This is all related to a concept of fairness that is ingrained in the human psyche.
I took a class once where the presenter handed someone in the audience a $1 bill and then handed the person next to him a $10 bill. When he asked the first person how he felt about the situation, he felt cheated even though objectively he was a dollar richer, and the fact that his neighbor was more fortunate had no bearing on that fact.
You also see this when people run red lights. Oftentimes I will see a car run a fresh red light, then the car or two behind him will run it too. "It's not fair that he gets to run the red light and I have to sit here".
If you import people from cultures with no respect for the law, those that already live here will chafe at the unfairness that they are still expected to be good citizens.
This is all related to a concept of fairness that is ingrained in the human psyche.
I took a class once where the presenter handed someone in the audience a $1 bill and then handed the person next to him a $10 bill. When he asked the first person how he felt about the situation, he felt cheated even though objectively he was a dollar richer, and the fact that his neighbor was more fortunate had no bearing on that fact.
You also see this when people run red lights. Oftentimes I will see a car run a fresh red light, then the car or two behind him will run it too. "It's not fair that he gets to run the red light and I have to sit here".
If you import people from cultures with no respect for the law, those that already live here will chafe at the unfairness that they are still expected to be good citizens.
Is 'the law' worthy of respect when it mandates transgenderism, affirmative action and corporate/wealthy corruption?