Joneses’”. But that does not translate into a human right for me to work in Kuwait or to get ahead of the Joneses at all.
The highest wages in the world are those enjoyed by the people in Lichtenstein the last I looked. If I could work illegally in Lichtenstein and come back wealthy or even live the life of Reilley forever in Lichtenstein, that does not mean I have a moral right to work illegally in Lichtenstein. Nor does it necessarily translate into a “right” inherent in me, if deported from Lichtenstein, to leave my children there to be supported by the generous welfare benefits provided by the people of Lichtenstein when I could support them in this country, even on a lower scale, myself.
I certainly understand that there are human stories behind all deportations, and some of them make for choices that are difficult. But sometimes I wonder whether some churchmen really understand the economics behind some of the choices that are made.