craigr wrote:
I don't think you understand that if the current situation continues you will have your police state in spades. Most of the police state that exists today is directly linked to bad immigration policy:
- PATRIOT Act - Bad immigration of people that shouldn't have been allowed in. Visa overstayers. National security threats.
- TSA - Ditto.
- NSA Spying - Again, they didn't get those powers to monitor Amish rabble rousers. Hello Tsarnaev Brothers.
- Gun Control Laws - A lot of gun crime is caused by illegal and legal aliens. Every alien gang banger causes gun controllers to get more power. See Chattanooga, Tennesee.
- Health Care Costs - Driven up by having to care for uninsured illegals and their kids.
- Failing Schools - Being shattered by serving many people and languages which diverts resources. Many failing school districts are swamped with immigrants that shouldn't be here either legally or illegally.
- Bloated Welfare - Large number of foreign born consumers again.
- Packed Jails - Look at most wanted police blotters in most major cities and see if a pattern is present. There is a surprising lack of French Canadians.
- Various Fraud, etc. - Again a large amount is foreign born and culturally detached from what an American would do.
So you know when I call open border libertarians idiots, I just don't know how to argue the point except with mockery because facts don't work. All I say above is easily verified by anyone not holding a confirmation bias or political ideology that opposes it.
Having been on both sides of this argument recently, I'm sympathetic to Stewardship's point but ultimately I think Craig has it right. It's easy to say that most of the problems Craig highlights are themselves ultimately caused by government: the TSA and NSA's creation were driven by 9/11 hysteria which was blowback to decades of bad American foreign policy; welfare fraud is inevitable given the deleterious nature of welfare itself; packed jails are caused by to victimless crime laws, etc, and there's truth behind these assertions.
But the fatal flaw in highlighting them is the implicit assumption that these problems are somehow politically rectifiable with an infusion of libertarianism, as though a plurality or majority of the U.S. population is somehow going to become sufficiently libertarian as to cause the government to adopt a more moderate foreign policy, repeal welfare, respect people's privacy, decriminalize victimless crimes, etc. The sad truth is that this is simply not all that libertarian of a country--it's just not going to happen, and Craig is absolutely right that the possibility becomes more remote with every non-northern-European immigrant who enters the country. Most immigrants to the USA these days come from Asia, Africa, and Latin America--regions of the world not known for their thriving libertarian movements. On a practical level, it is a serious truth that political libertarianism becomes a dimmer prospect the more immigrants from these regions enter the country.
Ultimately, having borders implicitly requires their maintenance and defense, and the segregation of insiders and outsiders. If that function is compromised, so too is the border itself. And without a border, society crumbles once selfish actors realize this and take advantage of this fact. Imagine how much you'd like to live in a house near a marginal neighborhood that lacked walls or doors. It's the same principle on the societal level.
Simonjester wrote:
i have either. never heard a well explained well reasoned out version of libertarian open borders, or maybe it just cant be made... i could understand reciprocal open borders between equal nations.. if japan, England Australia and Canada wanted free entry into the US and were offering free entry into their country for any american, then maybe it would be closer to reasonable or at lest be far smoother than open borders with any and all random country's, who have all manner of incompatible ideals, economy's and standards..
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