ottohauser1977
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2008
- Posts
- 636
I have mixed feelings about this issue. Part of me is annoyed that I went to all of this legal effort to get naturalized, while they just go over the border. On the other hand, I am a citizen and they are not, so they do not reap the full benefits of immigration, so in a sense they are already being punished.
Add to this sweatshop labor, and only the fact of how horrid things must be in Mexico for them to prefer such conditions makes this seem like a reward for their crimes.
Amnesty...that may go too far, true, if taken to a certain extent. But is it so bad to ease the immigration laws in the first place to make it unnecessary for people to break the law in order to enter this great country? I am not advocating "open borders", as some would say. I understand the need to keep out criminals, lunatics, and terrorists. But most immigrants are just peasants, seeking a better life. I am not sure how much all of them know of the U.S. immigration laws. I was different, but then I am from a civilized, totally literate European country with First World technology and decent laws and regulations governing labor conditions.
But I don't want to just open the border and let everyone in. Where is the middle ground, the decent compromise that keeps the floodgates closed, but lets in the "huddled masses, breathing, yearning to be free"?
There is a fine line between preserving border control and outright xenophobia. Then again, my native country has no place to judge, given its discrimination against Turkish and Kurdish refugees. And that's just what the Mexicans are, I think. Refugees, just like Cubans and Haitians, from a catastrophic situation at home.
Add to this sweatshop labor, and only the fact of how horrid things must be in Mexico for them to prefer such conditions makes this seem like a reward for their crimes.
Amnesty...that may go too far, true, if taken to a certain extent. But is it so bad to ease the immigration laws in the first place to make it unnecessary for people to break the law in order to enter this great country? I am not advocating "open borders", as some would say. I understand the need to keep out criminals, lunatics, and terrorists. But most immigrants are just peasants, seeking a better life. I am not sure how much all of them know of the U.S. immigration laws. I was different, but then I am from a civilized, totally literate European country with First World technology and decent laws and regulations governing labor conditions.
But I don't want to just open the border and let everyone in. Where is the middle ground, the decent compromise that keeps the floodgates closed, but lets in the "huddled masses, breathing, yearning to be free"?
There is a fine line between preserving border control and outright xenophobia. Then again, my native country has no place to judge, given its discrimination against Turkish and Kurdish refugees. And that's just what the Mexicans are, I think. Refugees, just like Cubans and Haitians, from a catastrophic situation at home.