Making the United States a gated community does not deal with the problem.
Recognizing immigrants are really economic refugees, fleeing deplorable conditions in their own country for a stable, safe, free country of opportunity, we must recognize the solutions cannot be at the border. The only way the migration of people from the South to the North will stop is when conditions improve there. Making the United States a gated community does not deal with the problem. So long as there is a pull to the North and a push from the South, people will find their way over, no matter how big, how long or how guarded a border fence is.
To truly address the issue, US foreign policy must focus on eliminating deprivation south of the border, rather than signing treaties that drive down the standard of living in Mexico. We must focus on people not profits in our foreign policy. Until we can do so our domestic focus should be how to either temporarily integrate them into society until conditions improve in their home country, or permanently integrate them as productive members of our nation.
The United States cannot take on the world's problems on its own. Other affluent countries need to extend a humanitarian arm to peoples fleeing oppressive economic circumstances as well. How many immigrants the United States should be willing to accept will ultimately be up to Congress.
The problem is a humanitarian crisis that extends well beyond the southern border. The focus must shift from the immigrants themselves and domestic policy to a broader view of why so many people flee, and how we can help alleviate conditions in Mexico and Central America to prevent the flow in the first place.
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