I realize that white supremacists are perfectly O.K. with punishing people who have done nothing wrong.
Do people have the right to do with their own stuff, what they want, or not? Do Americans have the right to not allow aliens to enter our territory, if we don't want to? America's path to citizenship couldn't be simpler, and I'm sure most American citizens on this discussion board did it, through being born within the country, even if their parents/mother are not in the US legally. Even in that illegal case, the child becomes an American citizen, and so has the right to vote and to voice their opinion, and if they become POTUS (which they can legally do since they are natural-born Americans), then they too can decide that, No, I don't want to invite and welcome or receive aliens right now. Aliens, get out. No more new ones, and the old ones who are here, leave. Get out.
Don't we have the right to do this? You "leftists" (Bannon's word, for Charlie Rose) act like we are immoral to think this way, but you never make a convincing argument for this, you just act like you're morally authoritative, it's a classic poker bluff, and you have zero evidence backing up that your position exists in some supernatural way, because it's what the Maker wants us to believe.
You're a censored Catholic, you should know this. The only morals that God wants us to know, is published in the Catechism of the Catholic Church. Whatever else is said, by anybody, even the popes, and definitely some lay leftist such as yourself or Charlie Daniels or HRC or whomever .. whatever else is said isn't even a candle's flicker to the sun. What is in the Catechism, is what is moral. Cardinal Dolan acknowledged that Bannon was right, and DACA isn't about doctrine.
He then pulls a characteristically PROTESTANT poker move, by grabbing a notion from Sacred Scripture---a notion that didn't rise to the level of being contained within the Catechism, even though the Catechism is hundreds of pages long---I don't know how they could have fit it in, except oppositely---the cardinal then pulls a scripture or two and makes an ad hoc analysis/interpretation, pretending like, acting like, this notion has the full weight and authority of the morals expressed plainly within the Catechism. Show me where Jesus or His Apostles or His bishops, in Sacred Scripture, says that the fundamental notion of DACA, that taking our wide, wide gate, and basically running it over with a tractor, and then backing over it, and making sure that the gate will never even work again, even if we might really need it someday. You show me that.
We have a wide gate in America. Right now, it's wide open. DACA is running over the gate in a tractor. And then backing over it, so that it will never function again. Why can't we just modulate the gate, instead of having to treat the thing with supreme contempt? President Trump's predecessor chose to get rough with the gate, and President Trump has made an executive decision that dealing with the gate is Congress's job, not the POTUS---Congress, get to work. You've got six months, and the clock already started.
The economic argument just points out these guys are dumb enough to harm themselves, just to get at people they hate.
Do we have the right to shut the gate a little bit if we want to, yes or no? Is it a matter upon which intelligent people can disagree, yes or no? Why do leftists make these debates moral. These are economic policies, not moral policies. DACA recipients aren't Americans! They don't have American rights and privileges. They are at the mercy of Americans on this matter, because they are not Americans, America is not theirs, it is ours, and we have the right to deny them the rights that we Americans enjoy, because America does very much work to ensure that we have these rights; a lot goes into protecting them and recognizing them and even fighting for them, and people who couldn't even bother to meet the barest of requirements, to be born here, illegally, are just not Americans, and Americans have no moral imperative to consider this a moral matter when it's not.
DACA recipients missed their chance, and were born elsewhere and then entered the country illegally. Yes, they can't help it, and still yes, we have every right to deny them any privilege wrt United States citizenship. This is ours. We can tell anybody who's not American to leave. That's our right. As America's owners.