Dilbert_X wrote:
So its not so much a border problem or a mexican problem as it is a corrupt employer and slack govt problem?
The problem does originate from those things, yes. One could also argue that it results from consumers who don't give a damn where their services are coming from as long as its cheaper.
However, to blame only these things is overlooking what Mexico's poverty and corruption add to the equation. Even if we refused to purchase goods and services from illegal labor and employers refused to hire illegals, there would still be drug cartels smuggling their products here.
When reaching this part of the discussion, many people then blame us for consuming the drugs to begin with, but that can be fixed by legalizing and regulating things like marijuana.
Of course, by doing that, the cartels would still have the market of human trafficking. That problem can only really be blamed on Mexico itself.
I guess what I'm getting at is the fact that, even if we reformed our citizenship process, distributed far more visas than we currently do, legalized most drugs, implemented better border security, and stopped consuming from/hiring illegal labor, Mexico would still be poor as hell and a problem for our border because of cartels and their criminals in general.
Ultimately, what we're facing is the consequences of living next to a poor and corrupt country. So, at the very core of this is Mexico being a problem altogether.
Of course, whenever people suggest that, they get labeled as a racist.