An Objectivist Response to Immigration Policy | Amy Peikoff
from Amy Peikoff's article:"
I agree with Mazlish that the creation and maintenance of a proper government depends on at least a significant, influential minority holding the right ideas. However, this does not mean that a proper government can use force to maintain ideological consensus. A proper government enforces objective laws which describe the acts people do (or refrain from doing) which violate others’ rights. Why should immigration law be any different? How is an ideological screening of immigrants any different, in principle, from prosecuting “hate crimes”?"
I agree with Mazlish that the creation and maintenance of a proper government depends on at least a significant, influential minority holding the right ideas. However, this does not mean that a proper government can use force to maintain ideological consensus. A proper government enforces objective laws which describe the acts people do (or refrain from doing) which violate others’ rights. Why should immigration law be any different? How is an ideological screening of immigrants any different, in principle, from prosecuting “hate crimes”?"
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I wanted to do (and did locally) the hard work to be up in arms about the underlying ideas that formed the nation. Since then I have shrugged. Mazlish said that a sufficiently large minority was necessary to protect Constitutional ideals. With President Zero's effective elimination of the Tea Party via IRS targeting, that minority is no longer sufficiently large, and it is hard to envision it ever getting that large again. There are too many moochers. Romney errored in the percentage of moochers that he thought the US had.
1. where are large social programs in the Constitution?
2. Where is democracy mentioned? we are supposed to be a Constitution based republic
see, everybody is up in arms over Immigration and no one wants to do the hard work to be up in arms about the underlying ideas that formed the nation. This post is not a political one, but a philosophical one. Please check your premises.
2) The values I am referring to that are being diluted include a) the idea that government should be limited in its scope and powers; b) the freedoms in the Bill of Rights (Many who come to the US from elsewhere have no appreciation for the right to keep and bear arms, think it is OK for government to search and seize, think that "objectionable" speech should be limited, etc.
When those immigrants become citizens, they cancel out my vote, thus diluting me of one of my property rights.
Suppose, for example, that Galt's Gulch had an open borders policy. It would not take long for looters and moochers to outvote producers. Two wolves would decide that the one sheep is dinner by popular vote. Vote dilution is a serious problem. In my part of Florida, the central east coast of Florida, many liberals from the Northeast move down either to work or retire, and they bring their values with them. Now, the government cannot and should not take sides in that sort of situation between citizens. However, it does have the right and the responsibility to protect citizens from vote dilution by non-citizens.
I'm not sure I agree with "not a legitimate function of government to impede the travel of free people". At least not in practice. Is there ANY country that currently has truly open borders? No border stations, no passport checks?
I'd like to see the world become a place full of reasonable, logical people who all treat each other with respect. But the current situation is that governments feel (rightly or wrongly) that they have an obligation to protect their citizens from "evil outsiders". And many, if not most, citizens expect that from their government.
1. Should we test immigrants for personality?
2. HOW would we test for personality?
Taking number 2 first, there are tests such as the MMPI (Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory) which have been used for the purpose of filtering out certain personality disorders. I had to take one, followed by a visit to the shrink, to work at a nuclear facility. The shrink visit was particularly interesting, and he explained that the test (and the grading thereof) is actually quite complicated and sophisticated in its approach. I'm an engineer and in no position to vouch for the test's accuracy or usefulness, but there are tools to do what the author suggests.
But on the first question, I have some problems with the use of a test like this by the government. What traits are they going to screen for? A government may be interested only in people who follow their own ideology. They might screen out rugged individualists, and let in those who are easily controlled and believe whatever they are told. To put it today's terms, they might let in only those likely to vote Democrat (but it could go either way).