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Topic: Why do people hate trumps wall.. - page 2. (Read 1035 times)

legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386
November 25, 2018, 04:14:45 PM
#45
Its a non issue.  Known criminals will not make it through "catch and release", they will be caught and brought to whatever justice is deemed appropriate.   No one is saying criminals should be granted asylum. ....

Again you show your bias and mis statements.

Advocating criminals be allowed into the US, and advocating they be allowed to run free until they are "caught."

Oh, and by the way, this entire problem in large part exists because your "open border buddies" did in fact do just that, let the criminals run free, and let them repeatedly be caught and released, over and over. There is a large number of these cases, yes, including many of rape and murder.

Please stop being idiotic.
newbie
Activity: 1
Merit: 0
November 25, 2018, 03:48:07 PM
#44
A wall would be good for security reasons but in a world were trade and commerce, social lives and economies are driven because of lack of these walls i think its a bad idea Roll Eyes
full member
Activity: 952
Merit: 175
@cryptocommies
November 25, 2018, 01:13:21 PM
#43
Its a non issue.  Known criminals will not make it through "catch and release", they will be caught and brought to whatever justice is deemed appropriate.   No one is saying criminals should be granted asylum.

Trump has closed san ysidro, our largest border entry point to all people.  Americans in TJ cannot get back.  Yet again we have to wait several hours for a judge to overrule our dictator in chief. 
https://www.cnn.com/2018/11/25/us/san-ysidro-port-of-entry-closed/index.html
Until then, unjust policies should be broken. People should resist.
legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386
November 25, 2018, 10:06:23 AM
#42
...
That myth has been debunked. The fear is irrational.  
https://www.npr.org/2018/05/02/607652253/studies-say-illegal-immigration-does-not-increase-violent-crime
Here we subscribe to the idea that everyone is innocent until proven guilty.  If you are really concerned about rape, and murder, you should look at our natural born population which commits crimes at much higher rates.  
It's not a myth that there are 500 criminals in the caravan population. The only myths are in your words.
full member
Activity: 952
Merit: 175
@cryptocommies
November 25, 2018, 01:32:55 AM
#41
The same thing we do when "criminals" show up in a visa application or at the airport.  We already have systems in place for catching criminals.  That is part of the conversation solely to invoke fear in the hearts of people who are otherwise morally active.

No it is not. In fact that's an incredibly insensitive thing to say for one who claims to be so sensitive to others.

You blithely say things like that only perhaps because you don't personally know the violence along the board. You are remote from people being raped and murdered by criminals that cross back and forth freely across the US border with Mexico.


My entire stance is based on the violence.  That is the same type of violence these people are trying to escape.  Its the same argument as saying refugees were full of embedded ISIS. 
No it is not an argument intended to invoke fear in people.

That's a total bullshit pitch and you know it.

Sure we've got systems to catch criminals, but that's after they murder or rape or steal, not before. The whole point is to not let them in so those things don't happen.
That myth has been debunked. The fear is irrational. 
https://www.npr.org/2018/05/02/607652253/studies-say-illegal-immigration-does-not-increase-violent-crime
Here we subscribe to the idea that everyone is innocent until proven guilty.  If you are really concerned about rape, and murder, you should look at our natural born population which commits crimes at much higher rates. 
legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386
November 25, 2018, 12:52:28 AM
#40
The same thing we do when "criminals" show up in a visa application or at the airport.  We already have systems in place for catching criminals.  That is part of the conversation solely to invoke fear in the hearts of people who are otherwise morally active.

No it is not. In fact that's an incredibly insensitive thing to say for one who claims to be so sensitive to others.

You blithely say things like that only perhaps because you don't personally know the violence along the board. You are remote from people being raped and murdered by criminals that cross back and forth freely across the US border with Mexico.


My entire stance is based on the violence.  That is the same type of violence these people are trying to escape.  Its the same argument as saying refugees were full of embedded ISIS. 
No it is not an argument intended to invoke fear in people.

That's a total bullshit pitch and you know it.

