Author Topic: economic consequences of cracking down on illegal immigration  (Read 11064 times)

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Xavier_Onassis

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Re: economic consequences of cracking down on illegal immigration
« Reply #60 on: October 02, 2007, 09:56:55 AM »
Try to keep the language stagnant, and it will become like Latin, a dead language.
======================================================
Trying to keep a language stagnant is never an option. No one controls a language much others than those who speak it, and they cannot be controlled.

Latin is not quite dead, it is still used by priests in conversations in the Roman church at some meetings, when two people do not share some other language.

But Latin is otherwise dead, not because of any attempts to block changes in it, but because people just quit speaking it.

"Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana."

Universe Prince

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Re: economic consequences of cracking down on illegal immigration
« Reply #61 on: October 02, 2007, 12:13:32 PM »

But Latin is otherwise dead, not because of any attempts to block changes in it, but because people just quit speaking it.


Yes. The point being, language evolved and Latin got left behind. So there is no point in lamenting the influx of Spanish speaking people. The change will come whether or not we try to prevent it.
Your reality, sir, is lies and balderdash and I'm delighted to say that I have no grasp of it whatsoever.
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Religious Dick

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Re: economic consequences of cracking down on illegal immigration
« Reply #62 on: October 02, 2007, 02:36:51 PM »


most americans do not like being invaded by a flood of illegal non-citizens


Then perhaps, immigration being a relatively harmless action in and of itself, they shouldn't see how many legal barriers they can put in the way of immigration.


You have to love the modal libertarian conception of freedom - "Americans should be free to have exactly what they don't want rammed down their throats."

Essentially, it amounts to a declaration that the fish are free to swim in the pond, while draining the pond out from under them....
I speak of civil, social man under law, and no other.
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Universe Prince

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Re: economic consequences of cracking down on illegal immigration
« Reply #63 on: October 02, 2007, 03:27:02 PM »

You have to love the modal libertarian conception of freedom - "Americans should be free to have exactly what they don't want rammed down their throats."


I'm sure you could make a more ignorant comment if you tried, but you'd have to try really hard.


Essentially, it amounts to a declaration that the fish are free to swim in the pond, while draining the pond out from under them....


Not in the least. What I said was, "Then perhaps, immigration being a relatively harmless action in and of itself, they shouldn't see how many legal barriers they can put in the way of immigration." Which amounts to a suggestion that they stop trying to interfere with trade. No one is "draining the pond". In point of fact, the general idea is to raise the level of "the pond." I'm not sure why you have trouble understanding this.
Your reality, sir, is lies and balderdash and I'm delighted to say that I have no grasp of it whatsoever.
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Religious Dick

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Re: economic consequences of cracking down on illegal immigration
« Reply #64 on: October 02, 2007, 04:00:02 PM »

You have to love the modal libertarian conception of freedom - "Americans should be free to have exactly what they don't want rammed down their throats."


I'm sure you could make a more ignorant comment if you tried, but you'd have to try really hard.

I'm sure I could, but you haven't explained why it's ignorant. Does not freedom, in the political sense, include the right of a population to self-determination? Do not free societies, all the way from your local bowling team up to the United Nations have the right to decide who may become a member and who will have use of their facilities?

Apparently your flavor of libertarianism believes the preferences of specific individuals preempts the right of a population to self-determination.

Given that even the laughable "libertarianism" promoted by the modals would be reliant on the authority of society at large to enforce it's tenants, that's a rather self-destructive proposition.


Essentially, it amounts to a declaration that the fish are free to swim in the pond, while draining the pond out from under them....



Not in the least. What I said was, "Then perhaps, immigration being a relatively harmless action in and of itself, they shouldn't see how many legal barriers they can put in the way of immigration." Which amounts to a suggestion that they stop trying to interfere with trade. No one is "draining the pond". In point of fact, the general idea is to raise the level of "the pond." I'm not sure why you have trouble understanding this.
[/quote]

First, immigration and trade are two different things. It's entirely possible to trade without immigrating, and the right to trade does not exempt one from compliance with applicable laws, the rights of other individuals, or the sovereign rights of the law. My right to trade does not include a right to run a whore-house out of your living room without your consent.

