Originally posted by Ben Kenobi
It's a straw man and not worthy of discussion. Saying they are just "racists" is wrong. Many people who are minorities themselves have problems with illegal immigration. Did you ever think about that, but I guess it's just evil whitey keeping the brown people down.
It's a straw man and not worthy of discussion. Saying they are just "racists" is wrong. Many people who are minorities themselves have problems with illegal immigration. Did you ever think about that, but I guess it's just evil whitey keeping the brown people down.
So the US in the 19th century wasn't concerned about the outside world at all? I think this is a very weak argument.
Look it up. When were immigration controls established in the first place and why did the policy change? I'll hint that it had something to do with Margaret Sanger and limiting the number of evil brown people from the US.
You probably don't know US policy in the 19th century very well... the US was very self-involved prior to WWII, and had very little interest in the outside world. Particularly around the time of WWI, there was quite substantial sentiment to just ostrich up and not get involved in the outside world. This sentiment meshes easily with the racist politics and made it possible to pass anti-immigration policies.
I'm not sure it is possible to do both, unless you believe it's ok under a democratic president and not ok under a republican.
That makes no sense. You can be against amnesty and for legal path to immigration that's reasonable. I am.
I would support making it easier to come over, but it is necessary for the US to keep the restrictions they had on people entering the country. Your suggestions just seem like amnesty to me.
I support making a legal path to immigration, over here or over there. I think it's impractical to tell everyone over here to go home and then allow a similar number to come over... the ones who want to come are here, so let's make it possible for them to come over legally.
The proposal I'd support:
- Allow employers to list jobs at the border
- Conduct entrance interviews (by USCIS) on potential applicants
- Allow those that pass minimum qualification levels to enter on a 30 day visa
- If they are able to find work within the 30 day timeframe, allow them to stay on a rolling 1 year work visa which must be re-applied for each year with employer signoff
- Minimize costs for these visas, on the order of $50 each
- Allow those here already to apply for 1 year visa same as anyone else
- Visa allows travel between home country and US, either unlimited or reasonably limited
That's pretty much it... The number would not be limited at all for this type of visa, and would include a SSN (or whatever the equivalent is for immigrants) to allow the employer to pay taxes on the. FICA and Medicare taxes wouldn't apply for this type of visa, as they wouldn't be eligible for these services, but instead a tax to cover the program that would run ~80% of the level of FICA/Medicare taxes. That would pay for the program and then some... and you could add the other 20% on in taxes to support FICA anyway, if the lessening of the tax was a problem politically. To limit the effect on local economies, you could limit the number of jobs permitted to be posted on a local basis, say to locations with low unemployment, and/or if it's not an agriculture or service job you could require the job to be posted for at least two weeks or a month locally before it was permitted to be filled with this type of visa.
That's not an amnesty plan, it's an economically sound plan for allowing immigration based on need that fills jobs as they appear but restricts it to qualified applicants who are applying for legitimate jobs.
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