Sure we've got systems to catch criminals, but that's after they murder or rape or steal, not before. The whole point is to not let them in so those things don't happen.
full member
Activity: 952
Merit: 175
@cryptocommies
November 24, 2018, 08:47:32 PM
#39
The same thing we do when "criminals" show up in a visa application or at the airport.  We already have systems in place for catching criminals.  That is part of the conversation solely to invoke fear in the hearts of people who are otherwise morally active.

No it is not. In fact that's an incredibly insensitive thing to say for one who claims to be so sensitive to others.

You blithely say things like that only perhaps because you don't personally know the violence along the board. You are remote from people being raped and murdered by criminals that cross back and forth freely across the US border with Mexico.


My entire stance is based on the violence.  That is the same type of violence these people are trying to escape.  Its the same argument as saying refugees were full of embedded ISIS. 
legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386
November 22, 2018, 04:57:16 PM
#38
The same thing we do when "criminals" show up in a visa application or at the airport.  We already have systems in place for catching criminals.  That is part of the conversation solely to invoke fear in the hearts of people who are otherwise morally active.

No it is not. In fact that's an incredibly insensitive thing to say for one who claims to be so sensitive to others.

You blithely say things like that only perhaps because you don't personally know the violence along the board. You are remote from people being raped and murdered by criminals that cross back and forth freely across the US border with Mexico.

full member
Activity: 952
Merit: 175
@cryptocommies
November 22, 2018, 12:52:55 AM
#37
The same thing we do when "criminals" show up in a visa application or at the airport.  We already have systems in place for catching criminals.  That is part of the conversation solely to invoke fear in the hearts of people who are otherwise morally active.
legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386
November 21, 2018, 07:03:14 PM
#36
Yes I left out all of the examples of people who had special reasons why they might be able to migrate to the US legally and focused on the desperate poor people that the caravans we are discussing consist of.  Yes I left out Venezuelans, doctors, and family members of Americans because those are not the majority of people rushing across our southern border.  Those are not the majority of the people who would be affected by a wall.  I want everyone to have a pathway to migrate to the US.  If that is what you are calling open borders then fine, I want open borders because that is what our country was built on.  Its such a stretch so suggest anyone is against testing for diseases or catching criminals. 

If someone commits a crime, they should be prosecuted and every person could be screened for disease if they didn't have to risk their freedom by doing so.

So you made up the entire set of false facts to assert your agenda driven wishes.

But you will add a couple exclusions now?

So what would you do about the 500 criminals in the caravan?

full member
Activity: 952
Merit: 175
@cryptocommies
November 21, 2018, 02:15:56 PM
#35
Yes I left out all of the examples of people who had special reasons why they might be able to migrate to the US legally and focused on the desperate poor people that the caravans we are discussing consist of.  Yes I left out Venezuelans, doctors, and family members of Americans because those are not the majority of people rushing across our southern border.  Those are not the majority of the people who would be affected by a wall.  I want everyone to have a pathway to migrate to the US.  If that is what you are calling open borders then fine, I want open borders because that is what our country was built on.  Its such a stretch so suggest anyone is against testing for diseases or catching criminals. 

If someone commits a crime, they should be prosecuted and every person could be screened for disease if they didn't have to risk their freedom by doing so.
legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386
November 21, 2018, 12:32:08 PM
#34
....
I left those out because they aren't relevant to people who don't have sponsors in the US; family or work. ...

People will always take the path of least resistance. Why not make that the legal path?

Why should risking your freedom, safety, health, everything crossing illegally be the easier option?

So you left out ALL the other everyday methods by which Hondurans do get into the USA legally. You left out ALL the problems with this group, like the fact there are 500 criminals in the group. You left out the problem with group members having possible communicable diseases. You ignored completely other countries that might take them. Then you tried to argue they were "climate change refugees," and that was a complete laugh. Then you make an unverified assumption that they ALL had no other recourse for US immigration except illegal entry.

So after mis stating the facts repeatedly, and getting caught repeatedly, then making a plea for sympathy for the down trodden, your argument now is simply that we should have an open border policy, kind of,

"Just Because."

full member
Activity: 952
Merit: 175
@cryptocommies
November 21, 2018, 02:41:38 AM
#33
Yes, actually you did make stuff up. Because I'm using the consensus to refute you. You misrepresented "the consensus."

