It's a person who flees their home country, gets to another country and applies for asylum, which is the right to have international protection — Patulia
Basically they are immigrants who come mainly from Libia, where there is a civil war. — Patulia
Sounds like someone who needs to make a personal display of himself, appealing to other "men" - it never seems to be women - who covertly would like to make a similar display of themselves. It is infantile. And it is dangerous. Sooner or or not much later, the jackboots who knocked on their doors will come and knock on yours.Matteo Salvini — Patulia
I wouldn't let a stranger stay in my home — Tzeentch
No country should ever be forced to take in immigrants. — Tzeentch
This is a faulty analogy. Your country is made up of strangers, many of whom you may not want in your home. — Fooloso4
I think this should sound familiar to you since you posted it on your about page:
"And the light shineth in darkness; and the darkness comprehended it not." - John 1:5
In this time of darkness we need more comprehension of the light. Yes? Forget the theology for a moment and comprehend the human message. Many immigrants are in desperate need. What they don't need is locked doors. When a flood comes locked doors will not keep you dry. When the winds blow off your roof locked doors will not keep you safe. Comprehend it not? — Fooloso4
There's nothing faulty about my analogy. — Tzeentch
But since we're on the topic of preaching, how many immigrants and homeless people have you let into your house so far, dear Judas? — Tzeentch
That is not how I interpret that quote at all. — Tzeentch
Do you know everyone in your country? No strangers? Do you allow all of them in your home? Do you have as much say in who enters your neighbor's house as your own? — Fooloso4
I am in favor of allowing those who seek asylum to go through an expedient process and a path to citizenship. I am also in favor of international cooperation to spread the burden. As I pointed out in an earlier post immigration can be a problem when the numbers are high. I am also in favor of helping people in their own country if possible before they are forced to leave. — Fooloso4
I am sure that wherever you live if the situation became dire and you were forced to leave you would find a different song to sing. — Fooloso4
Or maybe nothing like that. — Fooloso4
The truth is, a multitude more people die yearly in car accidents in the US than in the hostilities in most of these conflicts combined. — Tzeentch
Many people stay behind in the countries from which people are supposedly "forced" to leave — Tzeentch
Countrymen are to a country, like family is to a home.
Immigrants are to a country, like a stranger is to a home.
Notice the word like, implying likeness and not sameness. — Tzeentch
Excuses to justify inaction. — Tzeentch
Don't you see the inherent hypocrisy in preaching about how other people should accept total strangers to negatively impact their lives, while at the same time these preachers don't carry any of the negative consequences and squander every opportunity to help their fellow man? — Tzeentch
If one wishes to be a saint ... — Tzeentch
And do you regard your countrymen like family? — Fooloso4
If those who live in a country allow immigrants into their country then it potentially impacts their lives. It is not squandering every opportunity to help their fellow man, it is by their actions helping their fellow man. — Fooloso4
The funny, or maybe not so funny, thing is that everything you say has been said in places like the United States throughout its history whenever there has been a large influx of immigrants - Irish, Italians, Chinese, Jews ... — Fooloso4
The only practical solution is to treat the cause of displacement by economic improvement and political stability in the countries of origin. — Wayfarer
This is just the beginning. Liberals, internationalists, and Christians are going to be sorely tested as political and economic based migration is dwarfed by climate based migration. — unenlightened
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