Beryllin wrote:
As I have stated, people should have a choice. By coming to the U.S., non-citizens made a choice.
1) Why should people have a choice?
2) What prevents U.S. citizens from exercising the same choice to leave this country that others did to come here?
Quote:
But, finally, we have something to work with. You finally admit that people whom you want to disenfranchise actually do have a stake in the government, just not as large a stake as business or property owners et al. So you are arguing degree. Interesting. Suppose the day comes when the man who owns a business decides he has a larger stake in the government because he does 2 million dollars business a year, and joe blow down the road does 50 thousand a year. Or the man who owns a 1,000 acre cattle ranch decides he has a larger stake in the government than his neighbor who owns 3 acres and a house. You gonna argue that the small business owner should be disenfranchised because he has a smaller stake in the government? That's what you are arguing now, after all, the only difference is degree.
Well, duh. You're just now noticing this?
Obviously it's about degree. A person with a buisness has a stake in 2 different ways: They have to obey the laws, and they have a buisness. Same with owning property or being in the military.
The degree isn't how much money the person makes, how many square feet they own, or what rank they get to in the military. It's the fact that they have a risk in society beyond that of a person with none of these things.
So, the degree is only "risk over and above what everyone already has as a default". Why does the "stake" one has by virtue of having to obey laws deserve the franchise when some people have other stake over and above that? It takes no effort to be required to obey the law. You're required to obey the law simply by virtue of being part of any society, regardless of what that law might be. That's just a result of humans being social animals.