biffvernon wrote:
UndercoverElephant wrote:What was the purpose in saying your income was less than LJ's
My comment was in response to LJ's comment about my personal situation, which really has no place in such a debate.
I don't agree. Sometimes people's personal situation is directly relevant to a particular debate. And even if you think this wasn't one of those cases, your response was still disingenuous - you pretended you didn't really understand what was being said when in fact you understood it perfectly well. You do this either to frustrate the natural course of the debate, or to intentionally wind people up.
The reason your own personal situation does matter, as has been explained to you on countless occasions, is that you are advocating policies based on respect for the humanitarian needs of these migrants, while bloody-mindedly ignoring the humanitarian consequences for people in the UK who aren't lucky enough to be able to afford to live in a leafy, sparsely-populated part of the country. In short, the migrants you are so keen to let in will not end up in
your neighbourhood. If you still don't understand why this is inviting an angry response from British people whose living standards and options are way below your own, then you need to think a bit harder.
UndercoverElephant wrote:Quoting other people who are as detached from reality as you are does not help your case.
But it illustrates that my views are pretty common, at least amongst Guardian writers and readers if not those of the Daily Mail.
Over 50% of the US population views climate change as a left-wing conspiracy. Holding views that are common is not a substitute for holding views that are rationally/scientifically defensible.
UndercoverElephant wrote:Let's try a little test. A question.
Is this refugee situation essentially the same as 1945/46, or are there any important differences?
There are a great many important differences but there are also lessons that we can learn from history. As I've probably mentioned before, my mother was an immigrant, fleeing from persecution by the Third Reich in pre-war Germany. My childhood hardly saw a day when there was not a foreign visitor in the house. Three of my siblings married people from other nations. I have an internationalist outlook that is the antithesis of the Little Englander caricature.
We are not accusing you of being a "Little Englander" - a term which means "xenophobic" or "overly nationalistic". We're accusing you of being a middle class liberal sorely lacking in political realism and wallowing in idealism, who is posting on an internet forum the sole purpose of which is to host debates about the real world consequences of Peak Oil.
I would like to see open borders the world over,
And I would like to see all the world's religious people come to the realisation there is One Truth underlying all of them, and stop fighting with each other. Sometimes what we would like is something that just isn't going to happen, and in those cases we have to deal with reality instead.
but that must come as a result of international agreement with a large proportion of the world participating. It will have to be preceded by a much fairer distribution of wealth around the world and a lot fewer wars and other causes of migratory push factors.
And as you well know, the probability of the scenario you've described actually happening is
zero. So why is it relevant?
We have to deal with the situation as it is now, and as it is likely develop in the forseeable future.
In the meantime the UK could accommodate at least as many asylum seekers as Germany and Sweden have recently done, with negligible cost and perhaps even an economic benefit.
Yes we could, if we are willing to ignore the probable long-term consequences of that decision. The several thousand people currently camped in Calais, and the countless thousands trying to get into the EU, are doing so
even though they know that the journey is difficult and perilous, that they aren't wanted in the places they are trying to get to, and that they may not be allowed to legally remain there. You are proposing that we make it easy for them to get here and legal for them to remain here. In other words, by helping the ones that are already trying to get here, all you are going to do is encourage even more to attempt the journey. So we let 10,000 of them in, and those 10,000 are replaced by another 20,000. Do we let those 20,000 in too? If we do, they'll be replaced by another 30,000.
This is the problem, and you are being disingenous if you claim you don't understand it. You have been asked repeatedly under what conditions you'd stop allowing people to come here, and your answer is always the same: "Never. So long as they want to come, they should be let in."
It is not the fate of the 10,000 that are trying to get here from Calais right now that matters in this discussion. It is the longer term consequences of our decision on how to deal with those 10,000 that matters - consequences that you are point blank refusing to consider.