Create a Fair Immigration Policy

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Can you imagine the outcry if an American or UK person was banned from a country. Nope. If we want to emigrate to work or set up homes in more sunny climes we just go. Of course, quite a lot of us are white…Who says this town/city/country is only for certain people??
 
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Mirdath:
There is no fine print on the Statue of Liberty.
Yes there is. It says: “Made In Fance” super teeney weenie at the bottom in the back.
 
Can you imagine the outcry if an American or UK person was banned from a country. Nope. If we want to emigrate to work or set up homes in more sunny climes we just go. Of course, quite a lot of us are white…Who says this town/city/country is only for certain people??
Pardon me?

Try moving to Mexico and applying for social services there!!

When I worked in Singapore, I had to submit a copy of my diplomas – they only admit highly-qualified workers. Had I not had a couple of graduate degrees, I couldn’t have got a worker’s visa.
 
Tell the indians. Tell the Romans. Tell the Gauls. Tell the Britons.😛
Tell them what, precisely? They were all conquered, not overrun by immigrants they accepted, who lived and worked in their territory, and who generally contributed to their society.
As that it witten, it could indicate you are “cool” with abortion.
Imagine that!
 
Tell them what, precisely? They were all conquered, not overrun by immigrants they accepted, who lived and worked in their territory, and who generally contributed to their society.
In point of fact, their land was flooded by immigrants, who when they became powerful enough simply took over.
Imagine that!
So you are pro-abortion?
 
So you’re…what, anti-Hispanic? Please try to stay on topic. I really did want to hear answers to my question.
 
So you’re…what, anti-Hispanic? Please try to stay on topic. I really did want to hear answers to my question.
A fair immigration policy would be one that benefits the United States, only taking in those people we need, with emphasis on the highly-educated and highly-skilled.

We are not the relief valve for every dictatorship in the world – Social Justice would require creating conditions so people could find a good life in their own countries, rather than migrating elsewhere.
 
Conquerors? What conquerors? The American indian was overrun by people coming here for economic opportunity. The Middle East and North Africa by immigrants who were spreading a new religion.
In both cases, it was conquest by armed force. The American settlers had the backing of the British and later the U. S. Army. The Muslims invaded the Holy Lands and North Africa and forced conversions by the SWORD.

People coming to the U. S. in the 20th and 21st centuries looking for opportunity is another matter altogether.

Apples and oranges; thus: Analogy denied.
 
In both cases, it was conquest by armed force. The American settlers had the backing of the British and later the U. S. Army.
Ah, yes – we all remember the British Royal Marines storming asnore at Jamestown, Plymough Rock and Phlidelphia.😃
The Muslims invaded the Holy Lands and North Africa and forced conversions by the SWORD.
Funny, I had a debate going with an apologist for terrorism who told me the local Christians joined the Muslims to throw out the Byzantines.😃
People coming to the U. S. in the 20th and 21st centuries looking for opportunity is another matter altogether.
They came in the 17th and 18th Century for the same reasons.

Most of America was “conquered” by slow infiltration of ordinary civilians.
Apples and oranges; thus: Analogy denied.
Analogy proven, denial nonsense.😛
 
vern humphrey:
They came in the 17th and 18th Century for the same reasons.
Good point. They did. And many of them were as unruly as their contemporary counterparts are now accused of being – or actually are, as the case may be.
vern humphrey:
Most of America was “conquered” by slow infiltration of ordinary civilians.
90% of the original inhabitants were “conquered” by disease.

As for slow infiltration: we in Canada – some of us anyway – are aware that some folks who had paid for passage to the New World were barred from entering Canada when the ships finally docked here. Those hopeful but doomed human souls died on the boats in plain view of a wide wide country. (And we won’t mention what fair green isle those unfortunate folks were from, will we? But I will mention how slow an infiltration that was for some ordinary civilians.)

Make a long story short: I have yet to see a point of view which explains the status of First Nations in the Americas before , during, and after the War of Independence vis a vis border crossing. While everything else you have said on the subject of ‘illegal migration’ makes perfect sense to me, it leaves out

a) the status of First Nations vis a vis border crossing; and
b) the status of First Nations before there was even a border to cross and has that status changed and if so on what basis?

The tripping point for some very reasonable and otherwise responsible arguments to tighten up on the border is: the status of the First Nations.

Today I had to re-examine an unconscious Canadian reflex in my own thinking. Perhaps it is time for some Americans to look at a somewhat anachronistic isolationism which persists in your interpretation of contemporary American conservatism.

Is the WOT an isolationist policy? What happens if you concede the WOT?

We have been talking about perimeter control replacing border control now for years.

We have been talking about a free-trade zone (similar to the EU) in the Americas now for years.

Chavez (say hello to his leel frenz) has been losing no time while we are yakking as if there is no tomorrow.

