All humans have an equal basic moral status. They possess the same fundamental rights, and the comparable interests of each person should count the same in calculations that determine social policy. — Rank Amateur
The purpose of any government is to protect the people. Unfortunately, this is merely ideal and not always followed for many countries. Without the application of compassion and mercy, the woman and her children are encroaching on another person's property, as most land within many nations are privately owned and not government property. By removing the woman and children to place them back to their own country is actually more logical than offering refuge; as one cannot know the intents of all such immigrants, as many crossover with dishonorable intent. In order to protect citizens from potential harm, the government must remove such persons without regard to the woman and her children's situation.Who in the scenario has a higher moral purpose. A woman protecting her children, or a government protecting its border ? — Rank Amateur
It seems that on an individual basis, the actions of the government have lesser moral standing - can it be justified as a lesser evil than mass migration ? — Rank Amateur
First of all, how can you say everyone has "rights"? — LD Saunders
Perhaps this point should be more discussed here, as especially when the following P5. makes the argument that these borders are so artificial that the majority are only upheld by power...and hence without it would collapse.P4. Political borders exist in the world — Rank Amateur
Nation states have no moral goodness associated with them if morality is about caring about human beings in general. Nation states are about "us" and "them", you'd have to be a fantasist to think otherwise. — Kippo
I've noticed that one of the most patriotic people, meaning that they love or have a fondness to their country and the people, cherish the culture and heritage are actually ex-pats living in foreign countries. As aliens they are constantly in touch living and working with foreigners.Nation states have no moral goodness associated with them if morality is about caring about human beings in general. Nation states are about "us" and "them", you'd have to be a fantasist to think otherwise. — Kippo
I'm making the point that natural rights do not exist. Never have and never will. — LD Saunders
People instead first figure out what is morally good, and then make up legal rights to accomplish what is morally good. It's only after people figuring out that freedom of speech is a good thing that it then becomes a legal right. Rights are always governed by a larger moral system — LD Saunders
I'm making the point that natural rights do not exist. Never have and never will. — LD Saunders
Nation states are one of those things that links totally different people together. Even the rich and the poor. — ssu
Immigration reform is needed, the question is: what should it look like? What problems are we trying to solve? — Relativist
Actually it's not; there are merely difficult people. What I observe is that the most powerful nations simply exhibit a real impoverishment of imagination in thinking up solutions. Here's one: people often are on the run from tyranny and terror, and that makes perfect sense. Solution? Eliminate the sources of tyranny and terror. How? Draw from the repertoire of sticks and carrots. Of course sticks and carrots come with the respective risks of abuse and corruption. I'd like to think these could be minimized.It's an extremely difficult issue. — Wayfarer
This can be done by making cocaine etc legal to buy. — Kippo
Obama was also pretty strict about border control, but he didn’t showboat it for votes the way Trump does. — Wayfarer
The problem - or one problem - seems to be that the benefits of globalisation and neo-liberal economics have been very unevenly spread, even in that bastion of capitalism, the United States, not to mention many other nations. — Wayfarer
If marijuana legalisation continues apace throughout the world and it is seen as "successful" on its own terms then cocaine legalisation will be more likely to be considered. But it would have to follow a very different model - one of harm and use reduction, with just enough supply available to eliminate the motive for criminal production. There is an awful lot to be gained if the appropriate model of legalisation based on expert advice and scientific data can be passed. Not only would many Latin American areas become viable to live in again, I think there would be a drop in cocaine use and addiction. This is what the experts tend to suggest, I believe.Yeah good luck with that — Wayfarer
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