First off, I don't think it's to people's personal detriment. People forget the enlightened part of enlightened self-interest. There's perfectly legitimate reasons to oppose immigration.
Reasons which many of us here have given, multiple times, and we just get shouted down with accusations of being racist, stupid, or heartless.
"But rape!" is not a legitimate reason to restrict muslim integration as a whole, which you seem to. It's an argument for finding the group that's doing that the most (I already described what I'm 85% certain it is), and restricting their immigration. Nobody seems to be talking about it lowering wages. No one seems to be arguing that the welfare system is overburdened so far. That it will be, sure, and like I said, don't take more than you can support. But your argument is, in your own words, about self-interest. I think you're wrong, Covenant, but I don't think you're evil.
Only FSM cultists are evilAs for Trump: To some extent, yes. More motivated by the fact that my priors for his support level are such that if he won I would suspect foul play, however. Indeed, I would know it existed, considering the rulings concerning at least one law related to voter id and it's discriminatory implementation. Constitutions and the equivalent do exist for reasons, you know. They're where we pick and choose those principles of democracy we like. You know, since it used to be the democratic consensus that interracial marriage was illegal, up until a small non-elected body enforced it's will on the public against their perceived self-interest. As an example purely. There's good and bad in everything. Balance tends to be a necessity.
You seem to be pretty much saying in your post that even if the majority of your countrymen vote for Trump as president, you won't accept/respect that decision. I don't even know what to say to that - it just seems like we're coming at this whole 'being a part of society' thing from very, very different perspectives.
But I'm not saying that. I'm saying that I don't think that that would be the case. If it was proven to me that in a fair election with full and unbiased turnout, Trump won, I would go 'Whelp, hopefully he doesn't nuke anyone' and see how many gods I could find to pray to on Wikipedia. But with polling as it is, the election system as it is, and Trump as he is, I don't think that would happen. Furthermore, I would think that our society had reached a very, very bad place, and that we were in danger of mob rule and demagoguery. If people in Britain voted to allow quartering soldiers in people's homes around where you live, would you respect that decision and live with a soldier? Or if they voted that people needed to allow immigrants to stay in their home? Would you be okay with having to do that, since it's the democratic will of the people? There's a line we all draw in the sand where our respect for democracy and our beliefs conflict and the beliefs win out. Trump winning is very close to that line. Trump subsequently banning Muslims from the US is over that line.
Democratic process only represents the will of the people if the people actually participate. And there's plenty of reasons and means to make sure only the proper sorts of people do. Would you be open to a second referendum on Brexit with mandatory turnout, given how many people voted against their self-interest in the hopes of making a point because of flawed perceptions of national sentiment, and the highly variable turnout rates based on age?
We actually had a very high turnout rate on Brexit, and despite sensationalist reporting the number of people who regretted their vote was later found by pollsters to have been tiny. Would I be open to a second referendum? Tough to say, given your parameters. I don't support mandatory voting, for one thing, and 'my side' won for another, so why would I want to re-do it? Is it a trade? Would we be re-doing it if Remain had won? If we re-do Brexit can Trump re-do the American election if he loses?
Ultimately, it was a fair vote (some dodgy dealing by the government regarding leaflets aside), so starting a trend of rerunning any election if people complain hard enough seems daft to me. If it'd gone the other way, I'd have been disappointed in the result but happy we at least got the chance to vote, and I'd have respected the result rather than pulling a Nicola Sturgeon and whining for yet another referendum I'd likely lose.
With mandatory voting? Gladly! I love mandatory voting. I think it's great for getting maximal turnout so that election campaigns aren't run on the platform of increasing turnout. Which is basically how they're run right now. That's why activists don't try to convince. They try to outrage and vilify and scare. Over 50% of the people voting for either candidate in at least one survey (so I'm not entirely certain how reliable it is) put 'to prevent the other person from winning' as their primary reason for voting. Other people have said they plan on screwing over their countrymen by voting for Trump and leaving so the whole system can burn to the ground. That's the terms they use. They don't give a shit about the people left behind who have to deal with the fire. I like mandatory voting because it means you don't need a second one. You get the whole picture, right then and there. If I remember correctly, it was the Leave voters leader who was saying that they would ask for a second referendum when they lost. They were almost certain they would lose, and that they'd use it to keep fighting. I think that if we're not gonna have mandatory voting, a re-do is pointless and asking for trouble.
In case you didn't notice, I like mandatory voting.
And you're saying that you should decide who this applies to and what those consequences are, rather than the majority of citizens reaching that decision democratically?
Ideally, yes, but in this instance I'm happy to let democratically elected governments handle it for me.
So if you do support it being handled by a democratic process, then in a matter of such contention as this I presume you've got no issue with making certain that the will of the people is being carried out by utilising direct democracy, right?
After all, that's what referendums are for. Hell, as much as I'm glad to be out of the EU, I'd have been more than a little bit concerned if ol' Dodgy Dave had just decided to pull-out of his own accord.
Direct democracy's been tried a few times. Turns out temporary sentiment rules peoples minds far more easily than reason. That is, in fact, a third of the point of representative democracy.
EDIT: To make myself perfectly clear: If you're going to do direct democracy to try and see what people want, do it right, and make sure everyone votes.