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John Wilson's avatar

"the U.S. economy relies on undocumented people. For the sake of everyone in the U.S., irregular migrants must enter the country" - I think the dignity of everyone in the US is actually undermined with this logic. Better paupers in a house of law than masters with cheap labor for our chicken products.

People voting for Trump are not buying his cat-eating stories hook, line and sinker. They are not idiots. They know the men standing outside Home-Depot are undercutting the rates citizens could charge, the same way that China floods our market with crap goods to destroy local manufacturing. At some level they feel powerless to undo these things. Deportation is one way to resist.

The real problem however is the log in our own eyes. We love cheap goods and have bought into worshiping material idols as the source of our comfort and happiness. That's a relatively modern phenomenon; it wasn't so long ago (1940's) that middle class folks worried about having enough fuel for winter.

So, while deportation helps us feel like we're pushing against the things we know are deforming our economy, the fact is that we are so steeped in material convenience we'll never sacrifice what we really would need to, in order to undo what China, Mexico and Amazon hath wrought.

Trump is cruel, unfeeling and uncompassionate. I do believe clemency is the right thing to do. But until immigration stops being the preferred political hot-potato for both parties, we cannot stem the tide of new illegal crossings, and we won't be able to get back on course as a sovereign nation.

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M.L.D.'s avatar

I like Christian’s reframing of “deportability” as a condition that bars full social participation. It gets at something important. But I worry that this conversation totally misses a major objection here from those on the pro-deportation side.

The idea that these migrants are a threat to US sovereign power because they undermine territorial integrity seems off. The migrants are not sovereign citizens in the Hobbesian wild who have decided to transgress territorial boundaries. They are *subjects* who have left one sovereign territory to enter another.

So what about thinking of illegal/irregular immigration as a “crime”? A murderer who hasn’t been brought to justice also has the threat of a sovereign “ban” hanging over their head. They also are barred from social participation in the grandest sense (perhaps even theologically, cut off from God, but let’s not get diverted).

If we think that it is good for a state to mete out punishment to those who break the law, and that this is not incompatible with human dignity, why is illegal entry different?

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