I quoted directly Gavin Schmidt, he's right at the core of the few people that write up and direct what the "consensus" believes. Here's another direct comment from Schmidt.

...Gavin Schmidt, director of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, estimated that El Niño accounted for 0.07˚C of the above average warming that occurred in 2015...

You claimed that climate change made the El Nino stronger. No, it didn't. And the El Nino contributed only seven hundredths of one degree to the weather pattern.

You don't even understand the subject. You have it exactly backwards.... You don't even know what the consensus of scientific opinion is on a subject, but you are quick to claim it's what supports your argument.

That's what we call making things up.

So this is something entirely different than what I am talking about.  Bolded quote talks about how much of the global average increase in temperature El nino was responsible for.  It doesn't say anything about the strength of el nino.  It definitely doesn't suggest that climate change wouldn't make el nino stronger.  The quote isn't even about that.

The idea is not that warming affects el nino.  The idea is that warming melts ice, changes ocean temperatures and sets off a series of events that changes climate around the world.  Global climate change.  Not everywhere gets warmer, many places actually get cooler.

The idea is that global climate change leads to an increase in extreme el nino events.  That could mean stronger, weaker, longer, or shorter.  There is consensus that it WILL affect ENSO but the reason there isn't a consensus on HOW it will affect it is because ENSO is complex and affected by so many variables.  This is generally the problem with modeling climate change in general.  I'm an atmospheric scientist and only wanted to keep this out of the weeds for your sake.
https://www.climate.gov/news-features/blogs/enso/enso-climate-change-headache
Really good article with a great analogy.

You missed my main point while in the weeds...


....
.....

Maybe you were making assertions that sounded like they were about all the immigration from Honduras, while citing numbers for the one program that only represents 4% of it?

Is there ANYTHING TRUE IN ANYTHING YOU SAY?
....
The 4% number is the only one important because that is the only program Hondurans in the caravans have access to from Honduras.   They don't have the education or special skills to get a job in the US ahead of time.

You are once more misrepresenting the actual facts very substantially.

Many, many other Hondurans did emigrate as family members of US citizens and through the other mechanisms. You misrepresented the facts by leaving that out.

Some did not qualify or were too lazy to try. They noticed that Soros et.al. was organizing a giant publicity stunt to crash the US border and decided to get in on it. The newspaper adds for the Caravan said they'd get free food and cash. So they headed north.

It is certain we don't want them. We definitely don't want the 500 criminals in that group. But you do. You've kept quiet about those criminals, haven't you?
[/quote]
I left those out because they aren't relevant to people who don't have sponsors in the US; family or work.   I don't believe in conspiracy theories and don't usually entertain them, but if Soros did that to press the issue, bring attention and put pressure on the government to reform the system, then great.  That should be a great thing for everyone who doesn't want illegal immigration by exposing a system that encourages it.   People will always take the path of least resistance. Why not make that the legal path?

Why should risking your freedom, safety, health, everything crossing illegally be the easier option?
legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386
November 20, 2018, 04:40:35 PM
#32
I'm baffled by those who may support forward thinking initiatives such as Bitcoin and yet cheer Trump and his wall...

So I need a passport to go to Mexico but Mexicans don't need a passport to come to the US?

It's not a passport policy I'm questioning, but rather why those people who would support a forward thinking, global, free, decentralized project like Bitcoin would ever yell America First or support Trump's wall. It's just completely against everything crypto currency stands for from where I'm standing; hence it baffled me a tad bit. That's all Smiley.
Good question.

You see, Bitcoin isn't for total free trade and movement. It's a very strict rule set, for example, protocols...

Bitcoin does not allow double spending, eg, stealing. Border walls prevent criminals, hence prevent, stealing.

The blockchain preserves the unique identity of transactions, and their history. The border wall forces people to show their unique identity and their history, including what they may want to conceal, such as criminal history, or communicable diseases. A person might be refused entry at the border, just as miners might refuse an illegitimate transaction.

Except for the rule set being applied by a government instead of peer to peer, the border wall implements a similar set of restrictions that allows freedom of movement, instead of restricting it.

