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I'm conflicted with anyone that ignores our national securityWith regards to taking in Syrian refugees. There are so many good points made by both sides. Anyone else conflicted?
How many women and children you see in this migration?
What does ignore mean to you?I'm conflicted with anyone that ignores our national security
5 ISIS members just caught trying to come into the country through mexico with fake Syrian passports. 8 ISIS member caught trying to come in through Turkey into Europe posing as Syrian refugees. When ISIS themselves, whom have done everything they advertise they say they will do, proclaim that they will infiltrate the Western World as Syrian Refugees.What does ignore mean to you?
So they were caught? In other words, security wasn't ignored?5 ISIS members just caught trying to come into the country through mexico with fake Syrian passports. 8 ISIS member caught trying to come in through Turkey into Europe posing as Syrian refugees. When ISIS themselves, whom have done everything they advertise they say they will do, proclaim that they will infiltrate the Western World as Syrian Refugees.
No, it proves there is an actual threat to our national security. Out of 10k refugees, even if there are 10-20 ISIS members that slip through, innocent blood will be on the hands of the government that allows them in. If I poison 10 gum balls, where even one would kill you, out of 10k, would you grab a handful and eat them?So they were caught? In other words, security wasn't ignored?
I guess my point is that security is not being ignored. You may disagree with some/many/all of the security policies, but to say that security is being ignored is misleading. As for the gumballs, what would be your solution. Send all the gumballs and the poisonous ones too to another country so that maybe they could kill other people? Destroy all the gumballs? Maybe put the gumballs in camps so they can be controlled? What if we are all gumballs? Maybe we should just all kill ourselves to get rid of the few bad gumballs? I don't have any answers to the situation. All I am going to do is live my life without fear, because otherwise the poisonous gumballs have won.No, it proves there is an actual threat to our national security. Out of 10k refugees, even if there are 10-20 ISIS members that slip through, innocent blood will be on the hands of the government that allows them in. If I poison 10 gum balls, where even one would kill you, out of 10k, would you grab a handful and eat them?
I don't live in fear, but that's partially because I live in rural Washington state. One of my best friends (I was his best man) lives in DC with his 5 month old daughter.I am just glad that I don't have to make these decisions. Washington is apparently accepting Syrian refugees, but I don't live in fear because of it.
I don't base my opinions on bluster so those memes mean nothing. And fear doesn't have much to do with it, it's that I can't make an honest assessment on if this policy will bring actual danger and possibly terrorism to the United States. I have listened to experts with both opinions and I simply don't have the actual information needed to correctly assess the situation. I want to help the children, women, tortured victims if Isis but if the cost is the lives of citizens then the answer has to be to find another way to assist.
I don't think most ignor it, they just listen and only apply credibly to the experts that say the threat is only imagined and that these discarded souls are who we need to attend to in order to actually start winning back the hearts and minds of the Muslim community in order to eventually have a true victory.I'm conflicted with anyone that ignores our national security
I guess my point is that security is not being ignored. You may disagree with some/many/all of the security policies, but to say that security is being ignored is misleading. As for the gumballs, what would be your solution. Send all the gumballs and the poisonous ones too to another country so that maybe they could kill other people? Destroy all the gumballs? Maybe put the gumballs in camps so they can be controlled? What if we are all gumballs? Maybe we should just all kill ourselves to get rid of the few bad gumballs? I don't have any answers to the situation. All I am going to do is live my life without fear, because otherwise the poisonous gumballs have won.
Hah! I knew you were anti-gumball!!!No, the gum balls wouldn't win if our fucking president would unite the world, instead of pushing his world view agenda. There is an opportunity here to protect Syrians by securing an area with all nations support. It actually protects them faster because the "vetting process" takes 2 years regardless. Secure a place and allow the migration there and they can be safe immediately. And with military support, they can organically weed out the infiltration. by policing the area.

Sure. Feeling conflicted is normal for most sane people when faced with difficult and complicated circumstances.With regards to taking in Syrian refugees. There are so many good points made by both sides. Anyone else conflicted?