Second, your assertion that immigration is "relatively harmless action in and of itself" and "raises the level of the pond" is only your opinion, it is not a point of agreement even among economists, especially libertarian economists not on the payroll of the Cato Institute.

Third, declaring that individuals are free to act as they choose while rendering them powerless to protect the social/cultural/political infrastructure that permits free-trade and freedom of action to the extent that they do is indeed draining the pond from under the fish.
I speak of civil, social man under law, and no other.
-Sir Edmund Burke

Universe Prince

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Re: economic consequences of cracking down on illegal immigration
« Reply #65 on: October 03, 2007, 02:56:26 AM »

I'm sure I could, but you haven't explained why it's ignorant.


Do I really need to?


Does not freedom, in the political sense, include the right of a population to self-determination? Do not free societies, all the way from your local bowling team up to the United Nations have the right to decide who may become a member and who will have use of their facilities?


I'm not the one arguing against self-determination. You are.

Arguing that people should be allowed to immigrate with less hindrance is not arguing that everyone should be made a member, which in this case would be citizenship. And secondly, you're confusing free societies with private organizations. Do private organizations have a right to decide who gets to be there? Sure. Is the U.S. a private club? No. Does the U.S. government own the country? No. If it does, then private property does not exist within the U.S. You don't get it both ways.

In any case, your example works in my favor. Does the local bowling team have a right to decide who joins the team? Sure. But then by the same reasoning, the local business owners have a right to decide who they hire for work. Do individuals have a right to decide to enter into private agreements to trade labor for monetary compensation? Or is that something the government should decide? Should the government decide whether or not you can be employed? If you're going to argue that people have a right to decide for themselves with whom they associate and do business, then why would you want to trample over that right with onerous laws? Your position is not tenable because it is self-contradictory.



Apparently your flavor of libertarianism believes the preferences of specific individuals preempts the right of a population to self-determination.


Not quite. My "flavor" of libertarianism believes that a population is not a collective mind but a group of individuals. And the rights of individuals are the rights of the population and therefore the rights of the population do not trump the rights of individuals. You seem to disagree. Which leads me to question where you have any room to criticize anyone else's concept of freedom because apparently you prefer a collective will enforced on others.


Given that even the laughable "libertarianism" promoted by the modals would be reliant on the authority of society at large to enforce it's tenants, that's a rather self-destructive proposition.


That is really cute, but here is a clue: no one here is advocating anarchy, the end of authority or arguing who is and is not a "pure" libertarian. Well, on that last one, maybe you're trying to do so, but I'm not. But you're correct in one thing, if someone actually held the stupid beliefs you keep talking about, that would be self-destructive. Unfortunately for you, no one you're talking to here holds the stupid beliefs you keep talking about.


First, immigration and trade are two different things. It's entirely possible to trade without immigrating, and the right to trade does not exempt one from compliance with applicable laws, the rights of other individuals, or the sovereign rights of the law. My right to trade does not include a right to run a whore-house out of your living room without your consent.


You're overlooking one simple fact. Most immigration to the U.S. is about achieving trade. Yes, immigrants are trading labor, not goods, but it is trade all the same. Yes, your right to trade does not include a right to run a whore-house out of my living room without my consent. But then my right to privacy does not include preventing you from having having someone over to your house to remodel your kitchen even if I don't like the person you hired for the job.


Second, your assertion that immigration is "relatively harmless action in and of itself" and "raises the level of the pond" is only your opinion, it is not a point of agreement even among economists, especially libertarian economists not on the payroll of the Cato Institute.


I have yet to see demonstrated any harmful effects of allowing people to come here to trade labor for recompense. Everyone keeps saying it's so awful, but so far the best anyone can do to support this idea is to say that it is a drain on government run social programs, programs which we really should not have in the first place, this drain being one of the reasons why the programs are a bad idea. So obviously the fault lies with the programs, not the immigrants. I have, on the other hand, seen evidence of the detrimental effects of interfering with the trade that immigration brings and I have seen the beneficial effects of trade, so until you can show me something besides your weak appeal to authority, I have no reason to believe you're right.


