Ideology and culture is the problem. Radicalization and
fundamentalist ideology are the issues that we cannot "screen" for, and
effectively monitor and control-- even if we construct refugee camps for them here to keep them contained and apart from the rest of society. And we know with certainty that poverty and fundamentalist ideologies are strong precursors to radicalization-- and the refugees are both. How do we ensure imported muslims will be moderate and peaceful? We can't. So we can't import them here. It is simply too much of a risk. Far too dangerous.
We already have serious and growing problems with fundamentalist immigrant Muslims in America. Honor killings of children and wives of fundamentalist muslims are becoming a very big concern. Additionally, we have
huge economic challenges with our poor muslim immigrant communities, and the predictable criminal and radicalization issues that arise from this. We don't need to import more of this than we already have, IMO. We have enough serious difficulties and challenges with the immigrant muslim population we ALREADY have. (And we have a huge immigrant population in my state.) This just is
not an area where we need more "tolerance and diversity." We need firm resolve and strong leadership, tempered with distance-compassion and distance-support for the real refugees.
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2015/11/1...port-says-growing-problem-is-hidden-in-stats/
We CAN help the legitimate refugees. We just don't need to, and SHOULD NOT import them here to do that. Helping them is best
done in the middle east--for everyone's benefit, ours, and theirs.
Islamic terrorists want to kill us, all of us, in the most bloody and horrific ways imaginable.
There.Is.No.Negotiating.With.Them. There is NO diplomacy that will work. It is just that simple. The attacks will get worse until we do something definitive as a united group of countries. Chem and bio attacks are coming-- and more bloody massacres. This is not a time to be foolishly and fatally soft hearted, or preach "tolerance" and "diversity" for terrorists. IMO.
But again, I've served in the Middle East, so my perspectives are shaped by that.