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Sad & Disappointed: Immigration

Posted by dbhalling 9 years, 8 months ago to Politics
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It is clear from the recent discussions that many people on this forum do not understand or care about freedom when it is their pet issue and are clearly not ready for a Gulch. The anti-reason, anti-objectivist positions followed three main threads.

1. Freedom: It is clear that many people do not understand that freedom is a set of ethical principles that apply to all people. It is clear that many of the people here seem to think their rights come from their government or being American. One absurd position being proposed by many was that somehow limiting someone’s right to travel is not limiting their freedom. Then we find the collectivist argument that government is nothing but a bunch of private people getting together and setting rules. These same people fail to recognize that this is exactly the argument for the welfare state. It also follows from these arguments that Kansas or some other state could stop people from other states from entering and in fact this is the goal of these people. Or we should be allowed to get together and agree to stone you to death, or sacrifice virgins.

Some people made the collectivist argument that somehow jobs are owned by the collective – this tribalist mentality is so despicable that I would support removing from the gulch anyone who made the argument twice.

What is particularly sad is when given a pro-freedom solution to immigration issues a number of people rejected it. The pro-freedom solution starts with something anyone who is allowed in the gulch should support, which is the elimination of welfare of all kinds including social security (overtime) and medicare. Next, it would eliminate all drug laws including the FDA. It would also of course enforce private property rights and be serious about crime. These changes would eliminate any legitimate concerns with immigrants entering the United States.

2. Eugenics/racism: It is amazing the number of people who tried to support their anti-freedom stance with the variations of the pseudo-science of eugenics. This puts them in the wonderful company of freedom lovers such Southern slave owners, racists more generally, the socialists of England in the early 1900s or earlier, Nazi Germany, and none other than Margaret Sanger

3. Logic: The opposite of the right to travel freely is imprisonment, no matter how big the prison or that sometimes the guards allow you outside or inside the walls. The inability to follow simple logic in this discussion was amazing. On the more innocent side was confusing immigration with citizenship. The two are not the same. Many people seemed to think that the requirement for IDs at the borders would not logically lead to IDs every time you travel. The Supreme Court has already ruled on this issue and yes they said you could be required to show ID for just walking down the street. That the need to monitor people at the border, will not lead to needing to monitor people everywhere. Oops that has already happened. That the need to monitor for terrorists will not mean the need to monitor everyone – again that has already happened. You cannot escape the logic of your positions. Require IDs for everyone else but not you. Monitoring for terrorists, but not you. Assuming other people are guilty until found innocent, but not you.

But what was perhaps the most chilling statement I heard was that we had to be practical, we had to deal with reality. Does this remind you of any conversation in Atlas Shrugged? The clear point of this statement is that being practical means abandoning reason, logic, and principles.

It was a VERY SAD week in the Gulch.


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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    My knowledge on unintended consequences of marijuana legalization is also limited, and I agree with you that CO and WA's legalization isn't the best test case because of the federal law. I am definitely in favor of drug legalization, even though my only experience with illegal drugs was smelling MJ on a high school band exchange trip. I just don't want to be expected to pay for drug users' later medical expenses.
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  • Posted by Zenphamy 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    A proper government has no duty to 'defend' rights, it only has the duty to apply retaliatory force in order to bring the offender of someone else's rights before a court and then apply more force to make the offender give restitution and/or not offend again. The individual only, has the right of self defense. That same government has the duty to stop foreign attack through it's armed forces and it's threat of retaliation or war.
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  • Posted by Zenphamy 9 years, 8 months ago
    Dale, I wholeheartedly agree. I can understand that some don't get freedom, but I can't understand how anyone on this site doesn't get it. Sad, yes. But also disheartening.
    As soon as one accepts government's authority to deny rights to one person, much less one group, for any reason imaginable, history and simple logic teaches us that it will then deny rights to everyone, except themselves. Plus 1,000
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  • Posted by 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    My knowledge is somewhat limited. The price did not fall much because taxes and regulations. I have not heard of any rash of MJ related car accidents or other problems It would be interesting to look at crime statistics,but I do not have them. You also have to remember that MJ is still illegal because of federal law, so I do not think it is much of a test.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Getting rid of drug laws and welfare is the correct first step. Implementation on a state or smaller level might be possible in my lifetime. I'm curious about how marijuana legalization has worked (or not) in Colorado and Washington. As I remember, you used to be from CO. Do you mind educating us on the success or failure of that endeavor? My only apprehension about drug legalization is that I would bear the cost of drug users' access of the medical care system. If that gets addressed at the same time as drug legalization, then I think it can work. If it doesn't get addressed simultaneously, then your state potentially sets itself up as a magnet for mooching drug users.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 9 years, 8 months ago
    It is precisely because I care about freedom that I disagree with you on this topic.

