Monthly Archives: December 2015

21

“the fundamental question-“should we be doing this at all?”-goes unvoiced by anyone in a position of responsibility” theatlantic.com/politics/archi…

| 9 years ago on Twitter

45 No “religious tests” for immigration? Really?

Just Between Us: Maybe it’s a bad time to say it, but the idea that we can never have a “religious test” for immigration — a righteous principle declared, to great applause, by Paul Ryan and to less applause by President Obama — is untenable, if not mildly insane. Sure, it may work for nice, bourgeois religions like Christianity, Buddhism, Judaism and, arguably, modern Islam (one reason Trump’s plan is misguided). But it’s not at all hard to think of religions so vile that it would be virtually impossible to justify not excluding people who believed them. Imagine, say, a religion that required its adherents to murder random people to demonstrate the superficiality of earthly life, to placate a bloodthirsty deity, or just to prove their faith. “The Thuggee were a religion. Jonestown was religious,” one NRO commenter has noted.  Thinking that the world’s great mainstream religions are the only possible faiths is what Marxists call “reification.”

Ryan made a point of praising “Muslims, the vast, vast, vast, vast majority of whom are peaceful, who believe in pluralism and freedom and democracy and individual rights.” OK! But what if the vast, vast majority of a particular religion were not peaceful, did not believe in pluralism and democracy and individual rights? Do we let them in too? … A million of them? … A hundred million? … Can’t have a “religious test,” after all. … It wouldn’t be hard for a beginning law professor to explode Ryan’s principle with a barrage of hypotheticals.  Ryan’s own “vast, vast, vast, vast” (yes, there were four of them) argument suggests that which believers to admit isn’t an issue of principle after all but an empirical question. Most religions — sure! Others, na-uh. It’s way too simple to just say, with Obama, that we shouldn’t discriminate against someone because of “the faith they practice.

P.S.: Religious inquiries, in this sense, are a subset of seemingly valid ideological tests that would weed out would-be immigrants strongly opposed to “who we are,” as the current cliche describes American values. Why should a murderous anti-democratic ideology get a free pass just because it calls itself a faith or concerns itself with grand cosmological issues? If Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi declares that he’s a god, do we have to wave his believers through customs?

Once we let people in and they become citizens, we’re stuck with them, so we have to be at least a little picky! Do you have confidence that our current powers of assimilation can soon turn sincerely non-freedom-loving people [don’t fight the hypothetical!] into democracy’s defenders? What about those who might believe with firm conviction in death for offensive writing, for homosexuals, for fornicators generally, etc.?

Safer to build democracy, free speech and tolerance with immigrants who believe in democracy, free speech, and tolerance, no?

16

When your party is reduced to worrying that Cruz doesn’t have the trustworthiness of Nixon, you are in trouble … nyti.ms/1IGLruF

| 9 years ago on Twitter

51

Bipartisan elite: ‘Trump a fascistic menace who’ll plunge world into chaos-but we won’t abandon amnesty to stop him’ kausfiles.com/2015/11/30/why…

| 9 years ago on Twitter

17

Do we have to take immigrants who reject-even hate-tolerance & other bourgeois virtues? If you say no … natl.re/040uO6

| 9 years ago on Twitter

3

Missing from O’s speech: The lecture on how we need to take in refugees. (He only opposed a religious test.) fw.to/8QBKwiJ

| 9 years ago on Twitter

22

Trump should’ve said “‘I’ need to build a wall on the Mexican border”? That wld make no sense. He doesn’t need-we do nyti.ms/1SEZktv

| 9 years ago on Twitter

32

Didn’t realize it was demagogic to say “‘We’ need to build a wall on the Mexican border” instead of “I need …” nyti.ms/1SEZktv

| 9 years ago on Twitter

13

Good example of how libertarian open bordersism ends up putting faith in big new government “transfer” programs. twitter.com/pgehred/status…

| 9 years ago on Twitter

13

In other words unskilled Americans have wages lowered–but hey, we have some new kind of welfare transfer for you! twitter.com/pgehred/status…

| 9 years ago on Twitter

36

Isn’t this a worse pander than anything Trump–or anybody–has yet said? How does AG “stop” a political movement? twitter.com/JebBush/status…

| 9 years ago on Twitter

44

Never get this argument: If controlling immig boosts lo-skill US wages wld you oppose b/c some backers also racists? newrepublic.com/article/125103…

| 9 years ago on Twitter