The situation at the Southern border is a problem, to be sure. But the word crisis more aptly applies to the challenges faced by the thousands of people now trying to make it into the United States. It is they who are in crisis. The vast majority have experienced the most difficult circumstances imaginable, have traveled here on harrowing journeys, and are now trying desperately to make to a place where they can simply live decent lives.     It will take time to reckon with this situation, in large part because of Congress’s ineptitude and inaction over the last two decades. Greater resources must be put in the service of creating legal, safe entry for the influx of immigrants now seeking asylum. But America must also recognize how our policies in Latin America over several decades - from sanctions to other destabilizing actions - have contributed to the economic and social hardships of millions of people throughout Latin America. This is a time of reckoning in America, in which every problem that confronts us now is challenging us to look in the mirror. Where has our country, with both domestic and international policies, created or at the very least helped to create the very conditions we now decry? As far as refugees are concerned, we are doing it again now. With our failure to ramp down fossil fuel extraction, we’re exacerbating a situation that could lead to a time when hundreds of millions climate refugees will be roaming the world in search of a place to live. It might well be true that we ain't seen nothing yet. This is not a time to close our hearts; it's time to open them. "You shall treat the stranger who sojourns with you as the native among you, and you shall love him as yourself, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt." - Leviticus 19:34. Just sayin'.

May 12, 2023 · 4:15 AM UTC

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Replying to @marwilliamson
Joe Biden doesn't care about poor people seeking asylum. A proper, effective system to house homeless Americans hasn't even happened
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Replying to @marwilliamson
Sweetie- your daily horoscope is getting too long
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Replying to @marwilliamson
This point of view points out one of our divides. One side see themselves as part of a community called humans, and others see themseleves as an individual trying to survive, provide and improve quality of life for themselves and their families. Not good, not bad, just is.
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Replying to @marwilliamson
Let’s start off by being honest & stop calling them “asylum-seekers”. Wanting a better life is all well & good and that’s the reason people migrate to other countries but we have a process and they don’t get to cut to the front of the line under the guise of asylum. It’s a lie.
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Replying to @marwilliamson
What a long way to say absolutely nothing
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Replying to @marwilliamson
Haven’t they had 3.5 years to get ready for this? Now they gonna cry? We have 50states, plenty of room
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Replying to @marwilliamson
Right now there are millions of American citizens who have no future, or a grim one at best. I feel for these immigrants too, but the reason they are coming is a foreign policy issue contrived in D.C., not a domestic one to be dealt with by normal citizens.
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Replying to @marwilliamson
The justifications for asylum used to be documented racial, religious, or political persecution; now, they include’victim of organized crime/criminal gangs’ which includes nearly every human on earth. They have made a mockery of asylum status, as all these economic migrants know.
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Replying to @marwilliamson
Bad take. Very very bad take
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