So what, exactly, is the problem at the Southern Border? I'm thinking you do not know
— tim wood
I've followed US-Mexican politics for forty years and lived in Mexico for four and a half years. I've been across the border in San Diego 60 times or so. You are wrong in your assumption that I don't know about the border. You know that fence sticking out into the ocean that you always see pictures of? I've been there. Not that any of this matters, but you're factually wrong about what I know. — fishfry
how did the Dems get from the Secure Fence Act accompanied by strong anti-illegal immigrant rhetoric, to the present stance of abolishing ICE and having open borders? — fishfry
I believe the worst the right says about the left... — fishfry
and the worst the left says about the right. — fishfry
No that is not my argument. That's a strawman. — fishfry
The point is that the Dems' current rhetoric is seriously out of alignment with their rhetoric from when they ran the government. — fishfry
You do know that Obama deported more Mexicans than Bush did, right? — fishfry
I object to the hypocrisy from the Dems on this issue. The Dems WERE in favor of STRONG border security before Trump showed up. Are you claiming to be unaware of that? — fishfry
Great, someone who knows. What is the problem at the Southern Border? — tim wood
In general, the only immigration restrictions I'd have, anywhere in the world, would be that I'm okay with screening for wanted criminals or people with significant associations with known terrorists. — Terrapin Station
What is the problem at the Southern Border? — tim wood
Far easier to declare victory on fictional problems, or more precisely, delusional solutions (as if a wall will solve things) than to create real solutions to real problems. Like Trump's first national emergency, to tackle the opioid crisis. So, how things have gone after that declaration?It's a "problem" which has no solution. It has no solution because the exact nature of "the problem" cannot even be formulated in a universally acceptable way. So "the problem" itself is a phantom problem. — Metaphysician Undercover
Did I? If I did I'll stand by it. I thought I said "No wall." All I get is the news, and that seems conclusive. What problem does the wall solve?Tim, you said there's no need for a wall. — fishfry
In my opinion, a problem cannot be solved until and unless it is understood - and that is not as easy as it sounds. There's the textbook example of a downtown office building where people complained of slow elevators. Do you think from that you understand what the problem is? The "problem" was studied until it was understood. What do you think the solution was? See the end of the post*. And the heart of this is quality improvement - what makes things better? Is it necessary to "solve" the problem? Or better to simply make it cease to exist?So do you think there's a need for a fence?
Breathe, fishfry. Sit down if you're feeling light-headed. But also let's get real. The President of the United States of America has declared a national emergency for the United State of America, because of "problems" on "the Southern border." You claim knowledge of the border and its problems. Are you aware of any border problems whatsoever that might give warrant to Trump's claims? Especially after every responsible source of information puts the lie to everything he says?What do you want to do about the existing 600 miles of fence? Tear some or all of it down? Add more as long as it's a fence and not a wall? Is this a Trump-bashing thread or a discussion of US-Mexico border policy, a situation that goes back to the Bracero program of the 1930's? Do you think there should be any international borders at all? After all, some people are one-worlders and don't believe in borders. When you say there's no need for a wall, is that what you mean? Do you think having 12-20 million people living in the shadows in the US is a good idea? Do you favor intelligent immigration reform? Or just Trump-bashing?
ou would say a wall is wrong, because you don't want strong borders. Which is perfectly fine, it's a coherent position that goes beyond, "Trump is a liar therefore we don't need a wall." That's what Tim Wood wrote and it's the point I challenged him on. — fishfry
But the point is that the goal of the proposal is not to "prevent [illegal] immigration", it is rather to raise the costs associated with it
I wonder how much suffering and unnecessary loss of life this could lead to? — VagabondSpectre
I could do the wall over a longer period of time, I didn't need to do this, but I'd rather do it much faster. And I don't have to do it for the election; I've already done a lot of wall for the election 2020. And the only reason we're up here talking about this is because of the election, because they want to try and win an election which it looks like they're not going to be able to do.
And this is one of the ways they think they can possibly win is by obstruction and a lot of other nonsense. And I think that I just want to get it done faster, that's all.
What aspects of Trump’s wall could work? Could it really prevent immigration? — Franklin
How many human beings do we want living in America? — Jake
No one is asking that outside the right wing because it's a ridiculous question. — MindForged
How many human beings do we want living in America? — Jake
No one is asking that outside the right wing because it's a ridiculous question.
There are some challenges involved in "more the merrier". As example, here in Florida, where the population has exploded in recent decades. Most of the roads (especially along the coasts) have already been widened as much as they can be without knocking down trillions of dollars worth of existing structures
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