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Notes -
Yes it is.
Mostly ignoring the American context, I think it's important to be explicit about this so that nobody gets any funny ideas about calling the job done when illegal immigration is finally consider not-actually-OK again. Mass immigration is a problem in and of itself, illegal or not, and arguing that the problem is merely the legality of it just invites pro-immigration actors to game the system by changing or subverting the laws.
Trying to play cute motte-and-bailey-games by tactically condemning illegal immigration because you think it an easier target when what you really mean is to condemn mass immigration or even any kind of immigration just sets you up for failure further down the line.
It's kayfabe on both sides. Both Left and Right governments in the UK prefer talking about illegal immigration to talking about mass legal immigration. Criticising illegal immigration is easy, makes you sound tough, and everyone knows there's not much you can do about it so under the rhetoric expectations are low.
What politicians on both sides refuse to discuss is that they have total control over legal immigration which is 20x the number. And with every 600,000 people per annum it gets harder to discuss.
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