• Gorilladrums@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    1 day ago

    The only point you’ve made that has any real practical weight is the issue of labor exploitation of undocumented immigrants

    All of my points are both true and perfectly valid. You not liking them doesn’t invalidate them nor does it make them any less significant.

    even then you seem to not care as much about the inequity of it as much as that it “devalues citizenship,”

    I’m against the exploitation because it’s exploitation, but the solution people like you come up with is not even remotely practical. Your solution to make illegal immigrants have the same benefits of citizens without them actually being citizens. f anybody, anywhere can come into this country without approval or documentation, and start working and getting benefits from the state… then it doesn’t take genius to see how this opens up other types of exploitation.

    Not only that, but since there are no controls to regulate the flow of people, then what’s there from stopping the billions of people out there who have live in places with worse economic conditions from just packing up and moving here? The answer is nothing, and with any massive influx of people, you start heavily over burdening the nation’s already stressed systems and start losing social cohesiveness. In other words this is a textbook recipe that leads to collapse.

    This type of thinking sounds just and moral on the surface level, but it’s in reality surface level is all it is. The idea falls apart the moment you start looking into the consequences, there’s a reason why unchecked borders haven’t worked well throughout history. The one and only real, practical solution is to overhaul the immigration system to make it more consistent, efficient, quick, and have it work to the benefit of the nation. Once you have that in place, then you make sure that it’s strictly enforced. The only people who are allowed to come here are the people we want to be here. This is common sense.

    Your argument about the legal ramifications is circular and based on nothing more than post hoc mental gymnastics to reach the unsupported conclusion you started with.

    Your economic argument is hollow and literally concludes that it isn’t important because your circular legal argument is what is important.

    The moral argument assumes a zero sum game and, again, is not based on anything factual.

    Finally, your security threat argument is evidenced by effectively nothing–the things you raise are threats regardless of immigration and are most actively guarded against at other points throughout their respective threat trajectory.

    These are all meaningless buzzword salads. It’s fine if you disagree, but you actually have to put in the effort to explain both your disagreement and your position, otherwise your words hold no weight. Simply saying things like “hollow” and “mental gymnastics” means nothing, and the same goes for insisting that my points are ciruclar and not factual. You saying they are doesn’t make them so, if you aren’t capable of explaining yourself or aren’t able to critique my points on their own merits, then perhaps this conversation isn’t for you.

    The only semi-argument you made here is that you think there’s no need to do anything about immigration, because the security threats that I brought up also happen outside of immigration and these issues are being countered elsewhere, but the problem with this argument is that it ignores the fact that the way our immigration is handled a big part of why these issues are much bigger threats than they should be. These threats need to be countered within and outside of immigration.

    I think before you flap about complaining about education quality, you should reflect on your own reasoning as presented. You have applied zero logical process and effectively thrown a heap of conclusory axioms in the air and sputtered with indignation. You have effectively argued nothing and only shown your own severe lack of self-reflection.

    This honestly proves my point more than anything.

    • FatCrab@slrpnk.net
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 day ago

      Look, you’re demanding I present counter arguments to statements that literally aren’t argued. Your entire position is effectively “this is bad because I say it is” so of course I’m not going to spend time and energy to counter that. Explain the actual mechanism of harm without resorting to “it’s clear from history” or “it’s a textbook recipe that leads to collapse.” I mean, if you are making your statements disingenuously as I suspect, that’s fine, but I’m giving you the benefit of the doubt that you’re in fact sincerely not understanding how you are in no way making logical arguments but just rattling off conclusions.

      So, here are some actual facts. Immigration of all stripes has been pretty thoroughly shown to only improve economies in terms of productivity and diversity. Immigrants, no matter what, pay substantially into the system, and thus enable scaling of the resources only some of them end up benefiting from. Immigrants, again of all varieties, are significantly less likely to engage in crime than their native-born counterparts. These are all well established in the literature, so I will take them as axiom.

      Given the above, your hypothesized concerns simply don’t track as population flows scale. Crime rates don’t increase (actually go down), economies don’t implode (actually improve), and social systems don’t collapse because they inherently scale in resource allocation proportionally to population (in a competently structured system–i.e., where this fails, it is not due to immigration but to extant deficiencies already in play).

      Now, let’s address another deficiency in the “reasoning” you presented. People don’t just magically immigrate between countries, regardless of Immigration laws. Even if we had no borders and lived in a space age utopia, most people would nevertheless stay where they are unless that place was inhospitable to their survival–this isn’t to say there aren’t many economic migrants, but they are still inevitably a fraction of the population of their country of origin and so the naive assumption that “billions” would flow across an open border is just absurd and completely unreasonable.

      Ultimately, understand that I am not expecting erasure of borders to happen anytime soon. However, yes, it is patently clear that the current “crackdown” on immigration is a solution looking for a problem so that it can justify totalitarian authoritarianism and immigration is not and has never really been a significant threat to the US, documented or no.