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Previous comments... You are currently on page 10.
I may be making a bigger deal of it than it should be but that is still a fine tightrope to walk there.
I am not yet on board with the government as just a caretaker of public property. It took me all day to get this far (been working too) but I have long maintained that there is no such thing as public property, just park a 5th wheel camper in the wrong area of a national or state park and you'll find out who owns it real quick. I know it's a pragmatic position for dealing with an overreaching government but nothing is owned by nobody, and everybody can't own anything. I'll keep working on it though. Right now my head hurts.
Growing up in Chicago, I knew nothing about what went on down here, until I moved here. There is a constant flow of people, drugs, weapons, sex slaves, and other bad things flowing across the border.
I firmly believe that we are a country, not a charity. We should have sovereign borders and they should be protected.
Edited for spelling
It's damaging to our rights when this critical distinction is wiped out by oversimplified analogies. A proper government's ability to act is granted and limited by its citizens, not (as you point out) by "right"—not based on the freedom to act as required by its nature.
Perpetuation of all the stolen concepts and other contradictory packaged ideas that personify "Government" make it easier for government officials and employees to overstep their tasked responsibilities and further erode the property rights they should be protecting.
Were she to have elaborated she might have placed some restrictions, but she did not elaborate. She came here in 1926. Did she approve of the Immigration Act of 1924? Did she disapprove of the Immigration Act of 1965 that rescinded it? Or what? Her Q&A sounds like a definite No, a definite Yes, but we cannot know.
Personally I would want her answers to be a definite Yes, a definite No. Because unrestricted immigration eventually leads to the end of capitalism, of freedom, of the recognition of individual rights in the target nation.
You ignore all simple logic and tie yourself in knots trying to justify your statist point of view.
Rand used the term “open immigration” and said we had no right to “close the border” and “no right to bar others” in order to raise our standard of living, assuming it would. She said, by asking a rhetorical question, that “immigration should [never] be restricted.” See the full quote for why inserting “never” is the right word to make the question into a statement.
To argue that Ayn Rand said it therefore it is true, that way madness lies. The ARIwatch article gives a few examples that probably everyone here would have misgivings about. To repeat, even a genius is not infallible.
Doubtless Rand herself would tell you to think for yourself, not follow her over a cliff like a robot.
Keep in mind, I am not saying that Government should be able to act independently of their charter as a free individual might.
The key thing is that you can point to any rock and say "who owns that rock"? And some entity does. If you want that rock, only that entity can give it to you. Sometimes it's the government.
What the Government can do with it's rocks is limited. And it should have no more than necessary to fulfil it's function.
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