Re: The Authoritarians
Posted: Tue Nov 15, 2016 8:25 am
Returning to a previous topic (but don't let me sidetrack you from the Israel/Palestine debate):
There appears to be a double standard among Western countries as regards illegal immigration/asylum seekers policies. I think these two can indeed be conflated, because they are actually indistinguishable until you get some evidence of persecution of an individual or individual's immediate community - which requires a legal process. An asylum-seeker from Syria, for example, is not a refugee if they didn't come from a city that's been directly attacked, or if their city is occupied but their neighborhood has not been directly affected.
Anyway, my perception is that the double standard is largely self-inflicted. There's one for the US and Europe, and an entirely different one for Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Russia, Chile, and all the other economically stable countries. Canada, for example, has only about 100K illegal immigrants, because they detain/deport and have effectively zero tolerance for it. And, here is an interesting description of Australia's approach, and the effects on incursions onto their shores:
https://ricochet.com/archives/how-austr ... migration/
It is kind of amazing that those in the US who simply want to do what Australia and Canada are already doing are being excoriated as "racist" and "xenophobic". No amount of political science textbook-speak is going to rationalize that away. (And I did take one poli sci course in college...hated it.)
There appears to be a double standard among Western countries as regards illegal immigration/asylum seekers policies. I think these two can indeed be conflated, because they are actually indistinguishable until you get some evidence of persecution of an individual or individual's immediate community - which requires a legal process. An asylum-seeker from Syria, for example, is not a refugee if they didn't come from a city that's been directly attacked, or if their city is occupied but their neighborhood has not been directly affected.
Anyway, my perception is that the double standard is largely self-inflicted. There's one for the US and Europe, and an entirely different one for Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Russia, Chile, and all the other economically stable countries. Canada, for example, has only about 100K illegal immigrants, because they detain/deport and have effectively zero tolerance for it. And, here is an interesting description of Australia's approach, and the effects on incursions onto their shores:
https://ricochet.com/archives/how-austr ... migration/
It is kind of amazing that those in the US who simply want to do what Australia and Canada are already doing are being excoriated as "racist" and "xenophobic". No amount of political science textbook-speak is going to rationalize that away. (And I did take one poli sci course in college...hated it.)