Why are you so eager to claim I'm dismissing anything~? Have you been fighting the monsters for too long? (´・_・`)
It is my wish to learn a little from you and your experiences, not undermine your ideology! I cannot even imagine from where the thought might have hailed from...
It's a preemptive response to move the discussion along slightly faster. There are usually obvious things to say in regards to certain arguments, so I tend to include the most obvious response ahead of time as to not bog us down.
It's not really a kind thing to do, though~ How would you feel if I put such unpleasant words in your mouth instead of the way in which it actually happened?
I would love to move towards the next of my questions, yet as much as I find your first paragraph agreeable the second is much more of a problem to process. I'm afraid to say, societies mostly composed of immigrants (I shall use the United States as a prominent example!) are the societies where liberty is eroding fastest! Compare this if you will with Japan, a country I believe we can agree to be at the least moderately xenophobic, or the democracies of Europe (with the exception of the UK, which has been turning into an immigrant society for a rather long period of time now). Immigration has not been hindered, while problems with tolerance remain more pronounced than anyplace else in the West (LGBT issues for one) and the previously free society is eroding into a corporate police state. How does this information affect what you have already written?
Compare what with Japan? It's a decent place, but they've got serious problems when it comes to civil liberties (the police can detain you without trial or charge for a month. A month! A person's whole life can collapse in a month of sitting in a cell.).
I do not agree with your prospect that liberty is eroding fastest in the United States. While there are always problems in trying to maintain a free society, the US is doing well. There are the Constitutional freedoms, and to use your example things like LGBT issues are progressing rapidly. Same-sex relationships were illegal in a lot of the US in 2003, when they were struck down by the Supreme Court. It is now 2014, and LGBT rights are spreading rapidly throughout America. That's 11 years from homosexuality being a crime to nearing full equality in a lot of the country, a process that is speeding up rather than slowing down. Now, freedom can never spread quickly enough, but I think that's rather impressive given the history of how non-heterosexuals have been treated in Western culture.
The problems with tolerance in regards to immigrants are, I think, a false equivalence. If a society reacts badly to immigrants, it isn't the development of intolerance, they were never tolerant to begin with. The presence of the immigrants is just bringing that intolerance into view. It's like I said, a homogenous society will not want to accept those who differ from them. They may not even know they're intolerant until the reality of it arrives on their doorstep.
Japan might have such a law indeed, but at the least it abides by the country's constitution, which New York's Stop and Frisk doesn't. ^^ Hasn't Bloomberg referred to the NYPD as his personal army at one point too?
(¬_¬) The office has changed tenants since then, but I doubt anything important actually has...
The fact that LGBT rights are quickly catching up with the rest of the world is great~! but it is that they have to catch up in the first place that is the essence of what I meant!
My, my~ What you said at the end leads me perfectly into my next question, as I really wishn't this thread to be hijacked into "why Japan and the US have problems with civil rights general". (^_^;)
Of course, that's unless you want to keep discussing that topic! I will be glad to oblige in that case!
Okay, number two! Now that we have defined the value of an immigrant, what reason is there for an intolerant country to accept them? Can we allow the tolerant societies to become the host of all migrants while intolerant societies remain immigrant-free and locals not burdened with hate towards the freshly arrived migrant? As far as I know, the official answer to racism and xenophobia has been attracting more migration to the problematic areas so that diversity is increased, but this has only ended in escalation of hatred... (・_・) It also feels like forcing views onto others - the tolerant view of a tolerant society onto the intolerant one - for which I have a heartfelt disdain for in all aspects, no matter how noble the cause!
While thinking of an answer, I request that you keep the uniting factor of a common enemy in mind. ^^