awm, on 2021-September-12, 01:26, said:
The number of naturalizations is not a good comparison point because about 1/3 of Switzerland's population is non-citizens (mostly from other places on Europe but some from further away); this percentage in the US is much lower. And while Switzerland is known for being harsh in this regard, Germany is not much easier and the UK just left the EU in large part because they didn't like letting in immigrants from Eastern Europe (much less refugees from Africa or the Middle East).
My point is that many countries are having debates about immigration, but the US in general has been friendlier to immigrants than many countries. They can communicate in their own language (even to the government), they can practice their religion (compare to France which bans wearing religious symbols in many contexts or Switzerland banning minarets) and obtaining citizenship is relatively easy (language tests are a citizenship requirement in almost every country for naturalization, but the US gives automatic citizenship to people born there while Europe does not).
Of course, the US is very much a crazy outlier with regard to gun laws and the social safety net. But it's not just uniformly more conservative on every issue; the lines of debate are just different by country.
I'll get to a specific or two in a minute but first a general thought.
You are one of the few people I know (to the extent online conversation is related to knowing) that was born in the US but is now living, and I gather expecting to live for the foreseeable future, in Europe. Offhand, I can't think of another. I have known people who have moved to Canada, and people who have moved to Israel, but I can't think of anyone other than you who moved to Europe.
This is asymmetric. My father came to the US from Europe. My maternal grandfather came from Europe. The father of one of my closest childhood friends (we still see each other 70 years later) came from Europe. I would have no trouble making a long list.
And even travel seems asymmetric. Growing up in Minnesota I once visited relatives in Chicago. I lived in Maryland for the summer when I was 21. When I was 26 or so I went canoeing in northern Manitoba. And then even to Boston for a week or so. I was in my 30s when I first crossed the Atlantic. That's not unusual.
In short, Europeans posting here have had far more direct experience with the US than I have had with Europe. A great deal more. I am not sure what to make of that, but it seems to be a fact.
Now to a couple of your specifics.
Guns: Recently there was a deer in my backyard lying on its side and clearly dying. I called the county, a game warden came out and he said I should shoot it. I explained that I did not have a rifle. He was surprised but suggested that I borrow one from a neighbor., I explained that I did not know which of my neighbors owned a rifle and I was not interested in going door to door to find out. He gave up on me, and got a rifle, and killed the deer. As I recall, it took him two shots to do so even though he had a high-powered rifle and presumably knew the best way to go about it.
I had a BB gun when I was young and a shotgun when I was 12. I got a car when I was 15 and my fellow 15 year-olds and I would go out hunting together. In my early 20s I decided that I really was not Daniel Boone and I was going to put away the shotgun before I accidentally killed someone or someone killed me.
I won't say that a gun is never useful. When I was maybe 8 we had a woman and her two daughters living with us after she had left her abusive husband. The husband came by, banging on the screen door demanding to be let in. My father wasn't home, my mother had my father's 12 gauge pointed at the door, explaining to him that he was not coming in. After a bit, he left. I could still tell you exactly where I was standing as this unfolded. But it's best to let the cops handle it. Hopefully, they know what they are doing.
Now about immigration. I want intelligent people to think this through. This is not a matter to be decided by a poll. Of course, I have known people who can trace their ancestry back to the Mayflower. In fact, the Mayflower must have been a very crowded ship. But most of us don't have to look very far to see immigrants or the kids and grandkids of immigrants. So of course we should see immigration as a good thing. What we have is chaos. Immigration is good, chaos is not good. I hope we can improve on this, but I am not the one to lay out explicit plans of how to do this.