ZenMode
Inconceivable Member
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"The idea was to let them get into the country quickly and then sort out their plans"Do you know why there is a year grace period? If you don't know the justification for a law, you can't cogently criticize it. You just end up showing your ass. Which would be a shame, because in this case my intuition matches yours. But I'm going to first find out why the law is the way it is before condemning it.
For instance, to take a silly example: what if the Area 51 incident was actually the arrival of aliens who told the US government that they would destroy the planet if refugees weren't given a year to seek asylum? If that were true, it wouldn't be crazy would it? In fact, it would be crazy not to. Of course this is an exponentially silly example (which I chose because it has no political salience); it illustrates the point that there are likely factors that we don't know about, and those factors could be terribly important.
In the case of asylum, the issue is more complex than "make them declare." There are international treaties that have to be adhered to; while I don't think those treaties speak to any grace period, I'm not sure about that. Traditionally asylum in the US was used to give refuge to small numbers of people who were being persecuted by vicious regimes for political beliefs. The idea was to let them get into the country quickly and then sort out their plans; delays could mean death. Also, the requirement that asylum would have to be declared at the border would undermine its use for defections.
Now maybe the importance of those justifications has lessened over time; the issue of defections definitely has. And it happens frequently that laws erode in effectiveness over time, as circumstances change. Most statutes need updating, because nobody can foresee the whole future. But if you don't understand what the law was trying to do, how can you ever design one that's better?
This shoot-first, ask-questions-later is Trump's approach, and we've of course seen how disastrous that is.
First, people who are sneaking into the country aren't being "let" in, they are sneaking in illegally.
Second, IF there were ever an urgent situation, where we needed to get people in as quickly as possible, the discussion of allowing a year could be discussed. Even that really makes no sense because the people should be detained and processed on the US side of the border.
However, as usual, your default is to try to defend federal government ridiculousness....