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Many economic trade-offs are harmful. You are aware of this, hence why your economic example is of someone not getting a luxury confectionary, as opposed to someone losing their job, losing access to affordable housing, having to live in less-safe / more dangerous neighborhoods, enduring significant stresses and related health and social consequences due to economic consequences that benefit other people.
And this is without further accounting for the not 'just' economic changes that can accompany macroeconomic changes, such as changes to culture, crime rates, and various other things that come with the macroeconomic trends and hurt people.
No, you may not, because the discussion is that you do not get to waive aside harms on the basis of semantic gerrymandering just because you do not want to acknowledge that your policy preferences hurt people, but you don't want outright admit you find that acceptable. You especially don't get to on the basis of a 'core value' that is routinely violated by both any action or inaction at a policy level.
Don't dodge the discussion, make your stand: does mass migration cause no harm, or does it cause harms but you are okay with that?
This is not a bodily harm — but the consequence of not being able to buy food is a bodily harm. The point is that under different policy choices, losing your job does not imply that you can't feed yourself anymore, the two can be decoupled.
Agreed. Losing access to housing is a bodily harm. Violence in the neighborhood is a bodily harm.
What I'm saying is that different policy choices that are unrelated to migration will do more to prevent the above bodily harms. The claim "immigration is harm" is different from the combination of effects "immigration does X", and "X does bodily harm" — a policy choice can affect X instead.
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