Side note, I would much prefer a decentralized identity verification process through blockchain than national ID.
newbie
Activity: 12
Merit: 0
November 20, 2018, 04:16:11 PM
#31
I'm baffled by those who may support forward thinking initiatives such as Bitcoin and yet cheer Trump and his wall...

So I need a passport to go to Mexico but Mexicans don't need a passport to come to the US?

It's not a passport policy I'm questioning, but rather why those people who would support a forward thinking, global, free, decentralized project like Bitcoin would ever yell America First or support Trump's wall. It's just completely against everything crypto currency stands for from where I'm standing; hence it baffled me a tad bit. That's all Smiley.
legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386
November 20, 2018, 03:12:04 PM
#31
....
Quote
Let's see what the Washington Post has to say about your claims.

Last year, 27,629 Venezuelans petitioned U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services for asylum, an 88 percent increase from 2016 and up from 2,181 in 2014. So far this year, the number of Venezuelans who have applied — nearly all of them in Miami — is almost three times as great as any other nationality, according to the latest USCIS asylum data.

Unlike the Central Americans who wade illegally across the Rio Grande and turn themselves in to U.S. border guards, the Venezuelans typically land at the Miami airport with tourist and business visas.

Wait, that's just Venezuelans....and there's a lot more to Central America than that....

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/even-as-trump-tightens-asylum-rules-thousands-of-venezuelans-find-a-warm-welcome-in-miami/2018/05/15/5e747fec-52cf-11e8-a551-5b648abe29ef_story.html?utm_term=.d81fe6e8e71c

Maybe you were making assertions that sounded like they were about all the immigration from Honduras, while citing numbers for the one program that only represents 4% of it?

Is there ANYTHING TRUE IN ANYTHING YOU SAY?
....
The 4% number is the only one important because that is the only program Hondurans in the caravans have access to from Honduras.   They don't have the education or special skills to get a job in the US ahead of time.

I believe you are yet one more time misrepresenting the actual facts very substantially.

But assume that you are correct. Many, many other Hondurans did emigrate as family members of US citizens and through the other mechanisms. Some did not qualify. They noticed that Soros et.al. was organizing a giant publicity stunt to crash the US border and decided to get in on it. The newspaper adds for the Caravan said they'd get free food and cash. So this thing got started and they headed north.

It certainly is possible we don't want them. We definitely don't want the 500 criminals in that group. But you do. You've kept quiet about them, haven't you?
legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386
November 20, 2018, 03:01:51 PM
#30


This is not a document that says what you claim. Not at all.

If you actually want to claim climate change then substantiate it. Show a statistically significant variation from the long term norm, separated from any regional weather patterns, and from 60-80 year ocean cyclic variations. Your link does not do that, in fact it does not prove any claim. It only makes an assertion, which you repeated blindly.

Let's go to the opinion of Dr. Gavin Schmidt, one of the most rabid warmer types around. Here is what he says about El Nino assuming more intense "climate change".

....climate models differ in their assessment of future El Niño events. Some suggest the ENSO cycle will become more intense, others say it will weaken, and some find there will be little change. According to Schmidt, “There is a very large variation in ENSO statistics (frequency/magnitude) over time, and so detecting a shift due to climate change is very challenging. Models as a whole are all over the shop, and so it doesn’t fill one with great confidence.”


Yet more lying/making things up.
Finding a source that disagrees with mine (and the consensus) doesn't mean I "made stuff up".  

....
Yes, actually you did make stuff up. Because I'm using the consensus to refute you. You misrepresented "the consensus."

I quoted directly Gavin Schmidt, he's right at the core of the few people that write up and direct what the "consensus" believes. Here's another direct comment from Schmidt.

...Gavin Schmidt, director of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, estimated that El Niño accounted for 0.07˚C of the above average warming that occurred in 2015...

You claimed that climate change made the El Nino stronger. No, it didn't. And the El Nino contributed only seven hundredths of one degree to the weather pattern.

You don't even understand the subject. You have it exactly backwards.... You don't even know what the consensus of scientific opinion is on a subject, but you are quick to claim it's what supports your argument.

That's what we call making things up.

