Implying they are cognizant of this fact and haven't been purposefully mislead on this very thing by our own government and theirs.doc_loliday wrote:Hanarchy Montanarchy wrote:This has been thrilling, but I honestly don't know how to explain my position in a clearer way. In fact, by some of the responses, I get the impression that people aren't disagreeing with what I am arguing, as much as they find it totally incomprehensible.
/shrug
Why you don't understand that it is the parents as those doing the punishing is incomprehensible to me. The parents know they are breaking the law and they know they risk having their children grow up in another country only to get deported. It's simply not our job to make better parents out of all of you.
This is the tipping point. This is where the United States of America was finally, at long last, put out of its misery.
There are a lot of problems with the sentiment behind these opinions. The most obvious problem, of course, is that it plays right into the demographic (and thus cultural, and thus political) displacement that will be the death of us all.
But there's a deeper problem driving this nonsense: the view that admission to the USA is some kind of prize, where "good" people are rewarded with entry, and "bad" people are punished with exclusion.
Notice where they say they're in the country through "no fault of their own." Immigration isn't about fault. Sending them back isn't a form of punishment (even assuming it's not what they want to do).
You can see the same stupid dynamic playing out in million Twitter spats and normie forum arguments every day: "You Whites don't deserve to have a country because of [insert some half-baked interpretation of history from 150-400 years ago]."
"This country really belongs to the redskins Injuns Native Americans! [But they're all nearly dead or getting gibs on the res so instead we're just going to move a few millions Afro-Chinese-Guatemalan-Myanmars in.]"
This is a very strange way of looking at this issue.
I don't think any other country considers entry as a reward for "goodness," or exclusion as a punishment for "badness."