Liberal or Conservative, you must admit that there are problems with our two-party system that were forewarned by our founding father

Showing posts with label us. Show all posts
Showing posts with label us. Show all posts

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Meet the new war, same as the old war


Or should that be 'meet the new war, same as the cold war', for once again the Russian Bear is blustering about Eastern Europe. In the truth is stranger than fiction category, the United States has taken a hard line stance against Russian aggression along with it's new found allies, and former Warsaw Pact countries, Poland, Ukraine, The Czech Republic and the Baltic States. The United Kingdom, already annoyed with Russia over the poisoning of Andrei Litvinenko, is rather edgy. While the rest of Europe, with strange dark spots on the crotch of their pants, runs to and fro, kissing the Bear's 'Gas'... afraid of the Russians cutting off their supply.

It seems our 'western' European allies are back in their thirties appeasement mode, while our 'eastern' European allies all too well know the price of freedom. Meanwhile we get to watch pretty girls swimming and doing gymnastics on the majority of our media outlets. One can only wonder what madness is this?

The West missed, or intentionally let slip, many opportunities to bring Russia into the fold, payback for years of transgressions real and imagined. As the CS monitor put it "The sky grows dark with chickens coming home to roost". Don't get me wrong, Russia must be told clearly, and point blank that the sovereignty of it's neighbors must be respected. Now more then ever, the West must stand united, unless we want to return to the days of yore. We had a more democratic Russia not so long ago, a Russia working to transform itself into a modern western industrial society and suffering severe economic consequences as a result while we stood by gleefully smirking with our we won, you lost attitude.

Today we are stuck with a Russia moving down an authoritarian path, restricting free speech and the media. Yet like Germany in the 1930's it is a Russia, which due to it's hydrocarbon wealth appears to its people to be prospering as a result of Putin's power grab. He, and his little foray into Georgia has the widespread support of the Russian people. No one likes to be shamed and laughed at, and following the collapse of the Soviet Union, we, the West, treated Russia like a joke. Now, we pay the consequences.

It is the West's difficult path now to show Russia that this kind of behavior is intolerable, yet we must at the same time accord them the respect they deserve. NATO's expansion to the east, while undoubtedly the right thing to do, is unarguably threatening to the Russian state, the Russians, after their treatment at the end of the cold war have no reason to trust us. We have, in this current difficulty, an opportunity to move in a different direction. The question that remains is what direction will that be? Another five decade standoff? Or an honestly different tact.

South Ossetia is indisputably part of the nation of Georgia, the Russian 'peacekeepers' indisputably sided with the separatists. Russia cannot act as an honest broker with the Georgians, nor can the Georgians be trusted to act civilly with the Ossetians. A joint Russian-NATO effort, odd as it may sound, might do wonders. The Russians don't trust the Georgians, the West doesn't trust the Ossetians... the question is can the Russians and NATO put aside their posturing and work together for the common good. No one, I would suspect, wants a return to the cold war.

I spent the first nine years of my military career, prior to the collapse of the Berlin wall, working missile warning radars, keeping an eye on the Russian bear. Take it from an old cold warrior, there has got to be a better way.

~Finntann~

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Immigration

In researching this subject I have discovered that dependent upon the source, numbers and estimates vary wildly, generally dependent upon the source's point of view. So in the interest of neutrality I will simply rely upon the figures published by the Department of Homeland Security, numbers that are fairly close to those published by the Pew Hispanic Center.

In researching this subject a quote of Mark Twain's comes to mind:

Figures often beguile me, particularly when I have the arranging of them myself; in which case the remark attributed to Disraeli would often apply with justice and force: "There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and statistics.

Given no universally acceptable source, the DHS will have to do.

In 2007, according to the DHS 1,052,415 persons became legal permanent residents (LPR) of the United States, generally since 2000 the number of illegal residents arriving per year has been averaging around 1,380,000.

