7/19/2018 - Frank Turek Townhall.com
If you say you’re for
open borders, you’re not. Not completely.
Do you have locks on
your doors? How about on your car? Got a fence so your kids can
play safely? Do you have passwords on your computers? How about
your bank accounts? Do you protect your credit card numbers? Your social
security number? How about your medical records? Do you think
curbs, guardrails and traffic lines are a good idea, or should people be able
to drive any where and any way they want? How about security borders at
the airport—necessary or optional?
The truth is everyone
believes in secure borders. In fact, life would be impossible without
them. As long as human nature is what it is—bent toward evil—borders will be
necessary. The only question is “Where am I going to draw the borders for
my own security?”
You may not want to
secure the border of the United States, but you certainly want to secure the
border of your home. The problem is the security of your home is affected
by the security on your street, which is affected by the security in your town,
which is affected by the security in your state and your country.
And I’m not just
talking about your physical security, but also your economic security.
People want to come
here for the freedoms and prosperity we have in America. This has become the
land of opportunity and the most prosperous nation on earth, which would have
been impossible without secure borders. Open borders would destroy the very
reasons people want to come here in the first place.
Why? Because
prosperity can only be achieved when people feel secure enough economically and
personally to take risks to innovate, invest, and extend themselves into the
market. That security requires safe streets, reliable and adequate
infrastructure, environmental protection, and a welfare base kept to a
sustainable limit. Such security also requires the rule of law which
helps create a predictable and level playing field. Without the rule of
law, you don’t get the security and prosperity of America—you get the
corruption and poverty of, say, Venezuela (where annual inflation is now 43,378%!).
People flee countries
that don’t have this unique combination of security and freedom. That’s
why communist countries build walls to keep people in. We need walls to
keep people out!
While it would be great
to give everyone the same opportunities we have in America, it’s impossible to
do by bringing everyone here. If we opened our borders, millions of people
would flood this country and overwhelm the very things necessary to keep it
prosperous, including our strained safety net. And even extremely high
immigration levels would do virtually nothing to ease world poverty as this video graphically demonstrates.
Then there’s the fact
that some illegal immigrants would harm Americans. Don't get me wrong:
I’m not saying all illegal immigrants would be terrorists or criminals
(although some surely would be). What I’m saying is that controlled
immigration and secured borders are as necessary to a country as they are to
your home. You don’t let just anyone and everyone into your home. If you
did, your home would be destroyed, possibly by a criminal element, but most
definitely by the fact that your home couldn’t physically handle a large influx
of people. In a similar way, open borders would kill the golden goose called
America—it would destroy the very environment which entices people to come here
in the first place.
So while an open
borders policy may sound compassionate, it actually leads to disastrous
results. That is because—like so many other utopian leftist ideas—it
ignores reality and misdiagnoses human nature.
Finally, contrary to
the media narrative, Scripture doesn’t mandate open borders or prohibit walls.
As Dr. Wayne Grudem upacks here, the Bible actually
affirms that borders are legitimate and walls are good things. God
Himself scattered people by language (Gen. 11), and the promised land of Israel
had definite borders as did its surrounding nations. In fact, Moses
respected the border of Edom by asking permission of the King of Edom to pass
through that country (Moses was denied as you’ll read in Num. 20:17-21).
Jesus acknowledged that nations need to be reached (Matt.
28:17-20), and Paul declared that God intends nations to have legitimate rulers
(Rom. 13:1). Paul even used his status as a Roman citizen to protect
himself from harm (Acts 22:25-26). And the scriptural commands not to
steal presuppose borders and the right to private property.
(Remarkably, there will
even be a border in the afterlife between Heaven and Hell because God can’t force free
creatures to love Him or one another. Forced love is impossible. Love
requires freedom and freedom requires the security that your choices will be
respected, even if it means that you want an eternal border between you and
God.)
We are blessed to live
in America. But we need to recognize that it’s impossible to have
everyone live here. The best way to protect America and help people
outside of our country is to control immigration at a sustainable level while
exporting our ideas of economic and political liberty to other nations.
We can't bring everyone
to America, but we should try to bring America to everyone.
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