My view is that sovereign nations have the right and responsibility to maintain their borders and follow a rational policy on admission. Just because x-millions of South Americans or Africans (and people from elsewhere) want to come to the US or EU doesn't mean they must be welcomed or admitted at all. — BC
As for the OP – As a lifelong leftist, I'm pro-Palestinian and pro-Israeli (non-settler); also, anti-Hamas and anti-Likud (& land-thieving settlers). — 180 Proof
Is that it? I thought we "hate" them for their nativist hatred of those "damn dirty darkies" (i.e. howling about "Eurarabia", etc).... they also hate white Europeans for wanting a more balanced approach to immigration ... — flannel jesus
The influx of Jews that populated Israel from the 20s to the 70s were in no small part refugees. — flannel jesus
Palestinians wanted to cut off Jews right to immigrate to the region before it was ever describable as "illegal colonization". They were willing to live side by side with the Jews who were already there, but they absolutely didn't want more Jews coming in. — flannel jesus
Why shouldn't a nation want to keep it's national identity and protect it from large waves of immigrants hostile to that identity? — flannel jesus
This is made worse by claims in liberal media spaces (e.g., John Oliver's "Last Week Tonight") that economists essentially agree that immigration has net positive impacts for all of society, providing benefits without significant costs. This is simply not the real consensus in the field. — Count Timothy von Icarus
AFAIK, the consensus is that immigration is generally a net positive on total economic output in the long term, and that the long-term overall displacement effect is small. But the displacement effect is there in the short term and it overwhelmingly affects people who are already in a precarious employment. Is that roughly how you would characterise it as well?
I agree with you on that. I think if that were a serious possibility I might fight to oppose it. But that's not an anti-immigration stance. — bert1
Actually, the river to the sea is the slogan of the Likud party. And I think it's working for them well... :smirk:so let me try to break it down: leftist institutions are full of people chanting 'From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!' — flannel jesus
Here's the crux of a counter-argument: migrant workers and refugees don't have the objective to create a new (Muslim?) country in Europe and aren't up taking arms and fighting to do that. Or if you think so, then you aren't going to quite extreme conspiracy theories and this conversation is meaningless.Here's the crux of the argument: Palestinians themselves are currently suffering from the literal nightmare scenario of the unfettered immigration of a bunch of people who they believed had an opposing way of life. Palestinians are literally the victim of the very thing "racist white Europeans" are trying to avoid. — flannel jesus
Oh yes, we white Europeans will be living in reservations or worse... how was the chant? We will be replaced?My thesis is this: if you have sympathy for Palestinians in this situation, because they are living in the worst nightmare scenario of the result of unfettered immigration of a perceived "hostile culture", then you should also have sympathy for the "racist white Europeans" who are trying to avoid the nighmare scenarios that come with unfettered immigration of perceived "hostile cultures". — flannel jesus
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