blackshoe, on 2015-August-05, 15:59, said:
citation needed (and Trump's campaign announcement isn't sufficient)
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I think that if someone wants to come here, be productive, and join our society (as opposed to bringing along a microcosm of his or her own), then more power to him. If he wants to come here, commit crimes, live off the productivity of the rest of us, then he ought to be denied entry. If he lies about why he wants to come here (surprise, surprise!) then when he is found out, he should be deported — after making reparations (I don't mean jail time) for any harm he's caused others here.
The notion of reparations seems to underlie a lot of libertarian thinking about justice. One huge problem is that most criminals are dysfunctional members of society and lack the ability to make reparations. Most of those dealing drugs at the 'retail' end of the market are themselves poor, usually with no meaningful job, no meaningful prospects and no qualifications that would get them a 'legitimate' job. Most of those sticking up stores or mugging pedestrians, etc, are similarly very much at the low end of the socio-economic spectrum, whether they be illegal immigrants or otherwise.
It may well be that to someone with a good job, and a net worth measured in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, or more, the threat of being forced to pay reparations would be a deterrent (tho most studies of which I am aware would suggest otherwise for most criminals in most situations), but for someone with no significant assets or legitimate income the notion is laughable.
Btw, if, as I suspect, we agree that the selling of some substances, such as crystal meth, is 'doing harm', how does one measure reparation? The victim has become a meth addict, with all the horrors that that entails, in terms of destruction of a meaningful life, but who gets the reparations? It's no good giving it to the addict, after all. But that is a trivial issue in comparison to the fundamental misconception underlying the theory of requiring 'reparations' from the criminal.