Hillary's position on immigration reform is very, very different from Donald Trump's position. IMO, at least, her position is realistic and recognizes the executive branch's role in formulating enforcement policies in a world with limited resources. Donald Trump's position, on the other hand, is full of platitudes (e.g., "Defend the Laws and Constitution of the United States!") and completely unrealistic proposals (e.g., "Make Mexico Pay for the Wall," "Triple the number of ICE agents," etc.). Moreover, some of them are a little scary (e.g., "End birthright citizenship").mjmjr25 wrote:I dunno - I mean, she can spin her immigration views to be more liberal than Sanders, and more conservative than Trump. After trying to pander to the latino crowd more than Bernie, she was asked how her support of a wall on the border is any different than Trump's proposal of a wall on the border, her response: "He's talking about a very tall wall, right? A beautiful tall wall, the most beautiful tall wall, better than the Great Wall of China . . ." People laughed because it poked fun at Trump...but let's look at the answer - the answer is...there really isn't a difference. You supported a wall, you voted to fund a wall and increase patrols, and now today you pander and we need to get better at uniting families and stop putting up walls.prfsnl_gmr wrote:she is the only one with nuanced well-developed positions on a variety of issues.
I sometimes think that I may be the last person on earth who thinks that people, and especially politicians, should be flexible in their views, willing to consider new information, and willing to reconsider their previous positions. IMO, those are desirable qualities, and I think that politicians should be less beholden to an ideology than to the will of the electorate.mjmjr25 wrote:I don't deny she's a politician through and through - I don't know that any of her positions are well-developed though. I think she's like most life-long politicians and can bend her views to suit the current environment.
I am a pretty liberal guy...and I think that Bernie has been great for this campaign season...but I think that his disdain for the U.S. finance industry is a bit much. Likewise, I do not think that someone should be labeled a pariah simply because she charged her standard speaking fee to a Wall Street firm. (She charged the same amount to speak at Cisco, eBay, SalesForce, and the University of Buffalo, but people have been strangely silent about all of the favors she is going to do for them once she attains the oval office...mjmjr25 wrote:As Bernie accurately points out - you must be saying something behind those closed doors - no one I am vehemently opposed to pays me $225K to come be hostile to them.
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Finally, I want to mention that I enjoy this forum a lot because I can speak to people who do not share my political views in a civil, respectful, and thoughtful manner. I hope that this level of civility and maturity lasts through what will surely be a contentious election cycle.
