Message from @Mersenne
Discord ID: 651580294931021825
Does that door have a lock?
way to completely ignore my question bud, just proves my point
Uh, no
It addresses and refutes your point, actually
Mmmmmnope
Mmmmmmyep
Immigrants overstaying their visas creates a class of second-rate citizens, not privy to the freedoms, social programs, and protections America stands for.
how does a wall combat people who overstay their legally acquired visas?
a moronic door analogy doesn't answer that question
On a large scale, it's a group that can be easily manipulated, exploited, and extorted. It mutually harms the immigrants and Americans alike.
It doesn't address THAT PARTICULAR problem, but it does address a problem that actually does exist
After all, you do also invite certain people into your home
because the one I cited doesn't? okie dokie
well that's a relief
Different problems require different solutions
And people are treating the wall like its some amazing panacaea to the immigration issue.
You see, since your house DOES have a door and that door DOES have a lock, your number of problems is decreased
not either of you, but that's the impression I'm left with talking to others about it
America copes with 100,000 immigrants arriving at the southern border each *month* - the number of immigrants overstaying their visas is scarcely comparable.
100,000 legal or illegal?
100,000 immigrants. Not legal, as they're not citizens - not illegal, as they haven't crossed the border
that's still a legal entry, fucks sake, don't play games
I'm not. Without a physical wall, or consequences for crossing the border, the immigration system would be overwhelmed - and you end up with an underclass of immigrants.
Which already exists
I'll agree - a magnanimous wall doesn't fix the issue of illegal immigration.
I don't recall arguing against consequences for illegal entry
Ultimately the wall is just a deterrent. The real problem is allowing state's to deny federal agents (ICE) from deporting illegal immigrants.
@Jokerfaic but you have to admit that reducing the breadth of possible entry points would help increase the efficiency of enforcement
I just don't think its the most efficient use of resources for the issue
financial, manpower, or in regards to time
Fair point. I believe you could have drones for detection and subsequent border stations to deploy agents.
All more effective and cost-effective than a physical barrier alone.
reducing entry points, fine, can't argue that
We don't have - and never will have - a great wall of China on the southern border. It's partially to deter blatant immigration and more importantly to deter immigrants from storming our borders.
still, as soon as this fucking wall's done, effective or not, we can maybe flush out the CIA niggers still stirring up shit down there and incentivizing immigration in the first place
Bolton said it himself, the Monroe Doctrine is still alive
Well - you're not going to stop the CIA from shady practices. Iran-Contra is demonstrative of that.
Or the FBI, COINTELPRO
Or the NSA
On incentivizing - Democratic candidates promoting de-criminalizing border crossing AND federal benefits for non-citizens is a dangerous promise.
yeah, moronic