Certainly one risk of the present ineffective border control policy is that folks like Adnan el-Shukrijumah and his American Hiroshima leel frenz have been crossing that border with impugnity while the First Nations little guys get nailed.

El-Shukri of course has Bin Laden’s billions behind him and the little guys have zip behind them.

Are we being suckered? Um… yes.

Are we at risk? Of course. What I am suggesting is that in some ways the risk of incurring harm is very much greater than anyone has so far suggested in these threads. Very much greater. Because we have not really discussed American Hiroshima, have we?

And in some ways the risk of causing harm is also very much greater. Because we have not yet discussed the status of the First Nations, have we?

Somewhere inbetween these two polarities lie the legitimate concerns yall have articulated about the cost – social and economic – of not closing the border more effectively. Legitimate concerns which must be balanced with the other two concerns I have brought forward.

The question is: how is that balance to be struck? Staying stuck on closing the border isn’t working. It doesn’t even correspond imho to current American foreign policy.

You yourself say that we have a responsibility to review our policies to see if they can actually be implemented. If we don’t then we are stuck with ‘good intentions’ as to a moral outcome alongside an actual outcome whose morality is on very shaky ground.
 
In both cases, it was conquest by armed force. The American settlers had the backing of the British and later the U. S. Army.
90% of the original inhabitants were ‘conquered’ by disease. Oh the army went in of course. But they more often than not went into villages that had been decimated by diseases brought over by the European settlers. And there were the odd battles about which much was written.
 
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Mirdath:
I am unable to recall a specific instance of or reason for a catastrophic failure of open immigration.
vern humphrey:
Ask the American Indians.
Why stop with American Indians? Why not First Nations of Canada? Latin America? Australia?
vern humphrey:
Ask the Christians of the Holy Land and North Africa.
Ask contemporary Europe.
 
Tell the indians. Tell the Romans. Tell the Gauls. Tell the Britons.😛
Ah yes, the Romans had that little immigration problem toward the end of their empire, didn’t they? I had forgotten about that surprising little bit of history.
 
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Mirdath:
Tell them what, precisely?
Well, in Canada the English told the First Nations many things. Then broke the treaties. Then decimated their communities by shipping First Nations children off to residential schools. For starters.

Reckon the First Nations don’t have a whole lot of reasons to listen to what they’re being told by the ‘conquerers’ anymore.
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Mirdath:
They were all conquered, not overrun by immigrants they accepted, who lived and worked in their territory, and who generally contributed to their society.
I honestly do not understand the basis on which you are making the distinction between the ‘conquerers’ and the ‘illegals.’ Can you explain please?
 
I honestly do not understand the basis on which you are making the distinction between the ‘conquerers’ and the ‘illegals.’ Can you explain please?
Conquerors come to make a land their own; thus, European encroachment upon Native American territory was not immigration but conquest. Same with the Aztecs, the Romans, the Gauls, et cetera et cetera.

Immigrants, however, come to live in another land. That’s the distinction.
 
Manuelman

That is excellent. It is fair and also is consistent with Catholic teaching. The immigration issue has caused me a lot of heartache this year. I know longer post a major conservative forum because I couldnt stand the hate and the insults. Most Americans and most Republicans(where I am at) and Democrats fall right into that group. THe problem is that no one realizes who is funding and running this debate. That is population control extremist masking themselves as “conservative”.

A few thoughts I would add. As to English profiency I would perhaps give some expemptions to the Seniors. That is a small number but there are a few. Mostly people who came over in their late 40’s early 50’s. Most know English anyway.

Second we have got to reform the entire immigration system. Some of the headaches that people go throught that come here legaly is horrible.

Third-Faith Based Initatives- There should be provisions that Churches can step into the gap here as to Citizenship and English courses. THis will be a major place for us to do our job

fourth- As to immigration numbers. We jave to have a rational policy as to these HB1 visas. We are going to lose some of the best talent out of India and other places

Fifth- A guest worker program that can be monitered and adjusted to take in cahnges in the Economy. THe biggest fallacy of this debate is that every illegal here wants to be a citizen. That is not true. We need to return to a sane policy of Circular migration. This will naturally happen as NAFTA is expanded but we need to implement it

Last- This migrant workers need to be protected. New Orleans and the Gulf Coast would be in bad shape without this folks. But what some of these people are being exposed too is criminal and I hate to imagine the birth defects that will be visted on this folks kids
 
Conquerors come to make a land their own; thus, European encroachment upon Native American territory was not immigration but conquest. Same with the Aztecs, the Romans, the Gauls, et cetera et cetera.

Immigrants, however, come to live in another land. That’s the distinction.
Conquerers sneak across borders illegally and take what is not legally theirs to take in order to live in another land.

Hows is this different from ‘illegal immigrants’?

Can those who were conquered be rightfully considered ‘illegal immigrants’?

What about El Shukri?
 
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