Los Angeles Times

MAGA has no room for DACA

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Re “No good reason to end DACA,” editorial, Aug. 29

The Times Editorial Board asks about immigrants brought illegally to the United States as children, “By what calculatio­n is it in the best interest of the country to eliminate their deferments and make them eligible for deportatio­n?”

First of all, 30 of the 50 states voted for President Trump and his immigratio­n policies in the 2016 election. It’s very likely that many of those voters were motivated to show up at the polls to counter the “diversity” dogma that regards them as bigots.

The only “dysfunctio­nal” part of the U.S. immigratio­n system, dating back to the Reagan era, has been lax enforcemen­t of existing laws. Since more than 1 million immigrants living in the country illegally received amnesty back in the 1980s, millions more have arrived and want the same for themselves.

So, “due to no fault of their own,” Americans have been bamboozled into subsidizin­g services for millions of people until they are deported and must finance border security enhancemen­ts to prevent a recurrence.

The American voice has spoken, and it does not have a California accent. David Goode

Manhattan Beach

Although I understand why many people from other countries want to live in the United States, they don’t have the right to just “decide” to move here illegally. People from all over the world wait up to 20 years for the privilege of coming here legally.

I can’t help but wonder if immigrants in the U.S. illegally had stayed in their home countries and put as much time and effort into making their own country a better to live place as they do in protesting that they have the “right” to stay here, that more countries would have their own style of the American dream.

For the greater good, citizens of other countries have to start holding their leaders responsibl­e and implementi­ng positive changes at home because the whole world can’t live here. Jan MacMichael

South Pasadena

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