Third, declaring that individuals are free to act as they choose while rendering them powerless to protect the social/cultural/political infrastructure that permits free-trade and freedom of action to the extent that they do is indeed draining the pond from under the fish.


I'm sure it would. However, no one here declared that or rendered anyone powerless. So your whole argument falls as flat a man made of straw. Too bad.
« Last Edit: October 03, 2007, 03:01:03 AM by Universe Prince »
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Religious Dick

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Re: economic consequences of cracking down on illegal immigration
« Reply #66 on: October 04, 2007, 12:14:49 AM »


Does not freedom, in the political sense, include the right of a population to self-determination? Do not free societies, all the way from your local bowling team up to the United Nations have the right to decide who may become a member and who will have use of their facilities?


I'm not the one arguing against self-determination. You are.

Arguing that people should be allowed to immigrate with less hindrance is not arguing that everyone should be made a member, which in this case would be citizenship. And secondly, you're confusing free societies with private organizations. Do private organizations have a right to decide who gets to be there? Sure. Is the U.S. a private club? No. Does the U.S. government own the country? No. If it does, then private property does not exist within the U.S. You don't get it both ways.

I'm not the one mistaking private property for legal sovereignty, either. As a matter of fact, every sovereign nation is a private club. Every sovereign nation has the right to determine who will and who won't be admitted. Every sovereign nation has the right to determine who will and who won't be granted citizenship. And not only does every sovereign nation on earth do exactly that, in democratic nations they're obviously doing it with the full consent of the governed. In not a single nation on earth is there a popular demand to abandon control of it's borders.

Borders are not a relinquishment of rights. They're an assertion of them.

So you equate private property with sovereignty? Ok, then - does the government have the legitimate authority to make and enforce laws preventing you from killing people or molesting children on your property? Would you have the right to construct and operate a machine that would emit deadly radiation for a hundred mile radius from your property? If not, why not?  Where does the government derive the authority to prevent you from doing those things on your own property?


In any case, your example works in my favor. Does the local bowling team have a right to decide who joins the team? Sure. But then by the same reasoning, the local business owners have a right to decide who they hire for work. Do individuals have a right to decide to enter into private agreements to trade labor for monetary compensation? Or is that something the government should decide? Should the government decide whether or not you can be employed? If you're going to argue that people have a right to decide for themselves with whom they associate and do business, then why would you want to trample over that right with onerous laws? Your position is not tenable because it is self-contradictory.[/color]

And here we have Dishonest Argument #11315 from the open borders advocates.

Tell me - are you planning to escort your workers up from the border, house them on your property, absorb the expense for any needs they might have, and escort them back to the border after work?

Oh wait - you aren't planning to do that! You're asserting that your right to property is the right to introduce elements to the public sphere, where they'll have an impact on everyone else, whether they like it or not.

And I suppose your right to keep and bear arms also equates to the right to discharge them out of your window into a crowd? The gun and the window, after all, are your property, right?

Try this one on for size: my family and I would like to have a Bengal tiger. Since we own the property, nobody should be able to tell us whether or not we can keep a Bengal tiger.

By the way, my family and I are going to be busy, so we're only going to be keeping the tiger on our premises from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM, Monday thru Friday, and the rest of the time we're going to let it wander the streets so everyone else can enjoy it, too.

Apparently you're arguing that ownership of property gives you the right to preempt public judgement on very public impacts that you're use of that property will entail. I call bullshit! This has nothing to do with your property, and everything to do with the public impact you're proposing to inflict on your fellow citizens without their consent. You're standing on your right to the use of your private property while abdicating the responsibility for the public impacts of that usage.

In addition, you're rights to free association and free enterprise are tempered by your obligations to the rights of others and to the law. You may very well have the right to associate and trade with Charles Manson, but you don't have a right to demand the State of California grants him his liberty to convenience your doing so. Given the current legal restrictions on Mr. Manson's movements, you are obliged to have to visit him in the penitentiary where he currently resides.

You're perfectly free to associate and do business with anyone you please. There are few American laws that actually restrict such associations. However, in the case that the person you wish to associate or do business with is not legally permitted to enter the United States, then you are going to be obliged to visit them in their country.

