Roxanne Appleby
Masterpiece
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2005
- Posts
- 11,231
I was talking to a rather conventional conservative today, very smart guy, quite sophisticated and knowledgable, absolutely not a bigot of any sort. Not a yahoo. He's spent some time in AZ. He said, "We are losing that state." He meant culturally, linquistically, and perhaps eventually - more than that.
Whether one thinks that last outcome is likely, can the possibility be dismissed as totally implausible? No.
So perhaps now I understand better what is driving the passion on this issue. People like my conservative friend have an appreciation of the real meaning of "demography is destiny." I'm sympathetic, but the public policy implications are by no means clear or obvious to me. I think the idea that the US will round up millions or tens-of-millions of people and boot them out is absurd. It's not gonna happen, yet that's what those who are passionate about the issue demand.
I also don't think it's possible to keep out those who are seeking opportunity here - they will find a way. And the notion that we will have a permanent class of exploited people living in the shadows is repugnant.
The problem is, I don't see any good answer. I've said in the past, sure, go ahead and build your Israeli wall, but just hand out work permits like candy, because at least that gives you control of the border. But at some point I realized that this is a dodge, because tens-of-millions of people don't want to come to the US just to work for a while and go home. They want to work for a long time and build wealth here. During which time of course they also want to have families and children. IOW, most (more than half) want to become permanent residents, and probably citizens.
Whether one thinks that last outcome is likely, can the possibility be dismissed as totally implausible? No.
So perhaps now I understand better what is driving the passion on this issue. People like my conservative friend have an appreciation of the real meaning of "demography is destiny." I'm sympathetic, but the public policy implications are by no means clear or obvious to me. I think the idea that the US will round up millions or tens-of-millions of people and boot them out is absurd. It's not gonna happen, yet that's what those who are passionate about the issue demand.
I also don't think it's possible to keep out those who are seeking opportunity here - they will find a way. And the notion that we will have a permanent class of exploited people living in the shadows is repugnant.
The problem is, I don't see any good answer. I've said in the past, sure, go ahead and build your Israeli wall, but just hand out work permits like candy, because at least that gives you control of the border. But at some point I realized that this is a dodge, because tens-of-millions of people don't want to come to the US just to work for a while and go home. They want to work for a long time and build wealth here. During which time of course they also want to have families and children. IOW, most (more than half) want to become permanent residents, and probably citizens.
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