    I know what Ayn Rand's and the ARI's position on immigration are.
    Their perspective is purely based on the position of the immigrant, and completely neglects the desires of the citizenry through their duly elected government. As an example, Ayn Rand committed perjury to land a tourist visa, as documented by Shikha Dalmia in Reason. http://reason.com/archives/2012/02/14...
    That may have been moral in her eyes, but can it be viewed as moral in the eyes of the country she was immigrating to? I can even admit that I probably would have done the same thing in her position. However, while Rand herself turned out to be quite a boon for America, her case proves that the country must be cautious when admitting visitors.

    An anti-Objectivist position is to claim that a visitor gets access to the privileges and prosperity of the country that they are immigrating without having to pay anything. Implicit in that position is that citizens of the country are expected to live for the sake of other men (visitors), which is fundamentally contradictory to Galt's oath.

    Also implicit in this argument is that while individual visitors have rights, other individual (citizens) cannot delegate authority to a limited government to act on their behalf in immigration decisions. Or do I have to go to the border and consider each case on an individual basis myself, to the neglect of other productive activities?
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  • Posted by $ WilliamShipley 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I would dearly love to discuss an issue with you without you simply calling names. I've read your writings and watched videos. You are a well-read, educated man. You can do better than this.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    You just made my argument as to why I have left the Republican Party. Ronald Reagan once said that the Democrat Party left him. Well, the Republican Party left many of its former adherents, including me.
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  • Posted by BrettRocketSci 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Thanks DB. Ok, those are good points. But the fact that immigration so quickly pulls in the relationship to illegal drugs and the welfare state--that's where I was questioning the value and efficacy of tackling the issue. In isolation, at least. Based on your reply, however, I do see more value in it. But only if we take the offense to bring it back to primary principles and show how we can't really solve this problem until we unwrap and systemically fix the entire mixed economy. That's a noble and worthy objective, but I don't see as much of that discussion happening here either. :-/ That was a goal of your first post, I take it? If so, thank you! We need more of it.
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  • Posted by $ WilliamShipley 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Note, I specifically did not say it wouldn't work. I said that it wouldn't work the same. There are far more people that could practically come here than was true in the past. There could be a large influx of people. And there isn't as much available useful space as there was. What effect that would have is an interesting question.

    Part of the problem is that everyone assumes an objective government. Setting aside how you implement that, and assume you can do so successfully. The other problem is that no form of government, no matter how logically structured, can survive if the majority of the people want "a new deal". They will simply ignore the old laws and make new ones.

    So, if you allow unlimited immigration you might find that the moochers take over again because there are more of them. No legal system will survive the people occupying the position ignoring the rules.
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  • Posted by XenokRoy 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    WilliamShipley,

    No offense intended but the idea that 19th and 20th century models will not work today is BS. We can assume that the 19th and 20th century models will work. We can do so because Persia once followed a free model, as did the Greeks and the Romans during their periods of growth. It was only after they put controls in place that immigration became a problem.

    Remove welfare, remove regulatory control of what can be purchased and I add a third not mentioned above, remove regulatory control of how big a company can get and get government out of commerce (IE remove Sherman law and everything that is derived from it) and immigration would not be a problem.

