KateLM wrote:Inspite of my radical opinions. I don't think I could turn a boat back with children in it to risk being killed on their return there.
And there is the problem. These are the very hard decisions that governments have to make. The hardest of all. Because if we do not, then these people who won't stay in their own country and do the very hard work to make it better (which we had to do in our own), will totally destroy our own countries and our families lives. They are not coming to make Our lives better. They are coming to make Their lives better on our effort to create a society which works.
Today it may seem like a humanitarian decision. But in the future these decisions will be weighed on survival. Australia is well aware of this which is why they have such a totally hard nosed attitude to people who try to gate crash their country. The Aussie position is this. We didn't ask them to come and we don't want them, so the country to which they belong to has a responsibility to rescue them and to succour them.
I have the same position. When faced with this I cannot look at the fate of those who brought their own children to this state. I look at my own children and the state they will be in if I do not do MY job and stand firm.
That is the moral dilemma today and it's all backwards. It is not my fault that these children are there dying. It is the fault of their parents! That is what I have to keep in mind.
That is why my post signature says what it does. Freedom is not a right and it doesn't come "Free". It has to be worked for. This is one of the times where our right to freedom and liberty comes with "work". IMO the work is to tell the UN to go take a hike.
If we really have to pull them out of the sea, fine. Then we take them to the first Libyan port and unload them. Or a beach if the Libyan's get testy. Job done, not drowning, not our problem.