rtprod,
I think you're really missing the boat. You refuse to acknowledge that poor people have and continue to, turn around things in their own countries whether violently or not
You refuse to acknowledge the facts of all the revolutions I've mentioned.
I'm beginning to think you're avoiding discussing these because they will ruin your argument about how people are just too poor to make any changes in their countries.
And honestly, it's beginning to smack of insulting to those people who actually did stand up and fight for change in their own countries.
"Wait! You can't stand up and try to change your country! You have to remain poor and downtrodden and oppressed so you can be rescued!"
Do I have a connection to this in anyway?
I grew up in a neighborhood full of illegal immigrants. 1/2 mile from the projects (govt housing) they call 'Little Mexico'. They were my next door neighbors, the people across the street, my customers, some were my relatives. My mother still lives there and she has illegal immigrants as neighbors.
And one of my ex-uncles by marriage used to be of those lovely purveyors of human misery - a coyote. One of those who takes money from Mexican Nationals to smuggle them across the border. So yes, my connection is pretty close. Try nearly 3 decades close of living this.
Sheyne suggested I'm keeping my boot on top of their heads by not wanting to help them.
How about the poor people in this country?
We have poor here you know. Quite a few of them. The poor people in the South who were living on welfare and displaced by the hurricanes? The dirt poor of the Appalachia regions? Or finally, my own relatives, one branch of which was so poor, they couldn't afford to bury their loved one and the hat got passed around to the entire family to try to collect enough money. Our public education system is a shambles, etc.. I get a fire in my belly,
Sheyne, about helping all of them.
Apparently my compassion for them doesn't count?
I might suggest the opposite. That you're keeping your boot on top of illegal immigrants heads by implying that they're too poor to do anything and really need to go into a sort of patronage system with all the 'rich' people in the U.S. because they're really helpless.
Do you understand how condescending and insulting that sounds?
star,
'Solving the issue'...you mean solving the problem of illegal immigration? To fix the problem, instead of allowing illegal immigration and making those here citizens, that won't stop anything. You're right. That's only treating the symptoms and not the cause. Which is, in this part of the country, the Mexican government/economy.
Now an earlier poster just lambasted the U.S. by our habit of going into countries who didn't ask for any help or want any changes in their way of doing things and forcing democracy on them.
Now, short of doing that since the U.S. is 'bad' for doing that, what do you suggest the U.S. do with the Mexican economy that doesn't require making them like us so that the Mexican nationals do not feel they have to cross the border?
opinionista and
sheyne,
I wasn't mad, just confused. I don't feel sorry for thieves who steal from hardworking people. I didn't feel sorry for her because what she was doing was running a scam. She was forming e-mail relationships with more than one man in the U.S. and whoever coughed up the money and airline ticket was the one she was going to 'marry'. So she came here with no intention of following through, no sincerity, no honesty. And when she wanted to meet her friend at the airport, she wanted to take my in-law's car. Alone.
Would she have come back? Or would he have been out a car as well?
Karma did catch up with her. It put her boyfriend in jail, left her penniless and pregnant.
I consider it an immigration issue because she probably did prey on the sympathies of my in-law, but it was dishonest from the get-go. Yes, he could have been bilked by some woman here, but not to become a citizen.
sparkleIt seems that some think that because they were born on american soil they should be allowed sole access to a better life.
Do people think that in the U.K., France, Italy, Greece, Australia, etc? Those are nice places to live too, I'm sure.
All people should be given the opportunity, no matter on which land you were born, to have a better life. Period.
Agreed. And you have to work for it. Make your country a better place to live if it is not. Hard to do, but it's done by people with great vision and great determination. That's why they're venerated, because they fought to make a difference.