I believe Daesh surely wants open borders so we should do the opposite. At the same time, muslims should be treated reasonably well, tough. So they dont needlessly radicalize. These two things are not in conflict.
But anyway, do you have any other argument rather than "thats what Daesh wants so we dont do it"? Daesh is a crazy apocalyptic cult, letting what Daesh wants define your policy is stupid. Rather you should define it rationally based on what you want. And thats what I am doing.
Scroll up, read posts. You're quick to throw accusations about ignorance but apparently don't even understand the gap between Daesh theology, the motives of their foreign recruits and operatives, and the motives of their ground-level fighters. You also think Daesh wants open borders, when the stated goal of Daesh is to drive a wedge between moderate Muslims and the West!
Indeed,
letting Daesh define your policy is stupid.
The idea that immigrants are a menace and a security risk is a dogwhistle used by the right. Terrorists can be tracked and stopped by law enforcement: this is and always has been true.
You are unable to rationally articulate either the basis or the goals of your argument:
even within your own last post you are utterly incoherent! You say, "Daesh wants one thing, so we should do the opposite." Then you say, "but do you have an argument beyond that's what Daesh wants, so we shouldn't do it?" This is doublethink.
Let's go back here:
Yeah, right..
Do that and you may as well get used to experiencing regular bloody attacks every year. As the new normal.
It is literally the very opposite of what should be done.
Sorry to say it bluntly, but you are not just uninformed or somewhat mistaken about this issue, you go out of your way to be as wrong as possible about it. Its like watching an expert at being wrong display his art for all to see.
But I know we will probably never agree about it, so further discussion seems pointless..
You go from 'we should do this to prevent regular bloody attacks' to 'well, we can't prevent every attack', to 'spatial separation is the key', to 'well, muslims should be treated well, so they don't needlessly radicalize.'
Which is it? Where are you? The
spatial separation argument is foolhardy: the West's policy is not spatially separated from the Middle East, and even if they are not here,
we are there. Even if everything we had in the Middle East vanished tomorrow, the effects of our actions would linger in economy, in structure, in memory.
Spatial separation is impossible. The world is too small.