I don't believe you don't know what exaggeration is.
I do know, what I don't know is why you would use it to mischaracterize the person you are talking to.
It is awfully transparent and does hurt instead of help the argument you are making.
Because it's better for everybody, the only way we can continue with this mass immigration is if we keep vast swathes of the world in perpetual misery, where they think sharing a dump with 20 people (I'm postman I see where they live) is a step up. I was against going into Libya and traitorfish accused me of racism "I guess brown people don't deserve liberty" he said. Well how they feeling about that liberty now? But hey at least we have that steady supply of immigrants to make you feel good and stoke the dying embers of our society.
You're just kicking it down the generations so at least it doesn't blow up in our faces. But if we stopped meddling and the majority of them stayed in their native lands they would work to improve their homelands. Sure we would have adjust because as they keep telling our economies rely on these hundreds of thousands of immigrants coming in, and if that's the case the system is going to need major changes because that can't and certainly won't continue forever all we're doing is delaying the inevitable.
Better for
everyone? Except foreigners I suppose. So not better for everyone. Again, why should I favor your well being over theirs only by virtue of the place you were born?
Also, maybe this is the place to drop the hypothetical and challenge your assertion that your situation is equal to that of a refugee for example. We are talking about people whose situation was so bad they decided it was worth crossing a desert, risking death, physical or sexual assault and forced labor, being separated from their family for a long time (maybe forever). Also, have you considered that they might be nativists themselves and would have preferred to stay in a place where language and culture and not completely alien to them?
I don't want to belabor this point too much, because I am admittedly better off than you and this thread is about checking your privilege after all. But I just as well cannot simply ignore the situation of those who are truly desperate. Let me add that I do not believe that your situation and that of immigrants are necessarily at odds, or that the problems with your situations cannot be addressed at the same time, or that immigration is necessarily even a problem in the long term.
(Discussing foreign intervention is getting really tangential. In fact it would surprise me to see TF write something like this but even then that was his post and not mine.)
How on earth can you deny it? Read that response where you trot out the buzzwords I might as well not have been there. It is what you were doing and I'm not going to tiptoe around just because you're a mod I can draw (or try to draw) whoever the hell I want into this.
Good, you are the only one who is constantly bringing up my moderator status. I would prefer if you'd ignore it until it becomes relevant to the thread. You will notice by the bold colorful letters.
As for the buzzwords, maybe they aren't to me? I'm being quite genuine right now.
Yes, I can get behind all of this.
(Just to clarify, my post was meant only as a continuation/elaboration on your post, not disagreement.)
Well it's the attitude behind the words that's really of importance of course. But if someone is being genuine with you and requesting you look inward in a way that doesn't suggest they want to spit at you or push you in front of trains then I'd argue that it's a request that's more likely to be honoured. But I think this was discussed to death in a fairly recent thread so never mind.
There's no denying that the phrase is often used in an incendiary way, but that is usually the case in conversations that were beyond the point of civil discourse anyway (and deliberate offense is still uncivil even in a polite tone). And even if it isn't, it is part of a controversial topic. I think it is worthwhile to separate the phrase and its purpose from the way it is often used.