Is Immigration really the problem?
Every time immigration comes up this question plagues my mind.
My great grandfather came to this country in what we would look at today as an illegal immigration. It was then too, but no one enforced anything about our immigration system. While the law said you have to follow this big process the process that was followed was come to the US, get working, work towards learning English and getting citizenship. Usually in that order.
This being the case, is immigration the problem or a symptom of the real problem?
I have my idea on what the real problem is but I would like to see some discussion before I share what that is.
If immigration is not the problem, but a symptom of the real problem, what do you think the read problem is?
My great grandfather came to this country in what we would look at today as an illegal immigration. It was then too, but no one enforced anything about our immigration system. While the law said you have to follow this big process the process that was followed was come to the US, get working, work towards learning English and getting citizenship. Usually in that order.
This being the case, is immigration the problem or a symptom of the real problem?
I have my idea on what the real problem is but I would like to see some discussion before I share what that is.
If immigration is not the problem, but a symptom of the real problem, what do you think the read problem is?
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Also thanks for the history around immigration law. I have never looked that closely at it. My ancestor came over in 1902 which would mean that my grandfather would not have been illegal at that time. Dang it, I can no longer say my family came here illegally.
If it was starve or work at a legitimate job or face real consequences (deportation, execution...) then the people who came were would not be idiots they could pander to, but people who wanted to work hard and earn what they received.
Politicians can only use people this way when the people they are using are gaining something from it. If the people that came here came here to work and improve themselves by the sweat of there own brow then no politician could use them. They empower the politicians when the seek to get unearned gain from the politicians.
It is the culture they come seeking that is the root problem.
The fact is we have let people come in from all groups for the entire existence of this country. We did things more intelligently as we did check people out, but we did not stop them from entering.
The laws were all ready on the books in my great grandfathers time. They were ignored then as well, and there was not a problem with:
* People coming in to collect welfare (it did not exist).
* Deadly contagions were stopped because we had everyone sit on Ellis Island for a month - My great grandfather included. The laws were ingored but common sense was used.
* Drug Addiction - 30 days on Ellis kinda killed the addicts.
I would be totally game to stop every one that came in for 30 days like we use to, that makes sense. It is completely reasonable but it gets back to the root cause. Our culture will not tolerate doing anything like that any longer.
• Contagious Deadly Diseases.
• Membership in Groups Seeking the Overthrow of the U.S.A.
• Drug Addictions.
• Illegal Contraband (Drugs, Weapons, Dangerous Animals & Plants).
• Felony Warrants & Records.
• Membership in Criminal Organizations.
and much more.
Why in the world would we encourage that?
That was a problem back in your great grandfather's time which is why we passed the illegal alien laws we have.
immigrant group as pawns in their grand plan to
permanently take power in the u.s. -- through plain-
old bribery and subjugation of the dependent class
which they are enlarging through this scheme.
this hurts the people coming into this country,
to effectively prevent them from achieving "the
american dream" by that subjugation-by-welfare. -- j
MORE people in this country??? We have
trouble feeding those we already have, for
Pete's sake! Enough!
The enforcement would be by civil suit and I imagine an attorney or two could be found who would press cases on contingency.
Wouldn’t cost taxpayers a dime and would be the mother of all deterrents!
I remember when unemployment money ran out real quick and you even had to stand in line to get it. I stood in that line once in late 1969, but never made it to the window, never collected a cent. I left in a huff and found a great career within a week where I stayed the next 34 years (Thank you 3M). I sometimes wonder what my life might have been like had I made it to the front of that line. At the time I didn't need much to survive. I had a pretty bad attitude, just got home from the Nam and my old job hired me back but had to lay me off the same day. At least I got a little severance to tie me over, thank you Rocketdyne. This is the way the welfare system should work.
The purpose of controlling legal immigration is to keep out--no, try very hard to--keep out people who will likely harm citizens here.
I'm tired of reading about illegals killing innocent Americans.
No more illegals period! Secure the borders.
I read somewhere that our borders are such a joke that other countries laugh at our utter stupidity.
The problem is not and never has been immigration as such. Controlled immigration has always been good for the country. The problem is how to limit the entrance of "undesirables" -- criminals, those with mental or physical illnesses, and others who would likely have to be supported by taxpayer dollars; and how to limit immigration so that the US labor markets do not become overwhelmed by immigrants. The problem is illegal immigration, and what to do about those who enter illegally.
Immigration is a problem in welfare states - illegal or otherwise.
The fix is to eliminate subsidy (education/health/jobs/income/food etc.) claims all people have on others (taxpayers).
Barring the likelihood of that - restrict the claims
for as many people as possible - all immigrants ("illegal" or otherwise) would be a category of ineligible welfare state beneficiaries.
It is sad that because of our welfare state, we heavily restrict immigration to the US to many hard working, honest people that are stuck in otherwise hostile, horrible environments.
Lack of respect of or support of the rule of law, undermines everything else. The rule of law is the difference between an organized "civilized" country and barbarous chaos. It takes time to slide from civilized to chaos so there are many gradations in between. But without supporting the rule of law the slide is inevitable.
There are defined lawful processes for both immigration, and changing laws you do not like.
Ignoring the process (rule of law) undermines society as a whole.
I agree with AJ, on his remedies, it is unfortunate that his list is as much as is practical, since at base they are passive measures on the main rather than active ones.
The part everyone seems to want to gloss over in the whole discussion is the first word of the label...ILLEGAL.
Coming here illegally is childishly easy to do, that does not however make it right for someone to do so. Nor should it grant you any rights or anything that can be construed as justification for being allowed to remain.
Illegals of any stripe incur a cost on society, and it is a cost that not only has been growing greater every year, it is a cost this country cannot afford. And the cost is not merely economic, it is social and cultural as well.
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