Jacoby wrote:
It's not a strawman, you said that essentially that we owe Puerto Rico for holding onto it as a colonial asset which quite frankly doesn't remotely compare to the number we've done on Iraq over the last 30 years. You can't take a "you broke, you own it" to colonialism. The UN mandates that the US give PR its independence.
Ahh I see the source of your confusion-you misunderstood my original comment about US rule in Puerto Rico since 1898. It isn't a "you broke it, you own it" argument, it's a "you made the Jones Act into law in Congress, so now these people are citizens" argument. American malfeasance in Iraq, no matter how extreme, is not germane.
Jacoby wrote:
Who said anything about stripping them of US citizenship btw? I don't have an issue continuing a special relationship with the nation of Puerto Rico, the reality is that they cannot survive on their own but that doesn't mean they should be granted statehood against our own best interests. It is not on the level of other US states and you don't take on a burden like that with no benefit.
The problems of Puerto Rico are a trivial challenge to the United States of America and one that we will deal with in one way or another regardless of our feelings in the matter. There is no possibility of a PREXIT. The people of Puerto Rico have consistently shown that they don't want statehood, probably not least because they don't want to be burdened with Federal income tax, so that is not really a prospect, though it would probably be best for them and the rest of the citizens of the U.S. Nor do they want independence, so you can't force them out.
Some interesting notes on the economic woes of Puerto Rico:
http://www.cnbc.com/2015/08/04/heres-wh ... broke.htmlThe other members of the union were given a mechanism for getting rid of their debt on joining. Too bad we can find a way to do that for our fellow Americans in Puerto Rico today. Perhaps the attempt to extend Chapter 9 Bankruptcy protection to Puerto Rico, or something like it, will succeed.
http://www.economist.com/news/business- ... have-moneyMaybe some wise leader like Donald Trump will come up with a great plan as part of the bid for the white house.
No, I suppose not.
But the reality is that they are US Citizens already and they don't speak a different language, they speak one of the many languages of the United States. These are not romantic notions they are matters of fact and law.
Regardless of your feelings about Spanish, the rest of the US is going to be dealing with the problems facing Puerto Ricans just as it has to deal with the problems facing Alaskans, West Virginians and Alabamians. My State is a net giver, those states are net takers and that's fine by me--it's part of being a nation, just like armed forces and hospitals. Or maybe Donald Trump will win, after all...
Incidentally, your muder rate stats are out of date. Puerto Rico's murder rate as of 2013 was 3.66 X Mississippi's or just over twice Louisiana's. Totally irrelevant to the problem at hand, but interesting.