To argue that right's to free association and free enterprise are license to usurp the right of a sovereign nation to control it's borders is like arguing that a right to drive your car across town is license to run over any pedestrians who happen to be in your way.



Apparently your flavor of libertarianism believes the preferences of specific individuals preempts the right of a population to self-determination.


Not quite. My "flavor" of libertarianism believes that a population is not a collective mind but a group of individuals. And the rights of individuals are the rights of the population and therefore the rights of the population do not trump the rights of individuals. You seem to disagree. Which leads me to question where you have any room to criticize anyone else's concept of freedom because apparently you prefer a collective will enforced on others.

No, I recognize there are legitimate private claims, and legitimate public ones. If you want to burn down your own house, knock yourself out. If you're disposing of toxic wastes in your backyard such that they contaminate the neighborhood water supply, then you're damn right I think the public has a legitimate input into how you're using your property.

And I submit that your flavor of libertarianism isn't libertarianism at all, but a bastardized third-way socialism that's basically replaced the individual with the nation-state as the unit of redistribution.

Sure we won't tax the individual. Sure we won't tell him he can't smoke dope. We don't need to. Having already stripped him of the legal, political and economic means to affect any input as to what kind of country and society he lives in, why bother? He's like a lizard in a terrarium. He can do anything he likes inside the confines of the terrarium. Unfortunately, if someone decides to fill that terrarium with methane and ammonia, he's just shit out of luck. We wouldn't want to restrict the freedom of people who want to poison terrariums, would we?


First, immigration and trade are two different things. It's entirely possible to trade without immigrating, and the right to trade does not exempt one from compliance with applicable laws, the rights of other individuals, or the sovereign rights of the law. My right to trade does not include a right to run a whore-house out of your living room without your consent.


You're overlooking one simple fact. Most immigration to the U.S. is about achieving trade. Yes, immigrants are trading labor, not goods, but it is trade all the same. Yes, your right to trade does not include a right to run a whore-house out of my living room without my consent. But then my right to privacy does not include preventing you from having having someone over to your house to remodel your kitchen even if I don't like the person you hired for the job.

And the simple fact that you're overlooking is that nobody much gives a shit who remodels your kitchen. What they give a shit about is that you're aiding, abetting and encouraging people to enter the country illegally. Again, if you were escorting your kitchen remodeler from the border to your house and from your house to the border, you might have a point. But you aren't doing that, you're abetting an impact to the public environment such that the public, i.e. the collection of individuals that constitute your fellow citizenry, has deemed undesirable.

If you were leaving rotten foodstuffs out on your property such that it attracted rats, do you not think your neighbors might have a legitimate complaint?


Second, your assertion that immigration is "relatively harmless action in and of itself" and "raises the level of the pond" is only your opinion, it is not a point of agreement even among economists, especially libertarian economists not on the payroll of the Cato Institute.


I have yet to see demonstrated any harmful effects of allowing people to come here to trade labor for recompense. Everyone keeps saying it's so awful, but so far the best anyone can do to support this idea is to say that it is a drain on government run social programs, programs which we really should not have in the first place, this drain being one of the reasons why the programs are a bad idea. So obviously the fault lies with the programs, not the immigrants. I have, on the other hand, seen evidence of the detrimental effects of interfering with the trade that immigration brings and I have seen the beneficial effects of trade, so until you can show me something besides your weak appeal to authority, I have no reason to believe you're right.

You forgot to mention that the major economic damage done in the article you posted was due to lawsuits against the city.

Quick question - if our economy is so short of labor that we need to import it, as our Susan Sontag libertarians assert, how is it that the cost of labor hasn't risen in this country in nearly a decade? When the demand for something outstrips the supply, the price of that something rises, right?

Ok, then. I want to see the rising cost of labor. Where is it?

Further, you might want to consider that the costs that "everyone keeps saying are so awful" might be of the variety that economics is inadequate to quantify. Social capital, cultural integrity, political environment, crime rates, etc.

Despite the fact that most Americans understand that illegal immigration helps provide them with cheap produce, most of them are willing to forfeit that benefit in return for securing the borders.

If immigration provides such an abundance of benefits, why is that? Perhaps people are willing to trade tangible values for some intangible ones that elude the economists....


