I'm aware of the net negative flow to Mexico, the US is not net negative over all. And the gumball man was making the case that pulling a handful of the best and the brightest from other places and bringing them here, only serves to make the conditions where they came from worse, meanwhile their population growth puts more people in poverty year over year.
What population growth?
Mexico's population growth has dropped to less than 1% by some metrics.
The US is at an 80-year low.
Brookings Institute
"Democrats for Open Borders" is a republican talking point in response to abolishing ICE... which is a recent thing. In fact, it is the Right's Koch brothers that were for Open borders.. look it up. They (The Right) is basically shifting blame for their own doings.
Take it from whichever news source you want:
Breitbart
Time
As far back as 1984, the
conservatives said:
Open borders could have an enormous positive impact on GDP worldwide. Even critics of immigration, such as George Borjas, acknowledge this: “The removal of immigration restrictions would indeed lead to a huge increase in GDP: global wealth would increase by $40tn – almost a 60% rise. Moreover, the gain would accrue each year after the restrictions were removed.” Given the clear economic benefit, the conservative Wall Street Journal ran an editorial in 1984 arguing for a five word amendment to the US constitution: “There shall be open borders.”
The left in the US has been saying for generations that we need to allow more migrants to help the poor people not be poor. The math doesn't lie, we aren't fixing poverty elsewhere by bringing it here, we're only prolonging it. Meanwhile, we have our own poor to worry about.
I hate to defend the Democrats, so let me make that clear.
I would challenge you to find a policy position or organizational statement that says the D's support immigration in the way you have laid out... I honestly believe that if you research it you will come to the same conclusions I am putting here. This is all politically motivated and charged "hot button" issues.. often taken out of context and used to attack the "others" so you don't see what the other hand is doing, so take what you hear 'recently' with big grains of salt..
Immigration was higher with Bush and Trump... it was lower with Obama. Remember that Obama was named "Deporter in Chief" by THE REPUBLICANS as a SMEAR... you don't smear someone with something you agree with, right? Otherwise the smear wouldn't work. So if your theory that Dems support (il)legal immigration, then why did they do the opposite, policy-wise, of your claim? Why do the numbers and statistics say the opposite? Why are there numerous "old" articles that seem to state that the situation is in fact fully reverse of reality?
Net migration for the US has been in decline since 1997 - That was Bill Clinton (I hate the guy).
So when did immigration go up?
Under the administrations of Nixon, Ford (Republicans) it goes up. Under Jimmy Carter (Democrat) it goes down. Under Reagan(R).. it goes up, Bush Sr.(R), it goes up... Under Bill Clinton(D), there is a sharp decline and under Obama(D) there is a decline. Maybe I'm missing something here?
I'm not saying all that should stop, I'm just saying that perhaps we should be aware of its impact instead of just ignoring things. Because that ignorance is why the 2nd and 3rd world runs to us every time they're given the option. For example If we don't want Honduran refugees in the country, we have to work with Honduras to prevent the reasons for them existing in the first place. Working with Mexico to help her contain them was a good move too, because it's not like all the nations South of Mexico are doing all that hot either. Mostly, because the US is funding drug cartels down there with more money than the governments have, and we wonder why there's so much corruption? Yet, if you end the War on Drugs and grow a brain that prohibition doesn't work, you actually make the problem worse because entire nations South of the US exist on drug money, that's a substantial portion of their economies! Put people out of work and they get hungry, then desperate, then they become the problem you're trying to avoid.
Of which I think you and I agree almost implicitly. I think we only differ on the thoughts on how we got here. You tend to blame the Dems while I will tend to blame the R's.
I will contend the only difference is that I can lay out a solid argument as to why you should blame the R's! I'm not saying the Dems can't take some solid heat, too, however. I will contend that now that the political atmosphere
is now fully bought and paid for, there is really very little difference between the R's and D's..
they are all corporate tools. That makes them equally despicable and equally at fault.
Honduran refugees are a direct result of
US meddling and the CIA led coup(Like most of South America)... we hardly have a right to now blame refugees for our **** ups. But your suggestion is to "help" more? The last thing Honduras wants from us now is "help", and I can't blame them. Now, which side is
still trying to do coups? Donald Trump. (Hillary would have tried her own coups, too, if she were president).
I agree mostly about the drugs issue you raise, but again, I disagree that lifting prohibition would make things worse for those countries and the data would suggest that you are incorrect on the outcome of such a move. The problem with the drug trade and the US involvement is this:
The problem was created by the Republicans (Nixon, Bush). The CIA was instrumental in Nicaragua... yet another coup by the US.
The problem in South America isn't that they exist solely on US drug money, it's that the drug cartels don't distribute wealth... therefore it's a losing strategy for their economies. If, in turn, the drug war ends and drug production becomes legal... it would force the cartels to dissolve and normal businesses would be able to actually help their economy. Look at any state that has legalized weed... it's not a detriment, it's the complete opposite. There is much more evidence to suggest that legalization of some form would be the smart economic and political strategy for all parties involved. But they don't want that, it's not in their interests.