As of January 2006 the estimate of legal immigrants (LPRs) was 12.1 million

In 2006 roughly 33.7 million I-94 visitors were admitted (The I-94 form is required for entry into the United States for non-immigrants from all countries other than Canada and Mexico.) and an additional 141 million visitors (from Canada and Mexico) were admitted.

For figures on illegal immigration, go here:
http://www.dhs.gov/xlibrary/assets/statistics/publications/ill_pe_2006.pdf

In summary, 11.6 million unauthorized immigrants were living in the United States in 2006, of those, 6.6 million were from Mexico. The estimated margin of error, at a 90% confidence level, is plus or minus 150,000.

The unauthorized resident immigrant population is defined as all foreign-born non-citizens who are not legal residents. Unauthorized residents refer to foreign-born persons who entered the United States without inspection or were admitted temporarily and stayed past the date they were required to leave.

These people are coming from: Mexico 6,570,000, El Salvador 510,000, Guatemala 430,000, Philippines 280,000, Honduras 280,000, India 270,000, Korea 250,000, Brazil 210,000, China 190,000, Vietnam 160,000, Other Countries 2,410,000

And the top five locations they are living in are: California 2,830,000, Texas 1,640,000, Florida 980,000, Illinois 550,000, New York 540,00

Let us put these numbers into some perspective, the illegal immigrant population of the United States exceeds the populations of each of these countries:

Cuba, Greece, Chad, Portugal, Belgium, Czech Republic, Tunisia, Hungary, Dominican Republic,Rwanda, Belarus, Haiti, Bolivia, Guinea, Sweden, Benin, Somalia, Burundi, Azerbaijan, Austria, Serbia, Bulgaria, Switzerland, Israel, Honduras, El Salvador, Tajikistan, Togo, Papua New Guinea, Libya, Paraguay, Jordan, Sierra Leone, Laos

The number of illegal immigrants in the United States is more than double the population of any of these countries:

Nicaragua, Denmark, Slovakia, Kyrgyzstan, Finland, Turkmenistan, Eritrea, Norway, Singapore, Croatia, Costa Rica, Georgia, United Arab Emirates, Central African Republic, Ireland, New Zealand, Lebanon, Palestinian Territories, Bosnia and Herzegovina

The number of illegal immigrants in the United States is more than triple the population of any of these countries:

Moldova, Republic of the Congo, Liberia, Lithuania, Panama, Uruguay, Albania, Mauritania, Armenia

The number of illegal immigrants in the United States is more than four times the population of any of these countries:

Kuwait, Jamaica, Mongolia, Oman, Latvia, Kosovo, Namibia, Macedonia, Slovenia, Lesotho, Botswana, Gambia, Guinnea-Bissau, Estonia, Trinidad and Tobago, Gabon, Mauritius, East Timor, Swaziland

There are a further 80 countries on this list which is comprised of sovereign states and self-governing dependencies.

If you add the legal and illegal immigrant residents of the United States, you can add the following countries to the list:

Ghana, Taiwan, Yemen, Romania, Mozambique, Australia, Syria, Madagascar, Sri Lanka, Cote d'Ivoire, Cameroon, Angola, Chile, Netherlands, Kazakhstan, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Niger, Malawi, Guatemala, Zimbabwe, Ecuador, Senegal, Mali, Zambia

The complete list of sovereign states and self-governing dependencies contains 222 countries. Of those countries 175 have lower populations than the number of legal and illegal immigrants in the US.

Considering just illegal immigrants, 149 countries have a lower population.

Consider that fact... we could absorb the entire population of any of those countries and the number would be less than the number of illegals we currently have.

The figures for population for sovereign states and self-governing dependencies comes from here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_population

Some of you may have a problem with the term illegal immigrant, may I point out that the definition of illegal is 'forbidden by law or statute' and/or 'contrary to or forbidden official rules, regulations, etc.' The term is not used to describe their motives or behavior outside of their immigration status... they are in this country contrary to law or statute, they did not follow the rules to get here.

Just a small dose of perspective

~Finntann~