Third, declaring that individuals are free to act as they choose while rendering them powerless to protect the social/cultural/political infrastructure that permits free-trade and freedom of action to the extent that they do is indeed draining the pond from under the fish.


I'm sure it would. However, no one here declared that or rendered anyone powerless. So your whole argument falls as flat a man made of straw. Too bad.

Really? You've asserted that your fellow citizens don't have the right to prevent you from preemptively admitting laborers to this country over their objections, a situation which would effectively force them to confront the resulting social, cultural, political and economic public effects that by a substantial majority they have, through their elected representatives, expressed a desire not to be confronted with. If that isn't stripping them of their legitimate power as sovereigns of the republic, I don't know what would be.

Lizards in a terrarium.
I speak of civil, social man under law, and no other.
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Universe Prince

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Re: economic consequences of cracking down on illegal immigration
« Reply #67 on: October 04, 2007, 06:10:52 AM »
Wow. I have to say, I am genuinely surprised by how much in your reply is so ridiculously wrong.


I'm not the one mistaking private property for legal sovereignty, either.


Guess that makes two of us. In point of fact, I argued that legal sovereignty was not the same as private property.


As a matter of fact, every sovereign nation is a private club.


So you're okay with the U.S. government, for whatever reason, deciding you cannot be employed and maybe that you shouldn't live inside the country? Not that I expect an answer to that question.


Every sovereign nation has the right to determine who will and who won't be admitted. Every sovereign nation has the right to determine who will and who won't be granted citizenship. And not only does every sovereign nation on earth do exactly that, in democratic nations they're obviously doing it with the full consent of the governed.


No one said a nation's government has no right to control borders or to decide rules for citizenship. No one.


In not a single nation on earth is there a popular demand to abandon control of it's borders.


That is probably true. But then, I'm not arguing that the government abandon control of the borders either. Perhaps you ought to brush up on your reading comprehension skills.


So you equate private property with sovereignty?


No.


Ok, then - does the government have the legitimate authority to make and enforce laws preventing you from killing people or molesting children on your property?


Yes, because killing people and molesting children would be violating the rights of other individuals.


Would you have the right to construct and operate a machine that would emit deadly radiation for a hundred mile radius from your property? If not, why not?


No, because that would be violating the rights of other individuals.


Where does the government derive the authority to prevent you from doing those things on your own property?


I think my answer to that should be clear by now. (If not, please see my two answers above.) The government exists to protect the rights of individuals. As I believe Bastiat said, the law (the government in this case) is essentially a collaborative exercise of the right of individuals to self-defense. (And yes, I know that is not an exact quote.)


Quote
In any case, your example works in my favor. Does the local bowling team have a right to decide who joins the team? Sure. But then by the same reasoning, the local business owners have a right to decide who they hire for work. Do individuals have a right to decide to enter into private agreements to trade labor for monetary compensation? Or is that something the government should decide? Should the government decide whether or not you can be employed? If you're going to argue that people have a right to decide for themselves with whom they associate and do business, then why would you want to trample over that right with onerous laws? Your position is not tenable because it is self-contradictory.

And here we have Dishonest Argument #11315 from the open borders advocates.


In other words, you're not going to address the questions. And no, the argument is not dishonest in any fashion. Your response, however, is.


Tell me - are you planning to escort your workers up from the border, house them on your property, absorb the expense for any needs they might have, and escort them back to the border after work?


Why would I need to do that? I would not have to do that for any other workers. Is there some reason these workers need to be prevented from renting shelter or buying it on their own? Is there some reason why the money they make in exchange for their labor is going to be refused by shop owners?


Oh wait - you aren't planning to do that! You're asserting that your right to property is the right to introduce elements to the public sphere, where they'll have an impact on everyone else, whether they like it or not.


No, I'm not asserting that at all. (I'm seeing a recurring pattern in your "rebuttal".) Actually, I'm asserting that my right to property and someone else's right to their property (they own their labor), means the two of us can make a private agreement of mutual exchange. That agreement is in no way binding on anyone else. If you don't want to sell your goods or services to certain people, that would be up to you, though I think turning away potential customers would be really stupid. And I'm sure the "No Mexicans Allowed" sign in your store front window would keep more than just Mexicans away.