    The only reason to come here would be to work. Every single person who comes here to be productive and does so will, by so doing, increase the standard of living for everyone here. New York could be expanded in height to 130 stories instead of 46 and it could be filled with people doing all kinds of work.

    Detroit would not be a ghost town with a district of Arab Muslims who all ready control who goes in and out, and will one day kill those they disagree with but would become a center of production again.

    In a matter of years, not even a decade, The US would have 70% of the worlds economy again because the people we would attract would be people who earn what they get by the sweat of there own brow. Such people build economies up and for everyone of those that come. Our cities would become bigger, more industrious and prosperous. We would be able to support however many people came to the US under these circumstances and a large and larger percentage of the worlds wealth would be found in the US as a result, until other countries figured out the same thing and changed their systems accordingly.
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  • Posted by 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Adding new anti-freedom policies will not solve the problem. It will create new problems that will require more compromises.
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  • Posted by 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Bret it is possible I misread your post - i appologize. I think immigration is a perfect chance to point out the anti-freedom policies in the US. It is nice to have a unifying them such as immigration. It shows the problems of welfare in human terms, it shows the problem of the war against drugs in human terms. So I think it provides a rare chance in politics to distinguish oneself from the pack and from the socialists.
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  • Posted by 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Well it certainly will not occur if the republicans do not push for it. When they support government intrusions on liberty, such as the NSA or TSA, how can they then take a principled stand on say the GM bailout?
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  • Posted by SaltyDog 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Frankly K, I don't recall anyone other than DB saying anything about sacrificing our principles to do anything.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    At some point, one doesn't reject one's principles, but one does have to ask what the logical next step is. Did Francisco or Galt or any of the other producers try to fix the society's problems? No, they shrugged.
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  • Posted by $ WilliamShipley 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    While we certainly have a welfare problem, the improvements in transportation and communications have vastly increased the pool of people who could practically immigrate here.

    Even setting aside welfare and the social network, we can't assume that 19th century immigration models will work the same.

    I don't actually know if we want to say "yall come", but I certainly know we shouldn't limit it to those who are willing to break the law.
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  • Posted by khalling 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    we stick to our principles even in the face of realities which work against our principles. If we do not, why have principles in the first place, if we throw them aside in order to fix perceived problems?
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I support all of your proposals here. SaltyDog's point of "What else?" is an important point. It poses the question of whether we can reasonably expect things to change if we do our parts. Most of us have done our parts for most of our lives, and all we have seen is the system getting worse, as SaltyDog said. Most of us are thoroughly frustrated.
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  • Posted by $ jbrenner 9 years, 8 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Of course, I agree with you and Kh, regarding Thompson's attempt to force Galt into compliance to deal with reality. However, we do have to realize what we are capable of changing vs. what we are not capable of changing. I can change some individuals' minds, but can I change enough minds to change the results of elections? That is unrealistic. When something looks remotely possible, I can be the most optimistic person out there. Unfortunately, this really is a sad time for Objectivists, because the sort of change we want does not seem remotely possible in any existing country.

    The point of the statement is not that reason, logic, and principles should be abandoned. They should not. However, worse yet, the point of what I said is that hope for a return to American values like non-intrusive government that stays within its fiscal means in America should be abandoned.

    President Zero ran on "hope and change". Most of us have neither hope nor change left.
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  • Posted by XenokRoy 9 years, 8 months ago
    I rarely participate in discussion on immigration any longer. We do not have an immigration problem, we have a welfare problem.

    For 150 years we had open boarders. My own ancestry was here for 5 years before filing any kind of paper work with the government. During that time they started to work, built up cash, learned English (we came from Austria) and then applied for citizenship. By the time they were citizens they bought a small farm and built up from that. That was largely the order that things were done in, and it was fine.

    As you stated, the issue is that we have "free" expensive programs that attract the wrong kind of immigrants and that we attempt to control what products and services people have access too, period. Remove those and immigration is going to be resolved as well.

    Because of the flawed nature of looking at it as an immigration problem I do not think it possible to have a rational discussion around immigration. The premises of the cause of the problem is all wrong, and only incorrect conclusions can be drawn.
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