Hi, Edwin,
You are certainly free to take my question seriously - it was intended that way. But, let’s take a look at what you have presented here and I will seriously try and respond.
Contarini:
I’m not sure what you mean by this. Surely one can say that the country is not admitting as many immigrants as it could, without saying just what the maximum number might be. That would depend on all kinds of circumstances.
Without getting bogged down in “…all kinds of circumstances…” what country is doing ‘all that it can’ in any area (e.g, energy exploration, conservation, production of durable consumer items) - you name it, Edwin, short-comings abound in every area of human effort. But, that does not mean that countries are not trying to imporve. This broad-brushed criticism of US failures in immigration - is both unjust and undeserved.
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Similarly, one can say that the earth can still support more people without saying what the maximum number of people might be.
I think it’s fascinating that you use the “lifeboat” analogy…
The ‘earth’ is not being criticized for not holding more people - the US is.
If you do not like the life boat analogy I used - feel free to change it to any other item you wish: car, bus, telephone booth, quart jar, etc. You name it, there is a physical limit to every physical entity. The issue is where is it that one draws the line since we are dealing with people. Total Population / Gross square miles may provide some number - but, that treats every square mile to be just as desireable as every other square mile. And, this just does not work.
What you have apparently refused to answer is: where are you drawing the line? Since the US actually does admit immigrants (and these would by definition be legal immigrants) every year - and every year previously admitted legal immigrants take the Oath to become US Citizens - there is a working immigration policy. .
And here you are, using that analogy. . . . Would you agree, then, that worldwide population controls are a good thing?
Actually, for me, Edwin, this is not about ‘over population’ - but, the destruction of the civilization in my own country that I have come to know. When my Father’s parents immigrated to the US - they had to learn to speak and write English. They had to learn about this country and they became citizens. Work to increase the number admitted - but, do not encourage illegal entry because of some presumed failure to admit some vaguely larger number…
I mean, you’re worried about overpopulation in the U.S., which has a density of 83 people per square mile if
Wikipedia is to be believed.
As I explained above, this is not and has never been my worry…
The world as a whole has a density of 135. So it’s hard for me to take your question seriously.
Beware of averages - they only look like they provide an answer. But, since you are using this as your numeric argument - the US is to go from 83 to 135 and this resolve the criticism, Edwin?.
By the standards of the U.N. Human Development Index, the
standard of living in this country is the 4th highest in the world. It is with the greatest effort (and only by taking some time in between posts) that I am able to respond with anything approaching courtesy to the astonishing claim by inhabitants of such a favored nation that they are unable to receive any more immigrants.
Thank you for the courtesy. And this is exactly what I am try to seriously address to your argument: whatever the US is doing is simply not enough - but, the ‘how much more will be enough’ question is simply dismissed as not worthy of answering. One can not be vague when one condemns! And this is just what is going on. If no specific amount will satisfy, I submit that the entire argument is flawed…
As far as I’m concerned, in light of the obvious facts concerning the relative wealth and extensive resources of the United States, the fact that folks on this forum can say with a straight face that the U.S. can’t receive more immigrants is a sufficient refutation of the claim that this is a purely non-moral question that the Church has no business addressing.
This is the major flaw in the argument presented above: every year new immigrants enter this country. No one (to my knowledge) has said, “…the US can’t receive more immigrants…”. The issue is how many more are you talking about?.
If people can come to conclusions as remote from reality as that–conclusions that have such a devastating effect on the lives of the poor and needy–then it is certainly the Church’s business to provide a “reality check.”
Well, I guess this is where we differ. You can not set up a ‘straw man’ argument such as you have done and then claim victory for defeating it. There also seems to be a bit of confusion between the USCCB and the Catholic Chruch - it is only the Church that can speak infallibly.
God bless.