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wmw999 2,452
But if it's only the illegals who won't go and get sick, then all us legals would be fineQuoteif we'd really like to get an epidemic started in this country, the best way to do it is get millions of people currently living here to be afraid to go to a hospital for fear they'll be deported.
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Illegal immigration is a problem. Most problems are best prevented, and not cured. Putting a big fucking fence at the border with lots of armed guards is a cure, and a damned expensive one. And unless it's really, really expensive, it's probably not going to work real well, either, because a person-sized hole is not very big. Do we really, really want to have an infrastructure like East Germany's with the wall and guards and everything?
But as long as we Americans like things cheap, we're going to have work done for us by people who are scared to ask for more money.
People in Central America have less hope and fewer prospects if they stay home than if they come to the US. The better cure isn't to make the US less attractive; that can only go partway. By making home (i.e. Mexico, Honduras, etc) more financially attractive more people will stay there. And since illegal immigration is a bigger problem to the US than it is to Mexico, I think it behooves us to help them fix our problem.
Wendy P.
What kind of sick liberal fascio-socio-communist are you?!?
GeorgiaDon 362
QuoteIllegal immigration is a problem. Most problems are best prevented, and not cured. Putting a big fucking fence at the border with lots of armed guards is a cure, and a damned expensive one. And unless it's really, really expensive, it's probably not going to work real well, either, because a person-sized hole is not very big. Do we really, really want to have an infrastructure like East Germany's with the wall and guards and everything?
But as long as we Americans like things cheap, we're going to have work done for us by people who are scared to ask for more money.
People in Central America have less hope and fewer prospects if they stay home than if they come to the US. The better cure isn't to make the US less attractive; that can only go partway. By making home (i.e. Mexico, Honduras, etc) more financially attractive more people will stay there. And since illegal immigration is a bigger problem to the US than it is to Mexico, I think it behooves us to help them fix our problem.
+1!!!
Just to add on a bit, when people say "illegal immigration is a problem" (and I agree it is) they seem to think mainly in terms of stopping the "immigration" part. Why not address the "illegal" part? People come to this country because of the opportunity for jobs which, while mostly low-skill and low-paying from an American perspective, are very attractive compared to what is available back home, as Wendy said. But, why do they come here illegally? To a large extent, it is because it is either impossible or prohibitively expensive for them to do so legally.
I came to the US (from Canada) legally, became a permanent resident as soon as it was possible for me to do so, and started the process to become a citizen again pretty much as soon as I was eligible. Over the years I have paid tens of thousands of $$ just in fees for visas, green card applications, and naturalization applications for myself and my family. I have spent years at a time where I was unable to leave the country to go home to visit family, while this or that application was being processed. I and my family have sometimes been treated well, and sometimes like shit, by immigration officials. At the end of the day it was all worth it because I have a great career that pays a respectable (not extravagant) salary. I was able to get into the country because I have an education and "skills" that filled a perceived need, which is to say there is a list of "needed professions" and what I do happened to be on that list.
Contrast that to the situation of the typical "illegal immigrant". There is no visa program that says "welcome to America" if all you have to offer is a strong back and a willingness to work long hours in the hot sun. There are a few slots for temporary "agricultural workers" that greatly limit how long they can stay (months only) and for whom/where they can work. Also if you are working for minimum wage or less, thousands of $$ in fees is a big chunk of your annual income. How many of us can pony up 25% or more of our income just to pay for the privilege of being able to work? There are many disadvantages of being illegal in this country, living in hiding and in fear of being caught and deported is just the start of it. I'm confident most would not choose that route if there was a viable legal alternative.
If we as Americans really want cheap food, yard work, and the rest, we should create an economically realistic way for people in those low-wage low-skill jobs to come here legally.
If we don't want that type of immigration, we should be prepared to pay more for our "stuff". We should also stop with the predatory policies that cripple Latin American and other economies. For example, because of our subsidies to corn farmers, and our export subsidies, Mexican food manufacturers (the big companies, more than the Mom-and Pop operations) find American corn is cheaper than it can be produced locally. As a result, tens of thousands of Mexican farmers who once made an acceptable living at home have been displaced, and many have come here, illegally, because they have to support their families somehow. Ironic, isn't it?
Don
Tolerance is the cost we must pay for our adventure in liberty. (Dworkin, 1996)
“Education is not filling a bucket, but lighting a fire.” (Yeats)
QuoteDo we really, really want to have an infrastructure like East Germany's with the wall and guards and everything?
Uh, dearest, that wall was built to keep the peeps IN, not out.
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