And I suppose your right to keep and bear arms also equates to the right to discharge them out of your window into a crowd? The gun and the window, after all, are your property, right?


This is getting tiresome already. 'No' would be the answer to the first question. And the answer to the second would be that my rights do not trump the rights of individuals, so no my ownership of the weapon and the window would not justify firing into a crowd. Why am I even having to explain this to you? Are you that ignorant?


Try this one on for size: my family and I would like to have a Bengal tiger. Since we own the property, nobody should be able to tell us whether or not we can keep a Bengal tiger.

By the way, my family and I are going to be busy, so we're only going to be keeping the tiger on our premises from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM, Monday thru Friday, and the rest of the time we're going to let it wander the streets so everyone else can enjoy it, too.


What you seem to be missing here is that no one is arguing that people have no right to self-defense. The argument is that your right to self-defense does not give you authority to initiate forcible abridgment of other people's rights. There is also an argument to be made that disliking people is not a threat to your safety. That would be why we don't arrest people for theft just because you think they're shifty-eyed.


Apparently you're arguing that ownership of property gives you the right to preempt public judgement on very public impacts that you're use of that property will entail. I call bullshit! This has nothing to do with your property, and everything to do with the public impact you're proposing to inflict on your fellow citizens without their consent. You're standing on your right to the use of your private property while abdicating the responsibility for the public impacts of that usage.


Not at all. To begin with, you have yet to show a detrimental impact on the public. A private agreement between individuals does not inflict anything on other people, unless you're offended perhaps by the sight of people with black hair and dirty clothes. At no point does a private agreement between an employer and an employee require you to do a damn thing unless you're one of the parties in the agreement. Why you would object to more customers for local business, I have no idea. Keeping them out, however, can have a detrimental effect on the public, and seems to me, you're the one trying to shirk the responsibility for that effect and for forcibly abridging the rights of the public.


In addition, you're rights to free association and free enterprise are tempered by your obligations to the rights of others and to the law.


That may be the first reasonable comment you've made so far. Though I would say one's liberty is so tempered, not one's rights.


You may very well have the right to associate and trade with Charles Manson, but you don't have a right to demand the State of California grants him his liberty to convenience your doing so. Given the current legal restrictions on Mr. Manson's movements, you are obliged to have to visit him in the penitentiary where he currently resides.


Yep. All true.


You're perfectly free to associate and do business with anyone you please.


Apparently not.


There are few American laws that actually restrict such associations. However, in the case that the person you wish to associate or do business with is not legally permitted to enter the United States, then you are going to be obliged to visit them in their country.


Or, we could change the laws so that they do more protecting of rights and less trampling of rights. And incidentally, why is it okay for me to go to the other person's country to do business but not okay for that person to come here to do business?


To argue that right's to free association and free enterprise are license to usurp the right of a sovereign nation to control it's borders is like arguing that a right to drive your car across town is license to run over any pedestrians who happen to be in your way.


That may be the dumbest analogy I've ever seen. In any case, I did not argue that a right to free association and free enterprise is a license to usurp the right of a sovereign nation to control its borders. (Back to your pattern already.) I believe what I said was "If you're going to argue that people have a right to decide for themselves with whom they associate and do business, then why would you want to trample over that right with onerous laws? Your position is not tenable because it is self-contradictory." Your position is still both untenable and self-contradictory.


If you want to burn down your own house, knock yourself out. If you're disposing of toxic wastes in your backyard such that they contaminate the neighborhood water supply, then you're damn right I think the public has a legitimate input into how you're using your property.


That would be an instance of violating other people's rights. Two people entering into a private agreement to exchange labor for monetary compensation violates the rights of other people in exactly what way?


And I submit that your flavor of libertarianism isn't libertarianism at all, but a bastardized third-way socialism that's basically replaced the individual with the nation-state as the unit of redistribution.


I then submit that not only are you not paying attention, you also have not the least notion what you're talking about.


Sure we won't tax the individual. Sure we won't tell him he can't smoke dope. We don't need to. Having already stripped him of the legal, political and economic means to affect any input as to what kind of country and society he lives in, why bother?


