GoddyofAus said:
Wow, even the Escapist is not safe from the Labor/Liberal blame game.
Face it, both of your parties are abhorrent, power hungry pariahs who have grown so desperate for power that they're willing to appeal this much to the racist underbelly of Australia's middle class. Who would've thought appealing to the bogan vote could net you government so easily.
See, my basic attitude here is that living in the first world is not a right. When a bunch of people who failed in their own hellhole of a country ask for citizenship I do not feel any obligation to take them in and their problems. Especially if the people are simply motivated economically and want a better quality of life than what they had, as opposed to really being a part of your culture. I'm an American, and yes I know the whole "nation of immigrants" speech and the whole "give us your desperate and poor" schtick, but the bottom line is that for every immigrant that succeeds probably ten more are going to do nothing but become a burden to society, because if they don't have the skills to succeed where they were, they probably don't have the skills to succeed in a more advanced nation, especially if they don't speaking the language. As "mean" as it is, you wind up with the social and public services facing more of a burden, causing the government to have to borrow more money as a result, and the assorted problems that come from poverty when you find these guys who never had the tools to succeed inevitably forming migrant communities and squatter/shanty towns in the shadow of other areas to succeed. There have been all kinds of exposes about the little communities that have formed down in California, Texas, etc... and the people that live there, usually intended as a plea for sympathy and assistance, with people mentioning how all these people came here pursueing "The American Dream". In reality I can't get "The American Dream" for myself when you get down to it, so what makes you think I'm going to support giving it to these people, and really when I hear some of the stories I can't help but wonder why they were ever let in because it doesn't take a genius to figure out where they were going to end up. The US doesn't hand you a job, a car, and an apartment when you come across the border, most long term Americans have some trouble maintaining those things, so basically some unemployed bum stumbling through the immigration process is likely to become an unemployed
bum in the USA, he simply wants to be here because our social benefits are better.
In short, your likely to hate me too, but I see where Australia is coming from. If you think these battles are nasty look at the ones the US has to deal with once we opened that door. While it's not the sole cause it does help contrinute to that staggering 17 billion dollars in debt, and honestly we're the only country I've heard of where we've actually had society wide fights over the right to ban our own flag in public buildings because it was upsetting immigrants
during foreign holidays.... think about that for a second.
I'll also say that at the end of the day I think it's less "Racist and xenophobic" than classist when you get down to it. The problem with most refugees in my experience has less to do with their ethnicity, and more with what they have to contribute to society. When the US is already dealing with massive unemployment problems for example, even a guy showing up with a trade like "mechanic" (to use the example from the Aussie propaganda) is pretty much useless when we have tens of thousands of those or more pretty much out of work, and you can see a hundred applicants at a garage when a job opens up in some places. It might tug at your heartstrings, but some unemployed mechanic on one side of the border is likely to be an unemployed mechanic on the other. On the other hand some guy coming up to become a citizen who wants to be American, already has some resources to support himself for a while, and a skill that's actually in demand (or has already secured employment, or is independently wealthy) that's a different story, that tends to be less of an issue with most countries.
We'll ultimately have to agree to disagree for the most part I'm sure. Despite how it might sound I do agree that it's not a nice thing, and it would be good to be able to help, but as someone else pointed out, when your country already has issues (and Australia apparently has them, just like the USA) it's not a good idea to start volunteering to take on everyone else's issues as well.