....
.....

Maybe you were making assertions that sounded like they were about all the immigration from Honduras, while citing numbers for the one program that only represents 4% of it?

Is there ANYTHING TRUE IN ANYTHING YOU SAY?
....
The 4% number is the only one important because that is the only program Hondurans in the caravans have access to from Honduras.   They don't have the education or special skills to get a job in the US ahead of time.
[/quote]

You are once more misrepresenting the actual facts very substantially.

Many, many other Hondurans did emigrate as family members of US citizens and through the other mechanisms. You misrepresented the facts by leaving that out.

Some did not qualify or were too lazy to try. They noticed that Soros et.al. was organizing a giant publicity stunt to crash the US border and decided to get in on it. The newspaper adds for the Caravan said they'd get free food and cash. So they headed north.

It is certain we don't want them. We definitely don't want the 500 criminals in that group. But you do. You've kept quiet about those criminals, haven't you?
full member
Activity: 952
Merit: 175
@cryptocommies
November 20, 2018, 01:45:05 PM
#29


This is not a document that says what you claim. Not at all.

If you actually want to claim climate change then substantiate it. Show a statistically significant variation from the long term norm, separated from any regional weather patterns, and from 60-80 year ocean cyclic variations. Your link does not do that, in fact it does not prove any claim. It only makes an assertion, which you repeated blindly.

Let's go to the opinion of Dr. Gavin Schmidt, one of the most rabid warmer types around. Here is what he says about El Nino assuming more intense "climate change".

....climate models differ in their assessment of future El Niño events. Some suggest the ENSO cycle will become more intense, others say it will weaken, and some find there will be little change. According to Schmidt, “There is a very large variation in ENSO statistics (frequency/magnitude) over time, and so detecting a shift due to climate change is very challenging. Models as a whole are all over the shop, and so it doesn’t fill one with great confidence.”


Yet more lying/making things up.
Finding a source that disagrees with mine (and the consensus) doesn't mean I "made stuff up".  This actually sheds some light on why so many deniers think scientists are lying. Science, especially climate science, doesn't operate by "proving" things.  Thats the reason why it has so much utility.  Science is about forming theories based on what the body of evidence points towards. 

You have it backwards with what you are telling me to do.  To come up with a claim and then go cherrypicking for data that can "prove" that claim.  Thats pseudoscience.

You are also getting too caught in the weeds.   Regardless of whether or not this is caused by climate change, these people are leaving, climate was a factor, and climate science suggests there will be many more situations like this in the near future due to climate change. 



Quote
Let's see what the Washington Post has to say about your claims.

Last year, 27,629 Venezuelans petitioned U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services for asylum, an 88 percent increase from 2016 and up from 2,181 in 2014. So far this year, the number of Venezuelans who have applied — nearly all of them in Miami — is almost three times as great as any other nationality, according to the latest USCIS asylum data.

Unlike the Central Americans who wade illegally across the Rio Grande and turn themselves in to U.S. border guards, the Venezuelans typically land at the Miami airport with tourist and business visas.

Wait, that's just Venezuelans....and there's a lot more to Central America than that....

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/even-as-trump-tightens-asylum-rules-thousands-of-venezuelans-find-a-warm-welcome-in-miami/2018/05/15/5e747fec-52cf-11e8-a551-5b648abe29ef_story.html?utm_term=.d81fe6e8e71c

Maybe you were making assertions that sounded like they were about all the immigration from Honduras, while citing numbers for the one program that only represents 4% of it?

Is there ANYTHING TRUE IN ANYTHING YOU SAY?

You are getting off-topic by bringing venezuela into this.  Its a different situation that isn't completely relevant to this thread. 
1. Venezuela has a lot more wealthy, educated people who can get jobs in the us
2. Venezuelans are being accepted as political assylum seekers because of socialism in venezuela
3. Venezuelans can afford to get tourist visas and fly to miami

If it was that easy, do you really think the Hondurans would prefer to walk thousands of miles just to break the law?  Why do you think they are going through so much trouble?