How did that occur? Please explain how respecting the rights of the individual, which would give the individual more power not less, strips him of "the legal, political and economic means to affect any input as to what kind of country and society he lives in".


He's like a lizard in a terrarium. He can do anything he likes inside the confines of the terrarium. Unfortunately, if someone decides to fill that terrarium with methane and ammonia, he's just shit out of luck. We wouldn't want to restrict the freedom of people who want to poison terrariums, would we?


This one goes in the violating the rights of others list. And please feel free to explain how respecting the rights of individuals is somehow horribly restrictive and at the same time your preferred laws restricting liberty and trampling on the rights of individuals is somehow going to empower the public. I'd really like to see how that works.


And the simple fact that you're overlooking is that nobody much gives a shit who remodels your kitchen. What they give a shit about is that you're aiding, abetting and encouraging people to enter the country illegally.


Obviously you do care who I hire, otherwise you would not demand that onerous immigration laws be in place. I'm sure people do care about the aiding and abetting of illegal immigrants. But what you have not explained is why we need laws that so strictly control immigration that people think risking death and imprisonment is better than staying where they were to wait for legal entry. Which leads me back to what said before. My right to privacy does not include preventing you from having having someone over to your house to remodel your kitchen even if I don't like the person you hired for the job. In other words, the onerous immigration laws are not justified.


you're abetting an impact to the public environment such that the public, i.e. the collection of individuals that constitute your fellow citizenry, has deemed undesirable.


You mean like hiring to "coloreds" was once deemed undesirable by fellow citizenry? Sorry, but you're going to have to do better than that.


If you were leaving rotten foodstuffs out on your property such that it attracted rats, do you not think your neighbors might have a legitimate complaint?


Excuse me, but did you just compare hiring illegal immigrants to leaving outside rotten food that attracts rats? Sure looks like you did.


You forgot to mention that the major economic damage done in the article you posted was due to lawsuits against the city.


No. The major economic damage was done by the loss of workers and customers driven out of town, resulting in stores and restaurants losing so much business that many had to close down permanently. If you don't think that was the major economic impact, I suggest you go talk to the people who had to close their businesses. In any case, for someone complaining about stripping the individual "of the legal, political and economic means to affect any input as to what kind of country and society he lives in" why would you complain about the lawsuits that challenged the law? Seems to me you should be in favor of that. Or are there only certain people who should have "the legal, political and economic means to affect any input as to what kind of country and society he lives in"? And I should note here that the ACLU is not run by illegal immigrants, so an "only legal residents" argument is not applicable.


Quick question - if our economy is so short of labor that we need to import it, as our Susan Sontag libertarians assert, how is it that the cost of labor hasn't risen in this country in nearly a decade? When the demand for something outstrips the supply, the price of that something rises, right?


Sometimes. And data I can find (http://clevelandfed.org/research/trends/2007/0307/01infpri_021507-1.gif) suggests the cost of labor in the U.S. has a net rise in the past five years. But then I don't know precisely what you're calling the cost of labor. That term can cover a lot of things. However, I'm sure the number of immigrants in the country as part of the labor market has had an effect on the cost of labor in this country. Which would mitigate other factors that might otherwise result in the rise for which you're looking. So chances are really good that I'm not going to find numbers that measure something other than what has actually happened.


Further, you might want to consider that the costs that "everyone keeps saying are so awful" might be of the variety that economics is inadequate to quantify. Social capital, cultural integrity, political environment, crime rates, etc.


Crime rate? As best I can discover, immigrants have an incarceration rate that is about 20% of the incarceration rate of native born folks. Social capital? I do not know why you think more people would damage your social capital. Political environment? You mean, they might do something to harm the situation we have now where two parties function as different factions of the same party? Cultural integrity? Cultural integrity? What cultural integrity? The integrity of the culture that has influences from the Greeks, the French, the Spanish, the Italians, the Chinese, the Japanese, the Irish, the Polish, the Germans, the Catholics, the Baptists, the Atheists, the Pagans, the Goths, the Texans, the New Yorkers, the Cajuns, the Puritans, the African Slaves, the Beatles, the Grand Old Opry, and all kinda stuff like that there? Am I supposed to worry about losing that sort of cultural integrity? To be quite honest, I'm more worried by the threat to our culture posed by those people who think the government should control our culture by controlling people. And that threat comes from both the political left and the political right. That is a much greater threat than any that might be posed by an influx of workers from another country.


