Don’t know that I know of any conservatives who do not support this for dreamers. I believe Trumps approach is right, force the Congress hand. Hardball politics.
A couple of years ago there was a bipartisan deal before Trump which funded the wall and had protection for DACA.
It was rejected.
Something about ■■■■■■■■ countries.
Then after shutting the government down over it… a government that was completely controlled by Republicans mind you… so after losing that stupid fight he declared a national emergency to divert funding that he could have had for free.
Now he is doing the second part of that deal he could have had a couple of years with Congress via Executive order AFTER he lost a Supreme Court battle for having poor paperwork trying to get rid of DACA.
Nope. I support now and have always supported this for dreamers. I have supported Trumps hardball approach and will continue to support it. No EO can extend citizenship, it will take a change in the law. Trump can sign one all he likes, it will be challenged and it will fail. Do I agree with him doing it? No. Will I still vote for him? Yes.
Your leftist masters lied to you. The pittance it had for the wall wouldn’t pay for anything. I could care less if Congressional Republicans rolled over for democrats again. Trump did not, and good on him.
Enclosure, for starters. Land expulsions, to create a surplus labor pool. Hard criminalization of petty crimes. Punitive debt laws. Criminalization of organization, then dissent. Public receipts, used to convert newly appropriated lands to resource extraction, conversion, and manufacture.
It is never, it has never been “organic”.
There is an enormous body of literature available online. You might begin by searching “Enclosure” alongside “Industrialization”.
Not seeing much about it’s use in the States really, (enclosure) at least not in the capacity of large displacements of people. Interesting stuff though.
The process varies region to region. The northeast was already a mercantilist region breaking away towards what we would classically understand as capitalism, and the commonly held lands and kings grants weren’t alike to those in England.
Enclosure, in the northeast, took a form closer to Dutch financialization, where private plots bankrupted because of credit contraction, tariffs and price collapses, many engineered by bankers in Boston, Hartford, NYC and New Haven. These newly landless farmers poured into the mill cities mushrooming along the Merrimack, Connecticut, Hudson and Susquehanna Rivers.
Once that happened, the surrounding timberlands lost their colonial era denizens, and were bought up by stock companies and what we would now call developers and speculators.