You’d think, but not really. Board in my own eye, and all that. I’m also not sure it counts as a straw man argument unless I am deliberately misrepresenting you rather than just me reaching an incorrect conclusion based on incomplete information.
I agree that Straw Man
usually is deliberate misrepresentation, but I don't think it needs to be. When people disagree, it's
easy to put your own impression of the other side down, rather than respond to what they actually say. You're putting down what you heard. Still a straw man IMO, but not the same as deliberate misrepresentation either.
I guess it's just a warning to all of us when "implying" for people we hate the opinion of (or the person, depending) that we're not seeing what we
want to see.
But, to address each of your points in turn:
- No argument here. If there weren’t so many people trying to cross the border illegally (and bringing their children along for the ride), it would definitely be easier (and less expensive) to process the smaller quantity of people. It would be easier to harvest grain if it didn’t come with so much chaff, too. But it does. Also, grain is a desirable thing, but the current wall-building administration has made it very clear that they don’t want any migrants, not even “good” ones.
From a fully
financial perspective, even wanting refugees
doesn't always turn out great for employment/benefit (from
Statistics Canada), but that's the cost of being humanitarian. But that's quite a different discussion of "wheat vs chaff" of legal immigration, versus what's happening at your southern border. The benefits of
choosing who comes into your country, to a country's (hopefully) benefit is quite different than a "we need to accept refugees because of international treaties we've signed, but we're also getting a lot of illegals just rushing the border too."
And as for migration
at all versus none, that's another discussion again. I think most would agree that unlimited incoming of any and all backgrounds is unlikely to benefit a country, but choosing some quantity could have benefits for filling jobs. Or it could be depressing wages. Or it could be stimulating economic activity, good for all. It's not a simple debate IMO.
- I don’t doubt that Dems see the negative PR for the Trump camp as a positive for them. But as I say above, I am (personally) not convinced that the current level of funding is insufficient. Sure, they SAY they need more money, but do they really? The various border organizations have repeatedly and famously been shown to be inefficient or even frequently ineffective, so to hear them begging for even more money does not fill me with confidence, exactly.
The existing money isn't doing it. It's a decent measure that they don't have enough. You can argue about administration of it, but X money, Y result. And I think I demonstrated quite clearly that the 15x (or more) increase in claimants (even if not that much of an increase in attempted illegal crossings) is happening. Thus I'm convinced it's about funding, and given the "great concern" the left in your country has for them, that they wouldn't increase funding strikes of something else. But even on the "left/right divide, there's a couple of bills in both of your legislative houses trying to get more money there, I think that
most legislators agree more funding is necessary.
But fair-minded people can disagree on this, and both inadequate funding
and waste can be happening.
- I understand your POV and agree we should stem the tide. I just believe we have an obligation to treat the people like... people.
Any solution needs both IMO. You can't clean up flood damage while the water's still coming. I think it's a bigger factor than some others do.
- I know you’re not a fan of catch-and-release, but if the budget doesn’t support holding everyone, then why try? Tossing the overflow back is not the same thing as having an open border, and is in fact less open border-y than keeping them housed, etc.
I think this is a miscommunication between us. I don't think it's allowed to just "toss back" and I didn't advocate for such. Above I did say "Or maybe auto-deport, but that'd break other laws and treaties." I'm not sure you can just throw them out over the Mexican border, even if that's where they came from, especially if they're citizens of somewhere else. Thus it's a bit of "you have to deal with them
somehow once they're over the border, and releasing them into the USA is a bad idea IMO.
- They’re being labeled as concentration camps because they are places where these people are all being gathered together (i.e., “concentrated”) in one location for a particular purpose, which is the literal definition of the term. They are not “death camps,” but the people operating them certainly seem appallingly unconcerned about ensuring they don’t become that. In my opinion, the camps are actually “propaganda camps,” and their purpose is to serve as a warning to people considering emigrating to the US. They are hoping that word gets out about what happens there — “If you come here, this will happen to YOU. You will be tortured, your kids will be stolen, you might even die and WE WON’T CARE about any of it! Ha-haa!”
I'm not debating the dictionary or historical definition Patrick (I linked the Internment wiki article a few pages ago), I'm just saying that the term is emotionally loaded from the Holocaust (correctly btw), so using it outside of that context carries similar baggage. The
Uyghur camps in China are much closer to this, as they are places you're sent to because of race, political reasons, religion, and no hope of trial (let alone a fair one), and other
horrific treatment that is
the purpose rather than a side-effect of inadequate facilities. Nowhere that I've seen (
not even the link that
@jwhouk had above) claims that the bad conditions there are deliberate malice on the parts of those running the facilities. Higher administration is another topic.
As for the “kids in cages” thing, the pictures appear to show chain-link enclosures which look very similar to dog pens (though taller), which is probably why they were labeled “cages.” I assume it’s quicker/easier to slap together holding enclosures out of chain-link fence than to build anything more permanent.
Dunno, but I appreciate you trying to answer this, nobody else really has.