I'm pretty pro-immigration, but it seems like the SCOTUS has repeatedly said to Congress, "you guys gotta fix this". Between the Constitution and existing statute, these rulings will continue to happen, and the border will continue to be a crisis.
As an aside, does anyone know what the international laws are with regards to passing through one or more countries and /then/ seeking asylum? It always seems a little odd that you can "shop around" for a country like that. I don't know enough about the pros/cons of it, but on some level it's weird that a terrible situation in, say, Honduras, somehow translates into the "right" to go live in the U.S. (again, I'm not diametrically opposed, just hard for me to grasp how that's sensical/practical).
I'm pretty pro-immigration, but it seems like the SCOTUS has repeatedly said to Congress, "you guys gotta fix this". Between the Constitution and existing statute, these rulings will continue to happen, and the border will continue to be a crisis.
As an aside, does anyone know what the international laws are with regards to passing through one or more countries and /then/ seeking asylum? It always seems a little odd that you can "shop around" for a country like that. I don't know enough about the pros/cons of it, but on some level it's weird that a terrible situation in, say, Honduras, somehow translates into the "right" to go live in the U.S. (again, I'm not diametrically opposed, just hard for me to grasp how that's sensical/practical).