Actually we can’t do what we like with this country. We inherited it from our parents and grandparents and we have a duty to hand it on to our children and grandchildren, preferably improved and certainly undamaged.
It is one of the heaviest responsibilities we will ever have. We cannot just give it away to complete strangers on an impulse because it makes us feel good about ourselves.
Every one of the posturing notables simpering ‘refugees welcome’ should be asked if he or she will take a refugee family into his or her home for an indefinite period, and pay for their food, medical treatment and education.
If so, they mean it. If not, they are merely demanding that others pay and make room so that they can experience a self-righteous glow. No doubt the same people are also sentimental enthusiasts for the ‘living wage’, and ‘social housing’, when in fact open borders are steadily pushing wages down and housing costs up.
As William Blake rightly said: ‘He who would do good to another must do it in minute particulars. General good is the plea of the scoundrel, hypocrite and flatterer.’
...So now, on the basis of an emotional spasm, dressed up as civilisation and generosity, are we going to say that we abandon this legacy and decline our obligation to pass it on, like the enfeebled, wastrel heirs of an ancient inheritance letting the great house and the estate go to ruin?
Peter Hitchens on immigration
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Peter Hitchens on immigration
Post #1Though of course his comments do not apply merely to the UK:
The response to the refugee crisis has been troubling, exposing... just how impoverished our moral and political discourse actually is. For the difficult tasks of patient deliberation and discriminating political wisdom, a cult of sentimental humanitarianism--Neoliberalism's good cop to its bad cop of foreign military interventionism--substitutes the self-congratulatory ease of kneejerk emotional judgments, assuming that the 'right'...is immediately apparent from some instinctive apprehension of the 'good'. -AR
Re: Peter Hitchens on immigration
Post #31Because the policy is to keep spending, and with an increasing number of people coming in every year it means an escalating spending in the billions per year. So it's not a merely a matter of me 'thinking it's spending too much', but that the policy is genuinely unsustainable. In addition, I have no 'want' either way.Bust Nak wrote:And how is this not an example of you thinking the Germany government is spending too much on the refugees, you don't want it to spend so much?Paprika wrote: The current spending policy of Germany that we've already touched on. The official estimate is 8 billion additional euros these year alone, and the number of immigrants is only going to rise.
Quite, but almost all are chosen from the House of Commons, are they not?This isn't the case with the UK cabinet, which is the system I am familiar with. The members don't have to be MPs.Quite, but those that are appointed have been voted in as MPs and potential appointees, which is unlike the EU's executive body.
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Re: Peter Hitchens on immigration
Post #32Even if I grant you that it is unsustainable, how exactly does that mean it's not another case of you not liking how much Germany intend to spend in the years to spend. You say you have no want, but clearly you disapprove of the German government policy.Paprika wrote: Because the policy is to keep spending, and with an increasing number of people coming in every year it means an escalating spending in the billions per year. So it's not a merely a matter of me 'thinking it's spending too much', but that the policy is genuinely unsustainable. In addition, I have no 'want' either way.
Yes.Quite, but almost all are chosen from the House of Commons, are they not?
Re: Peter Hitchens on immigration
Post #33My like or dislike has nothing to do with the plain fact that it is unsustainable.Bust Nak wrote:Even if I grant you that it is unsustainable, how exactly does that mean it's not another case of you not liking how much Germany intend to spend in the years to spend. You say you have no want, but clearly you disapprove of the German government policy.Paprika wrote: Because the policy is to keep spending, and with an increasing number of people coming in every year it means an escalating spending in the billions per year. So it's not a merely a matter of me 'thinking it's spending too much', but that the policy is genuinely unsustainable. In addition, I have no 'want' either way.
And if they were almost all chosen from the House of Lords instead, would it not make the system less democratic?Yes.Quite, but almost all are chosen from the House of Commons, are they not?
The response to the refugee crisis has been troubling, exposing... just how impoverished our moral and political discourse actually is. For the difficult tasks of patient deliberation and discriminating political wisdom, a cult of sentimental humanitarianism--Neoliberalism's good cop to its bad cop of foreign military interventionism--substitutes the self-congratulatory ease of kneejerk emotional judgments, assuming that the 'right'...is immediately apparent from some instinctive apprehension of the 'good'. -AR
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Re: Peter Hitchens on immigration
Post #34It does, when unsustainable means you disagreeing with them on what the practical limits ought to be.Paprika wrote: My like or dislike has nothing to do with the plain fact that it is unsustainable.
No, since it's we have no choice over the matter either way.And if they were almost all chosen from the House of Lords instead, would it not make the system less democratic?
Re: Peter Hitchens on immigration
Post #35No, it means that the funding is completely unsustainable because it will keep ballooning into the tens and hundreds of billions over time.
Given that the practical rule is to appoint almost all cabinet ministers from the House of Commons, to which ministers are elected, it follows that the people have some democratic control over who are eligible to be appointed. Under the EU there exists an executive body unelected, so being under the EU has led to a more antidemocratic state of affairs.No, since it's we have no choice over the matter either way.And if they were almost all chosen from the House of Lords instead, would it not make the system less democratic?
