The world is facing the most serious refugee crisis since the Second World War. It has instigated political confrontation in Europe and is now doing the same here in the United States.
More than half of our country’s governors are spouting xenophobic rhetoric reminiscent of regimes and countries we would not like being compared to.
Most legal experts,
whether Democrat or Republican, say that governors have no authority to override federal decisions on refugee relocation. So why are so many asserting that they just won’t let Syrian refugees
into their states?
The fear is seated in the possibility that one of the terrorists involved in the Paris attacks last Friday came in through Greece as a Syrian refugee. If we look
at the refugee situation in Europe and compare it to the United States, this apprehension to accepting Syrian refugees has little to no basis in evidence.
Since 2011, the start of
the Syrian civil war, the United States has admitted 2,200 Syrian refugees. This is compared to over 6,000 migrants arriving in
Germanyevery day, many of whom are Syrian. That doesn't count the hundreds of thousands of migrants from other countries that try to reach the European continent each year.
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The success of the screening process Europe uses to admit refugees is also difficult to accurately assess. With thousands arriving through various routes and with little or no documentation,
it is in no way comparable to the lengthy and in-depth system that is used for refugees applying for
asylum in the United States.
Not only does our executive branch have the right to override governors who claim they want to stop the intake of Syrian refugees, but our country, as a
global power, has a duty to aid in the accommodation and safety of human beings displaced, in part, because of destabilizing wars we have waged.
Whether we should stop the flow, or
more accurately the drip, of Syrian refugees into the United States is not the question we should ask ourselves. The White House has already stated that it wants to increase the number of Syrian
refugees to at least 10,000 in the next fiscal year. We should as a country of immigrants press for that number to increase.
The more we alienate refugees, Muslim or other, the more
we fuel the feeling of helplessness, degrade their humanity and increase their suffering. Shutting our borders to legitimate refugees will only increase the likelihood of extremism, which will, in
turn, further endanger our homeland. We must be compassionate in order to be safe.