The Annoyed Man wrote:KBCraig wrote:The real Tom Paine would mop the floor with this xenophobic fool.
Oh there's no doubt that he's a xenophobe. What I like about the video is that he places his cards on the table. There's no doubt about what he stands for, right or wrong. When I see Obama shrugging off hard questions as being above his pay grade, it makes me long for a more plain spoken political landscape.
That certainly is refreshing in today's political climate, so I understand your point in posting this.
Personally, I have strong feelings against illegal immigration, but I am also a Christian who feels compelled to extend grace and mercy whenever possible, and therefore, I cannot hate them just because they are different from me. I hope this convinces you that I am not myself a xenophobe.
Certainly, and I hope I didn't imply that you were. If you'll allow, I'll offer my views on borders.
I have a philosophical disagreement with borders. For example, I don't understand how crossing the Rio Grande or the St. Laurence is somehow magically different from crossing the Red or the Sabine. I don't understand how Cubans who make it above the high tide line are more entitled to asylum than those who are caught wading ashore from a sunken raft. I don't understand how Cuban victims of a brutal dictatorship enjoy this special privilege, which is denied to Salvadorans, Hondurans, or any of the hundreds of millions of victims of tinpot despots around the world.
I don't understand how two governments should dictate that neighbors who chat across the street in Derby Line, Vermont and Rock Island, Quebec, must go through government checkpoints to actually cross the street and shake hands; this is as unfathomable to me as if I was required to get government permission to turn left from State Line Avenue, from Texarkana Texas to Texarkana Arkansas.
But if borders must exist --and governments seem to think they must, so that they can define themselves-- I don't have an objection to requiring people to check in on their way in, and letting us know when they leave.
The surest way to "seal the borders" is to open them. Think about it: tens of thousands of illegal immigrants don't come to America just because they want to pay thousands to coyotes to guide them on a life-threatening trek across open desert late at night. They don't cut fences and litter ranches because they'd rather do that than drive. The borders are porous because they
can't just drive up the highway!
Let non-citizens freely check in and out at the border crossing points, and our national resources monitoring the rest of the border would know that anyone crossing in the middle of the desert is someone who probably really needs to be checked out, instead of someone who just wants to roof your house.
When it comes to current immigration policy, I'm reminded of a saying we used often in the Army: "We're hunting elephants here, so don't stop to examine mouse (droppings)!"