But then Mexico is not a European nation, and it is where the bulk of immigrants are coming from. As I said, our border with Mexico was not well-defined until 1845, so you cannot say that our current enforcement is out of the norm. There has been no norm and there have been times when enforcement was much more severe.
When immigration mostly was coming from Europe and laws were liberal, the US needed large numbers of low-skilled workers. That is no longer the case. We are unable to keep our own workers employed. There is no excuse for allowing millions more to enter uninvited.
My excuse is the ideals stated on the Statue of Liberty. I believe those best represent Christian values and the ideals of the USA and should be followed regardless of the economic realities.
But, I won't dispute with over this since it illustrates what I set out to illustrate. The real issue with illegal immigration boils down to not wanting a large number of them here at all, even if they came legally. Once that is clear, I merely point to the ideals found in the Statue of Liberty and leave it at that. Either one agrees with those ideals or one does not. If one does not, then they should be upfront with the real issue they have with illegal immigration - they simply don't want large numbers to come to the US.
Which brings us back to chucking all the rules. Just do away with the rules and problem magically solved.
The problem of illegal immigration is solved. No longer will they be using up resource illegally. But sure, if your main problem boils down to not wanting them here at all, then amnesty does nothing to solve that problem and in fact, is likely to make it worse. My point is not that amnesty solves everything but that it does solve the supposed problems that most people throw up. But, boil the issue down to simply not wanting them to come here at all, and, as you say, amnesty is not a good solution for that.
But let me also make clear that I my more serious suggestion is not simply chucking all the rules - merely changing the current rules to a different set of rules.
It is an argument against relaxing the standards for entry, or doing away with the line as you have argued for. If you can mix arguments then so can I!
No mixing arguments on either end here. Its now come to what I believe is the more accurate focus - that the main argument you have is not against illegal immigration per se, but against large number of poor immigrating here at all. Illegal immigration is merely the current form of this, but allowing them to come legally would not the fix problem. I just want to make clear that all other issues you raise are beside the point of the main issue you have.
I have found that your main issue is the common one among conservatives. I merely point out here that all objections raised that don't have to do with this main issue are little more than logical smoke screens. They detract and distract from the main issue.
The difference is that German, Italian and Russian immgration eventually ended. Mexicans continue to come and there has been no break for 60 years. Mexicans living in the US are 30% of the total foreign born. In their heyday, Italians, Germans and Russions combined constituted 30% of foreign-born. So the numbers of Mexicans are much larger and yes balkanization is a real problem.
I don't dispute that there are differences. Historically though, I don't see that the differences will lead to a different conclusion...unless we insist on making it hard for them to come. Make it as hard as possible for them to assimilate and the chances they won't is great. Make it easy for them to assimilate and actively encourage it, and the chances they will is much greater - in fact, there is little to expect they wouldn't. The problem is when policies provide more incentive towards balkanization than otherwise and that is then used as an argument for disallowing liberal entry. Circular reasoning.
You do realize the "Give Me Your Tired, Your Poor" inscription on the statue did not reflect any Constitutional concepts, but was originated by poet Emma Lazarus who wrote it for the occasion. Are we forever locked into an open door immigration policy because of a poet's nice-sounding words?
1. I realize it doesn't reflect any ideals in the Constitution...but thats because the Constitution is silent on the matter. So, by the same token, its not contradictory to the Constitution.
2. At the same time, I believe it does reflect American ideals very accurately. That's not to say that we are locked into it (certainly not by the Constitution), but it does raise the question of why we should depart from those ideals.
3. More significantly, I believe they represent the best of Christian ideals as found in governmental policy. Of course, whether the government should at all operate by Christian ideals is open to debate.
But really, my main objective in all this is not to prove others wrong, but to move the debate away from (what I believe to be) the smoke screen issue of "But its illegal!!" and focus the discussion on the more accurate issue of pro/con of more open immigration policies.