Toribash
Originally Posted by Ele View Post
While you're here, whadda ya reckon about the travel ban Hawkes?

I didn't see this when it was posted and didn't have a chance to reply until now due to my schedule. I don't have anything to say that hasn't been said by Oracle already. I believe that it's absolutely useless and only serves to piss law-abiding people off.

Originally Posted by Parrot View Post
In all reality, his views on immigration I feel are more than justified. Our vetting process at the moment is pretty fucking terrible, which is why the travel ban was first put into place. America needs time to fix the horrid process, and make it safer for our OWN people, before we begin dealing with other people.

While I believe that it's important to take care of your own country's citizens before taking on the problems of other people, the way that Trump and his administration are going about trying to solve those problems, both foreign and domestic is all wrong. A travel ban and adding even more security measures for immigrants and refugees on top of what Oracle already outlined above will not add security and only creates more work for the people that would have to carry them out.


Originally Posted by Parrot View Post
Being here legally is perfectly fine in my books. It's the Illegal ones that are the issues. Some people come here, don't register, and are like ghosts. Their children go to public education, and since undocumented illegal aliens don't pay taxes, a larger sum of money is now required from everyone else to pay for these children.

A fairly common counterpoint to this is that these illegal immigrants tend to take very difficult but also low-paying jobs, thus saving the business money. However since that money is considered part of its profits, that money is taxed. Theoretically there is a tipping point where having enough underpaid employees increases profits enough that the tax taken from profits is more than legal employees would be taxed individually from their incomes. I have not seen enough research on this topic to determine whether it would be worth it for a business, and I personally believe that underpaying illegal immigrants is akin to slavery.


Originally Posted by Parrot View Post
Lastly, if you don't live in America, your opinions are pretty much null and void unless you have a steady knowledge of our politics and infrastructure, outside of all media of course.

That is an extremely narrow minded view of how discussions work and is very disrespectful to those who wish to actually talk about issues instead of insulting their opponents. I would much rather value the opinion of a Dutch guy who has a degree in political science than the opinion of Amos the Tennessee hick who gets all his news from his uncle Crazy Earl. I realize those are extremes, but based on my experiences, in general, people outside of the US are more informed and involved than US citizens, which is disappointing.


Originally Posted by Flow View Post
That is only an avoidable situation if ALL refugees are taken, which is a worse problem. Taking out a large number of the non radicalized members of a population leaves a higher ratio of radicals, leading to more conversion.

It's not a question of overwhelming one side or the other with numbers, it's a question of wanting to help people in a bad situation get out of that bad situation. Even if it was about numbers, it still wouldn't matter. If a potential refugee gets denied simply because they live in a certain country, don't you think they're going to get mad at the denier? If they were neutral to the conflict before, that might push them to fight against the US, or at the very least become more open to listening to the arguments from the rebels.


Originally Posted by Flow View Post
Originally Posted by Oracle View Post
When, if ever, will we allow immigration from these countries? What stops these radicalized individuals from getting citizenship in another country then applying for a tourism visa in these less scrutinized countries?

Why is it infeasible to stop immigration from countries with known terrorist connections until those terrorist groups are no longer a threat? Nothing will or ever has been able to stop them from coming through other countries, one hole in the wall doesn't mean you tear the whole thing down.

you quoted exactly why it's infeasible. If someone is really determined to get somewhere, they will find a way, legally, "legally," or illegally. You don't patch a hole in a boat with a piece of paper and some glue. I don't know what the best option is, but I do know it's not this.

Originally Posted by Flow View Post
Again, if there are enough non-radicals in a country, they can help better their country rather than abandoning it to the terrorists.

Just because they aren't radicalized doesn't mean that they're on our side, or even against who we're fighting.

Originally Posted by Flow View Post
Of course there should be support in place for second generation immigrants, that doesn't mean we should make more of them.

You do know that second-generation immigrant is referring to the grandchild of the actual immigrant? Which means it takes a MINIMUM of 28 years to make one. A lot can happen in that time, including proper guidance on culture differences and acceptance of the values of the country they are residing in.

Originally Posted by Flow View Post
When 0.5% of the population commits almost half of the terrorist acts in a country, it's probably not random coincidence.

This is the only thing I agree on. While it's possible it's just random chance, the evidence against that possibility is very strong. However, it is not right to deny everyone of a certain culture or region simply because a few bad people wanted to cause some mayhem.
All it takes is one bad day to reduce the sanest man alive to lunacy. That’'s how far the world is from where I am. Just one bad day.
Originally Posted by hawkesnightmare View Post
you quoted exactly why it's infeasible. If someone is really determined to get somewhere, they will find a way, legally, "legally," or illegally. You don't patch a hole in a boat with a piece of paper and some glue. I don't know what the best option is, but I do know it's not this.

Just because there is a legal, difficult route doesn't mean we should open an easy route as well.
Originally Posted by hawkesnightmare View Post
It's not a question of overwhelming one side or the other with numbers, it's a question of wanting to help people in a bad situation get out of that bad situation. Even if it was about numbers, it still wouldn't matter. If a potential refugee gets denied simply because they live in a certain country, don't you think they're going to get mad at the denier? If they were neutral to the conflict before, that might push them to fight against the US, or at the very least become more open to listening to the arguments from the rebels.... ...Just because they aren't radicalized doesn't mean that they're on our side, or even against who we're fighting.

What stops them from realizing the source of their denial of refugee status and turning on them instead?
Originally Posted by hawkesnightmare View Post
You do know that second-generation immigrant is referring to the grandchild of the actual immigrant? Which means it takes a MINIMUM of 28 years to make one. A lot can happen in that time, including proper guidance on culture differences and acceptance of the values of the country they are residing in.

"The term first-generation, as it pertains to a person's nationality or residency in a country, can imply two possible meanings, depending on context:

A native-born citizen or resident of a country whose parents are foreign born (such that the citizen's or resident's parents would be the "'zeroth generation", e.g., "first-generation" American,
A foreign born citizen or resident who has immigrated to a new country of residence, e.g., "first-generation" migrant.
This ambiguity is captured and corroborated in The Oxford English Dictionary's definition of "generation":

...designating a member of the first (or second, etc.) generation of a family to do something or live somewhere; spec. designating a naturalized immigrant or a descendant of immigrant parents, esp. in the United States.... ...There is no universal consensus on which of these meanings is always intended... ...The term "second-generation" extends the concept of first-generation by one generation. As such, the term exhibits the same type of ambiguity as "first-generation," as well as additional ones."
I was referring to the children of immigrants.


Originally Posted by hawkesnightmare View Post
This is the only thing I agree on. While it's possible it's just random chance, the evidence against that possibility is very strong. However, it is not right to deny everyone of a certain culture or region simply because a few bad people wanted to cause some mayhem.

The alternative is letting them in, where they can form separate communities within the United States and refuse to integrate if they feel like it. See Sweden, France, and Germany.