Despite the fact that most Americans understand that illegal immigration helps provide them with cheap produce, most of them are willing to forfeit that benefit in return for securing the borders.


Are they? I'm sure the folks in Riverside, New Jersey, were willing too. And after the effects of the law manifested, they repealed their law. The poor and lower-middle income folks whose cost of living would skyrocket, do you think they would be thankful for the loss of immigrant labor? The only group of people who would benefit from "securing the borders" is the group of people in government who want more control over the economy, the culture and the people. If you think the Democrats are bad now for wanting universal health care and all that, just wait until costs skyrocket on everything. Talk about draining the pond, that would be it.


If immigration provides such an abundance of benefits, why is that? Perhaps people are willing to trade tangible values for some intangible ones that elude the economists....


Perhaps, but you're forgetting that many of those intangible values are made possible in our society by the economic ones. You remind me of the folks who decide to stop being part of the capitalist system by dumpster diving, never realizing of course that they can do so and live in relative comfort still because of the fact that they still live in a capitalist society. Intangible benefits of living in this society will be harder to come by the more you seek to hobble capitalism with laws controlling and in some cases preventing what should otherwise be reasonable trade.


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Third, declaring that individuals are free to act as they choose while rendering them powerless to protect the social/cultural/political infrastructure that permits free-trade and freedom of action to the extent that they do is indeed draining the pond from under the fish.

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I'm sure it would. However, no one here declared that or rendered anyone powerless. So your whole argument falls as flat a man made of straw. Too bad.

Really? You've asserted that your fellow citizens don't have the right to prevent you from preemptively admitting laborers to this country over their objections,


I'm still not clear on how arguing in favor of trade and freedom of action is supposed to render people powerless to protect them. I'm even less clear on how laws that interfere with and undermine "the social/cultural/political infrastructure that permits free-trade and freedom of action", such as the ones as you support, are going to protect either the infrastructure, the trade or the freedom. You do not have free trade when you regulate who is and is not allowed and with whom they are allowed to do business. There is no freedom of action when there are laws restricting the rightful liberty of the citizens. You do not have a "social/cultural/political infrastructure" that supports either free trade or freedom of action if the "social/cultural/political infrastructure" prevents both free trade and freedom of action. As stated before, your position is self-contradictory.


You've asserted that your fellow citizens don't have the right to prevent you from preemptively admitting laborers to this country over their objections, a situation which would effectively force them to confront the resulting social, cultural, political and economic public effects that by a substantial majority they have, through their elected representatives, expressed a desire not to be confronted with.


Actually, what I have asserted is that the rights of the individual are the rights of the public and therefore the rights of the public do not trump the rights of the individual. I'm not arguing that laws should be ignored willy-nilly. I believe I have, however, argued that unjust laws should be changed or, if necessary, eliminated. Better minds than mine have written eloquently on just that subject, and I am fairly certain one or two them would agree that unjust laws should be opposed even if supported by a majority. And I am also fairly certain that at least one or two of them would also agree that freedom does not exist if the majority can always force its will on the minority. And as someone once pointed out, the individual is the smallest minority. So how ever much people might not want to be faced with the (so far) largely unsubstantiated fears of an open trade in labor, that is not sufficient justification to interfere in the rights of others. The law, in my opinion, should be changed, and so far you have yet to provide a single substantial argument to the contrary.


If that isn't stripping them of their legitimate power as sovereigns of the republic, I don't know what would be.


Yes, I am sure you don't. You have demonstrated that beyond doubt.


Lizards in a terrarium.


That would be a good name for a punk band.
« Last Edit: October 04, 2007, 06:29:36 AM by Universe Prince »
Your reality, sir, is lies and balderdash and I'm delighted to say that I have no grasp of it whatsoever.
--Hieronymus Karl Frederick Baron von Munchausen ("The Adventures of Baron Munchausen" [1988])--