I'm anti Bryant Gumball...Hah! I knew you were anti-gumball!!!![]()
It's a beautiful sentiment but I'm not sure all actions against accepting refugees are based in fear, they may simply be pragmatic. I have no fear for myself because of where I live, but I still don't want to put other Americans at risk. I also don't want to begin a cascade in America of terrorism kicked off by one or two refugees whose disdain for west begins a plight of "bedroom jihadism" like now exists in Brussels. communities form for good and bad and it only takes one or two extremist youths to corrupt their friends and eventually create a cell."[...]We will not walk in fear, one of another. We will not be driven by fear into an age of unreason, if we dig deep in our history and our doctrine, and remember that we are not descended from fearful men — not from men who feared to write, to speak, to associate and to defend causes that were, for the moment, unpopular." - Edward R. Murrow
One suicide bomber can kill a lot of people. It's not living in fear. It's being smart.It's a beautiful sentiment but I'm not sure all actions against accepting refugees are based in fear, they may simply be pragmatic. I have no fear for myself because of where I live, but I still don't want to put other Americans at risk. I also don't want to begin a cascade in America of terrorism kicked off by one or two refugees whose disdain for west begins a plight of "bedroom jihadism" like now exists in Brussels. communities form for good and bad and it only takes one or two extremist youths to corrupt their friends and eventually create a cell.
On the other hand, loving ones neighbor and bringing them into your society may be what's needed long term to help convince the larger Muslim community that we are worth fighting with and not against. That we protect the innocent and that is a better cause than jihadism.One suicide bomber can kill a lot of people. It's not living in fear. It's being smart.
The terrorists who carried out the Paris attacks were homegrown.It's a beautiful sentiment but I'm not sure all actions against accepting refugees are based in fear, they may simply be pragmatic. I have no fear for myself because of where I live, but I still don't want to put other Americans at risk. I also don't want to begin a cascade in America of terrorism kicked off by one or two refugees whose disdain for west begins a plight of "bedroom jihadism" like now exists in Brussels. communities form for good and bad and it only takes one or two extremist youths to corrupt their friends and eventually create a cell.
That is, of course, the muslims in this country are actually sympathetic to core american values.On the other hand, loving ones neighbor and bringing them into your society may be what's needed long term to help convince the larger Muslim community that we are worth fighting with and not against. That we protect the innocent and that is a better cause than jihadism.
But many of them were shown to have links to that community in Brussels. And it's those tight communities that can be radicalized. Take a look at the brothers who pulled off the Boston Bombing. They were refugees as little kids who became radicalized mostly here. Bringing over the Syrian refugees includes a risk that even if we are able to perfectly screen candidates that those refugees down the road will be radicalized. Remember, many of them will continue to identify more with people from their homeland than the Americans that bring them in.The terrorists who carried out the Paris attacks were homegrown.
They might. It could work either way. They could be pissed we didn't help, or someone we help could plant a seed. I really don't know.Now I'm not saying that you can screen all bad actors, but I wonder if our current Muslim population wouldn't be even more prone to to radicalization with wanton disregard for Syrian lives.
It was already cracked, we just knocked it over. And history has shown that continuing to medal and try and correct or fix issues we created often continues to cause more problems. I'm not sure which this would actually fall into. If we try and fix things then we are continuing to interfere and that is where a lot of disdain also comes from.And let's face it, ISIS is a problem we helped create with our bumbling around in Iraq for the past decade+. I've always been a "you break it, you buy it" kind of guy.
No, it proves there is an actual threat to our national security. Out of 10k refugees, even if there are 10-20 ISIS members that slip through, innocent blood will be on the hands of the government that allows them in. If I poison 10 gum balls, where even one would kill you, out of 10k, would you grab a handful and eat them?
With regards to taking in Syrian refugees. There are so many good points made by both sides. Anyone else conflicted?
I don't live in fear, but that's partially because I live in rural Washington state
