Originally posted by Rufus T. Firefly
A reasonable argument can be made that all rights, in the end, depend upon political expediency. But I'll skip that one.
I will suggest, OTOH, that the right to asylum does not supersede a nation's right to protect its self-interest. If Sweden has determined that it taking in more Iraqi refugees does significantly more harm to their national interests than taking them in does good, then that is their right. Moreover, if counterarguments like "but the refugees are a burden you helped create" or "but you're doing no more than other like-minded countries" do not apply, they should feel no guilt about their decision.
The Swedes are certainly free to be better than everyone else, but its wrong to expect it of them.
A reasonable argument can be made that all rights, in the end, depend upon political expediency. But I'll skip that one.
I will suggest, OTOH, that the right to asylum does not supersede a nation's right to protect its self-interest. If Sweden has determined that it taking in more Iraqi refugees does significantly more harm to their national interests than taking them in does good, then that is their right. Moreover, if counterarguments like "but the refugees are a burden you helped create" or "but you're doing no more than other like-minded countries" do not apply, they should feel no guilt about their decision.
The Swedes are certainly free to be better than everyone else, but its wrong to expect it of them.
It's ridiculous to argue that the willingness to play host to asylum seekers should depend on the question whether the asylum grantee created the unsafe situation. By that yardstick Sweden can freely refuse asylum requests from anywhere, unless you can point to a country where persecution reigns due to Swedish hands.
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