CRHeel94
Esteemed Member
- Messages
- 538
Last night we had a family discussion about illegal immigration. It was an interesting conversation that covered several topics and led me to what I believe are some fundamental truths about the situation.
-Every country has the right (actually, the responsibility) to control its borders. Illegal immigration is problem just on this concern. Its paramount to be able to monitor who's coming in.
-The Republicans have been using illegal immigration as a convenient campaign issue for nearly 20 years. They have little incentive to actually solve it. This election was the clearest example...it was the main issue for Trump, it was the constant drumbeat that has marked his campaign.
-The dirty little secret is that America depends on the cheap labor that illegal immigrants provide in certain key industries (agriculture, construction, child care, meatpacking, etc). I love how the immigrants are the ones that get hunted down and pay the price. Start locking up the business owners who hire them and we'd see a compromise mighty quick.The US is currently at full employment; where the heck are they going to get the millions of laborers they will need? If Trump accomplished his campaign promise of sending back every illegal immigrant, the negative impact on the US economy would be severe.
-US immigration policy is divorced from economic policy. I always hear..."have them como here legally". The current setup makes it basically impossible for an unskilled or low-skilled laborer to gain a visa to the US. Heck, in the last Trump administration they made it harder to get all sorts of visas (I'm still traumatized by the renewal of my tourist visa...took about six months). A drastic overhaul is needed in the approach. I've advocated for a guest worker program in the past.
-We have a tense situation around the world between the developed and underdeveloped world regarding immigration. More people wanting to hop on the boat than is possible. Long term, the solution is the economic development of the third world (economically, politically, socially). Thats quite a daunting global challenge, but I'd like to believe that it can be achieved. Costa Rica (as well as other countries) does not have an emigration problem for the most part (we have more immigrants than emigrants). Why? Because in broad strokes people like to live here. My concern is that objective takes concerted leadership from the developed world...hard to achieve when someone wants the lion's share of the kill.
-Every country has the right (actually, the responsibility) to control its borders. Illegal immigration is problem just on this concern. Its paramount to be able to monitor who's coming in.
-The Republicans have been using illegal immigration as a convenient campaign issue for nearly 20 years. They have little incentive to actually solve it. This election was the clearest example...it was the main issue for Trump, it was the constant drumbeat that has marked his campaign.
-The dirty little secret is that America depends on the cheap labor that illegal immigrants provide in certain key industries (agriculture, construction, child care, meatpacking, etc). I love how the immigrants are the ones that get hunted down and pay the price. Start locking up the business owners who hire them and we'd see a compromise mighty quick.The US is currently at full employment; where the heck are they going to get the millions of laborers they will need? If Trump accomplished his campaign promise of sending back every illegal immigrant, the negative impact on the US economy would be severe.
-US immigration policy is divorced from economic policy. I always hear..."have them como here legally". The current setup makes it basically impossible for an unskilled or low-skilled laborer to gain a visa to the US. Heck, in the last Trump administration they made it harder to get all sorts of visas (I'm still traumatized by the renewal of my tourist visa...took about six months). A drastic overhaul is needed in the approach. I've advocated for a guest worker program in the past.
-We have a tense situation around the world between the developed and underdeveloped world regarding immigration. More people wanting to hop on the boat than is possible. Long term, the solution is the economic development of the third world (economically, politically, socially). Thats quite a daunting global challenge, but I'd like to believe that it can be achieved. Costa Rica (as well as other countries) does not have an emigration problem for the most part (we have more immigrants than emigrants). Why? Because in broad strokes people like to live here. My concern is that objective takes concerted leadership from the developed world...hard to achieve when someone wants the lion's share of the kill.