Do you support equal rights for all?
Heterosexuals
Gays
Transgenders
Whites
Blacks
Asians
Hispanics
Arabs
Christians
Muslims
Jews
on down the list!
Equality is a fantasy, and has no barring in the real World.
There's always going to be disparities because we're all different.
We're not equal robots, and therefor equality is stupid.
If you support equal treatment, there will still be inequality among the outcomes as some Humans are superior over others.... Then that's still inequality.
If you support balancing the scale to create equality of outcomes, as we have been doing, then there's still going to be little changes as some Humans are superior over others.... Then you still don't have equality of treatment.
I swear that Humans obsessed with equality have Asperger's or OCD or something, they too like to put things into equal little boxes.
It shouldn't be surprising that Second and Third Worlders don't understand the concept of a Constitutional government that isn't riddled with corruption and actually does seek to protect the rights of its citizens.
There's a difference between legislating that a government treat all of its citizens equally and legislating that all citizens treat each other equally. The former is workable, the latter is an exercise in futility.
The problem we're running into in the US is the effort by bleeding-hearts to right past wrongs by creating "protected classes" of people. To borrow from
Animal Farm; "
all animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others". This, of course, is wrong and weakens the entire system.
So sorry to say, but Democracy works better in Poland, than in America today.
Poles didn't want Muslim refugees so they didn't get them.
Americans didn't want Muslims refugees so they did get them.
America might be officially low on corruption, but it's a dysfunctional society none the less.
America killed 100's of thousands in Iraq in a war, while doing next to nothing about millions of illegal immigrants crossing the border, and gauging the system.
Defending an American Tradition, Communities Welcome Syrian Refugees - Center for American Progress
Since 2014, the United States has welcomed more than
18,300 Syrian refugees. In total,
238,000 refugees from countries including Burma, Iraq, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Somalia, and Bhutan have come to the United States during this period. Despite pockets of anti-refugee sentiment—much of it directed at Syrian refugees—efforts to ease the integration of these newcomers are well underway in communities across the country, led by nonprofit resettlement agencies, faith organizations, and private volunteers. Ensuring that Syrian and other refugees successfully integrate not only helps them and their families but also benefits the entire nation.
...........
Offering humanitarian support to those who need it most has been a hallmark of American tradition for a long time. Since 1975, the United States has resettled more
3 million refugees from all over the world, regardless of their faith. The United States
welcomed more than 200,000 refugees from Vietnam and Cambodia in the 1970s, Bosnians and Europeans in the 1990s, and more recently, refugees from Burma, Somalia, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Research shows that over time, refugees in the United States have made notable strides in education, gotten better wages, moved into better occupations, and started businesses.
Now is not the time to shut the doors on the
“your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.” America must continue its tradition of providing humanitarian assistance to refugees and also should not lose sight of the opportunities that refugees represent. For those who are already here, resettlement was just one chapter of their story. The next chapter is to build better lives while making contributions to society and bringing the community together. Big and small efforts to help refugees reach their potential and ease their integration into American society will have positive effects for local economies. But for those who are still seeking a refuge away from unimaginable horrors, this is the time for America to remain a beacon of hope and to offer them welcome.