The 4% number is the only one important because that is the only program Hondurans in the caravans have access to from Honduras.   They don't have the education or special skills to get a job in the US ahead of time.
legendary
Activity: 2926
Merit: 1386
November 19, 2018, 11:38:18 PM
#28
More lying. It just happens you cannot fool me with this talk because I know a bit about El Nino and those weather patterns. Deal with it; it is a normal weather pattern and a normal drought. You can't just lie your way around the issue. Please stop making things up.
I have no reason to make stuff up.  You can know about normal el nino and it can be exacerbated by climate change. Both can be true. Take a look at this fact sheet that summarizes climate change impacts for honduras
Quote
• Increased frequency and intensity of El Niño/La
Niña cycles.
That is listed under changes they have seen since 1960
https://www.climatelinks.org/sites/default/files/asset/document/2017_USAID%20ATLAS_Climate%20Change%20Risk%20Profile_Honduras.pdf


This is not a document that says what you claim. Not at all.

If you actually want to claim climate change then substantiate it. Show a statistically significant variation from the long term norm, separated from any regional weather patterns, and from 60-80 year ocean cyclic variations. Your link does not do that, in fact it does not prove any claim. It only makes an assertion, which you repeated blindly.

Let's go to the opinion of Dr. Gavin Schmidt, one of the most rabid warmer types around. Here is what he says about El Nino assuming more intense "climate change".

....climate models differ in their assessment of future El Niño events. Some suggest the ENSO cycle will become more intense, others say it will weaken, and some find there will be little change. According to Schmidt, “There is a very large variation in ENSO statistics (frequency/magnitude) over time, and so detecting a shift due to climate change is very challenging. Models as a whole are all over the shop, and so it doesn’t fill one with great confidence.”


Yet more lying/making things up.

....
There is no point in submitting an application when all that does it make it so you can't come.....The FY2018 allocation for Latin America and the Caribbean is 1,500. FY2017 admissions totaled 1,688. ...
.....
Ok so notice my quote came from FY2018 and FY2017 and your stats came from 2016, before Trump was president....

Let's see what the Washington Post has to say about your claims.

Last year, 27,629 Venezuelans petitioned U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services for asylum, an 88 percent increase from 2016 and up from 2,181 in 2014. So far this year, the number of Venezuelans who have applied — nearly all of them in Miami — is almost three times as great as any other nationality, according to the latest USCIS asylum data.

Unlike the Central Americans who wade illegally across the Rio Grande and turn themselves in to U.S. border guards, the Venezuelans typically land at the Miami airport with tourist and business visas.

Wait, that's just Venezuelans....and there's a lot more to Central America than that....

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/even-as-trump-tightens-asylum-rules-thousands-of-venezuelans-find-a-warm-welcome-in-miami/2018/05/15/5e747fec-52cf-11e8-a551-5b648abe29ef_story.html?utm_term=.d81fe6e8e71c

Maybe you were making assertions that sounded like they were about all the immigration from Honduras, while citing numbers for the one program that only represents 4% of it?

Is there ANYTHING TRUE IN ANYTHING YOU SAY?
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 1
November 19, 2018, 08:26:38 PM
#27
People say Trumps wall is wrong   we even have the EU saying we don't build walls and Trump is wrong for wanting to do this WHY?..

Now before you answer  i would like you to consider what you are saying..

Now we in the UK want to leave the EU and because we VOTED in a democratic vote to leave the EU want to build a wall a boarder Funny though considering they hate trump building a wall..

And this is the HYPOCRITES  in the EU we deal with..And this is another reason why i want out..

They hate Trumps wall because well the USA is it's own country so have every right to a boarder BUT the EU want it's boarders to protect their lot ..

So why do they want a boarder through Ireland Undecided..I thought they hate walls Kiss  Oh only if it doesn't upset their money pies..

BUT USA   you are bad for wanting a boarder just like they want in IRELAND..

The UK wanted all the benefits of staying in the EU without sharing the burden with the member countries, so the reaction of the EU is quite understandable. But I don't get why people want to nuild walls in places which were created free of access. After all, if a disaster was to occur on a global scale, especially in developed countries, they will retract their arguments about any wall because their survival would be in jeopardy. Except, of course, if they finally find a way to achieve transhumanism.
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