This & that
The Home Office now stopping people in the street on the basis of their race (& note also that they want to stop benefits/housing for failed asylum seekers with small kids, as well. So we're getting rid of them by starving their children, are we? Fantastic).
And a less depressing link:
the Underground turned upside-down (picked this up off someone else a couple of weeks ago).
Hunt Bill being discussed today. Thumbs crossed...
Interesting site showing current US voting polls - bit depressing atm, though.
I don't think I have any US readers who are currently overseas, or indeed any US readers at all, but just in case: register online for overseas/absentee ballot.
And a less depressing link:
the Underground turned upside-down (picked this up off someone else a couple of weeks ago).
Hunt Bill being discussed today. Thumbs crossed...
Interesting site showing current US voting polls - bit depressing atm, though.
I don't think I have any US readers who are currently overseas, or indeed any US readers at all, but just in case: register online for overseas/absentee ballot.
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There is nothing more frustrating for me than regularly being told that I am right-wing because I argue a socialist case against liberals. Nonetheless, I shall chance it again;
Immigration as a solution to poverty and instability in Africa is roughly equivalent to grammar schools as a solution to working-class educational underachievement. The successful individuals will probably benefit, the place they are going may benefit, but the place they are leaving will constantly worsen.
It is true, as you have both pointed out, that we send people back to places which are unpleasant. That's because asylum, specifically, is an individualist system. We don't accept, and I think it's impossible to create a system which works if you accept, that there is a collective right to seek asylum from a place which is unpleasant, it is about each individual's risk.
I guess if you could establish planned genocide, there'd be a collective right for people of the relevant race. But of course we can morally condemn Zimbabwe and then send people back there - for starters for there to be human rights abuses in a country, it must contain abusers as well as the abused, and probably many people in neither category.
The only long-term solution is to get solving the problems at their source. You are quite right to agree with Tony Blair about the plight of Africa, but we don't solve that by letting a lucky few get away from it. We solve it partly with money and material aid, and partly with direct intervention.
Unfortunately, the moment you start suggesting that the strong have a duty to intervene and protect the weak at anything other than an intra-country level, people who would support it start shouting dull slogans about neo-imperialism and the evil USA.
So, you end up at a ridiculous situation when, given clear and present evidence of an ongoing genocide in Africa, the most important thing on the Secretary-General of the UN's agenda for the day is arguing about the technical legality of a war which has already happened. No doubt as soon as people notice that Sudan has oil, they'll decide that we shouldn't get involved.
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I am determined not to let this degenerate into a flame war but your post is reasoned and interesting - wrong, but interesting :) - so I will respond in brief. I actually agree with you *in theory* that it is better to treat "the problem of Africa/Kosovo/China/wherever" at source rather than give a hand up to a few escapees. If and when this starts happening the question of what if any asylum should be provided by the UK may be worth revisiting but I am not holding my breath, and in the meantime I will continue to attempt to counter right wing media fuelled xenophobia and ill informed argument based on what the public seems to want with facts and contrary opinions no matter how unpopular they are.
And I dont think you have really engaged with the issue of sending people back to the atrocities you describe as "unpleasant" because "we cant afford it".
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When I referred to 'expensive' I was talking about the process of determining applications - expensive as in a waste of money if we ignore the outcome, which I rather thought at the time was what you were advocating, though you have since clarified that you weren't.
I'd just say that asylum and immigration are different systems, and if we want to change the immigration system, we should do so in an honest manner, not by letting people through the asylum system whose claims turn out not to be satisfactorily founded.
As for the immigration issue, I'd happily have a more liberal immigration regime with some of these countries, especially the ones with a history of, ahem, engagement with the British state.
At the same time, we are a wealthy and crowded island, a free-for-all would cause an influx. In terms of volume, I'd freely swap the more liberal policy globally for having a less liberal one than now for much of continental Europe.
Unfortunately, these are two things we can't do, because we've given our democratic control of both of them away, and is one of the reasons I don't think we benefit from membership of the European Union (I often discover that this makes me right wing too, right wing like Tony Benn, of course).
As for negative media stereotypes, I'm afraid I don't have time to sort out asylum seekers, I'm too busy trying to work out how to stop the Tories winning every local election round here by turning them into a referendum on Travellers.
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For me, if the government can lawfully remove someone it should do it, while preserving minimum standards of decency for those who have not yet been removed. Starving people out of the country is not an option. While the righting of economic inequality abroad is a desirable end, my view is that this will take a long time coming. In spite of Blair's aid agenda the loan servicng element of the south still outweighs any aid from the north, and everything so far implemented however radical is but a sticking plaster (not that some of the recent initiatives are entirely unwelcome).
In the meantime, I prefer to make sure that those within our shores are looked after while they are here.
My comments on xenophobia in the predominantly right wing press arise not because of my views on your own politics; rather they come from frustration at the spectre of Labour and Tories outbidding each other to seem tough on those who need protection. Bill Morris recently castigated Labour for overusing the term bogus asylum seeker (to the point that foreigner = asylum seeker = bogus became almost interchangeable). It's all slipping back again though.
If you remeber the single mother and workshy dole scrounger of 80's mythology, and compare it to the asylum seeker today, you may see what I mean.
A final thought; I recently read that according to Home Officde figures the net cost of immigration is a surplus to the economy of 2-4 £ billion(sorry, can't remember the exact figure). Food for thought, no?
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I felt I (or at least my views) were being labelled right-wing mostly when you said you wanted to discuss them further because I 'didn't seem like a knee-jerk racist'. Implication rather being that that was the logical explanation for my views (which have turned out to be very similar in outcome to yours, except that I think we should enforce our eventual decisions)...
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