E
Elizabeth502
Guest
Not making subjective sense to you, or to other individuals, does not in itself justify law-breaking, including in other social justice areas.I’m sorry to break it to you, but the American immigration laws do not make sense.
For example, in some not particularly wealthy cities, expensive parking meters, or expensive public transportation, is needed to access certain social service agencies which are only located in particular areas of the city where these high fees are charged. But only people without such disposable income (and who reside elsewhere, in areas of lower rents and property taxes) have need for such social services. Like some aspects of the immigration process, this also “makes no sense.”
The appropriate response to such an objective social injustice is for sincere, caring people to contribute to some donation fund to supply dedicated meters, and/or to lobby the City for a different meter rate for such dedicated meters, and/or to gather names of those who might be available to chauffeur such needy people downtown. All these responses are both legal and moral, and do not contradict the Fourth Commandment, while demonstrating active compassion for the poor.
An immoral response would be for such poor individuals to destroy or incapacitate the parking meters to “correct” the injustice (to break the law).
There are other mega-responses as well, in which authorities could move the physical locations of social service agencies, and/or ‘shortcut’ the process, and individuals concerned about social justice could participate morally by lobbying such officials to do such things.
I draw out the parallel only to show that the same concepts apply to immigration. Social injustices precipitated in and by other countries and their local conditions are not legitimately “reversed” by wholesale disregard of laws within a different sovereign country.