Angela Merkel told a sobbing girl she couldn’t save her from deportation. It was a lie. – Vox
Argentina has, as a matter of constitutional law, effectively open borders. There are no caps or quotas or lottery systems. You can move there legally if you have an employer or family member to sponsor you. That’s all you need. If you don’t have a sponsor, and make your way in illegally, you’re recognized as an “irregular migrant.” Discrimination against irregular migrants in health care or education is illegal, and deportation in noncriminal cases is exceptionally rare. Large-scale amnesties are the norm. Obviously Argentina is not nearly as rich as Germany or the US or the UK. But it’s considerably richer than three of its neighbors (Bolivia, Paraguay, and Brazil). And yet it doesn’t try hard to keep their residents out. It welcomes them — as it should. “One could have expected catastrophe—an uncontrollable flow of poorer immigrants streaming into the country coupled with angry public backlash,” Elizabeth Slater writes in the World Policy Journal. “That hasn’t happened.” Angela Merkel clearly expects catastrophe if she lets people like this weeping young Palestinian girl stay in Germany. That catastrophe is simply a myth; it wouldn’t happen. What would happen is that Germany’s economy would grow, its culture would grow richer, and that girl and more like her could see their lives improve immeasurably.
(tags: argentina immigration angela-merkel germany eu migrants deportation economics)