The response to the refugee crisis has been troubling, exposing... just how impoverished our moral and political discourse actually is. For the difficult tasks of patient deliberation and discriminating political wisdom, a cult of sentimental humanitarianism--Neoliberalism's good cop to its bad cop of foreign military interventionism--substitutes the self-congratulatory ease of kneejerk emotional judgments, assuming that the 'right'...is immediately apparent from some instinctive apprehension of the 'good'. -AR
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Re: Peter Hitchens on immigration
Post #36Lets assume that it would indeed ballooning into the hundreds of billions over time. How is this not an example of you disagreeing with the practical limits the German government ought to spend on refugees?Paprika wrote: No, it means that the funding is completely unsustainable because it will keep ballooning into the tens and hundreds of billions over time.
Which, as I stated above, is just the repercussion of a larger coalition. There is no difference between cabinet ministers and EU commissioners. At worse it's less democratic, not anti-democratic.Given that the practical rule is to appoint almost all cabinet ministers from the House of Commons, to which ministers are elected, it follows that the people have some democratic control over who are eligible to be appointed. Under the EU there exists an executive body unelected, so being under the EU has led to a more antidemocratic state of affairs.
Re: Peter Hitchens on immigration
Post #37Because the cost spent on the refugees will outweigh the output of the entire economy.Bust Nak wrote:Lets assume that it would indeed ballooning into the hundreds of billions over time. How is this not an example of you disagreeing with the practical limits the German government ought to spend on refugees?Paprika wrote: No, it means that the funding is completely unsustainable because it will keep ballooning into the tens and hundreds of billions over time.
Except that as has been pointed out multiple times, those in the executive body are not elected so that the difference is not that of vote dilution because of a larger voting pool but an entire branch of executive decision-makers over which there is little democratic oversight.Which, as I stated above, is just the repercussion of a larger coalition. There is no difference between cabinet ministers and EU commissioners.Given that the practical rule is to appoint almost all cabinet ministers from the House of Commons, to which ministers are elected, it follows that the people have some democratic control over who are eligible to be appointed. Under the EU there exists an executive body unelected, so being under the EU has led to a more antidemocratic state of affairs.
Less democratic is anti-democratic in this case, at least, because it shifts power more from the people to the bureaucrats and the political class.At worse it's less democratic, not anti-democratic.
The response to the refugee crisis has been troubling, exposing... just how impoverished our moral and political discourse actually is. For the difficult tasks of patient deliberation and discriminating political wisdom, a cult of sentimental humanitarianism--Neoliberalism's good cop to its bad cop of foreign military interventionism--substitutes the self-congratulatory ease of kneejerk emotional judgments, assuming that the 'right'...is immediately apparent from some instinctive apprehension of the 'good'. -AR
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Re: Peter Hitchens on immigration
Post #38Even if I take your hundreds of billion cost a year on face value, the GDP of Germany is in the trillions. It is just an example of you not liking how Germany spends its money.Paprika wrote: Because the cost spent on the refugees will outweigh the output of the entire economy.
I am not just talking about vote dilution. It's simply impractical for sitting MPs to working from Brussels. Like I said simple repercussion of a larger coalition.Except that as has been pointed out multiple times, those in the executive body are not elected so that the difference is not that of vote dilution because of a larger voting pool but an entire branch of executive decision-makers over which there is little democratic oversight.
How is that any different in principle than the House of Lords?Less democratic is anti-democratic in this case, at least, because it shifts power more from the people to the bureaucrats and the political class.
Re: Peter Hitchens on immigration
Post #39On the contrary, the GDP will drop not least because much of the output is spent on the basic needs of the immigrants and not anything productive.
Yet I can concede this detail and my point still stands: only a fraction of the GDP is available for such spending in immigrants and will be dwarfed by the amounts required.
Is this true impracticality, or you merely claiming that it is so?I am not just talking about vote dilution. It's simply impractical for sitting MPs to working from Brussels. Like I said simple repercussion of a larger coalition.
What part of aristocracy strikes you as not anti-democratic?How is that any different in principle than the House of Lords?Less democratic is anti-democratic in this case, at least, because it shifts power more from the people to the bureaucrats and the political class.
The response to the refugee crisis has been troubling, exposing... just how impoverished our moral and political discourse actually is. For the difficult tasks of patient deliberation and discriminating political wisdom, a cult of sentimental humanitarianism--Neoliberalism's good cop to its bad cop of foreign military interventionism--substitutes the self-congratulatory ease of kneejerk emotional judgments, assuming that the 'right'...is immediately apparent from some instinctive apprehension of the 'good'. -AR
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Re: Peter Hitchens on immigration
Post #40So you are saying as long as Germany spends that fraction of the GDP, instead of the amounts required, the government is actually heeding practical limits?Paprika wrote: On the contrary, the GDP will drop not least because much of the output is spent on the basic needs of the immigrants and not anything productive.
Yet I can concede this detail and my point still stands: only a fraction of the GDP is available for such spending in immigrants and will be dwarfed by the amounts required.
It's even impractical for non-London MPs to operate from London, let alone Brussels. Appointing a sitting MP would mean a by-election for his constituency.Is this true impracticality, or you merely claiming that it is so?
The part where there is a House of Commons to keep it in check perhaps? You know, much like the EU?What part of aristocracy strikes you as not anti-democratic?