The fundamental responsibility of government is provision of safety for its citizens. By these lights, the failed states we know from the evening news of bombings and of civil war today are certainly in the Middle East but also in Central America. The highest homicide rates in the world are in Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador.
The influx to the US of large numbers of unaccompanied minor children from Central America - 52,000 in 2014 alone - seems to have caught the US Government, the Obama administration and its opposition Republican-led Congress, by surprise. Both are making statements that have little relation to reality and neither is working on a plausible solution.
Instead of any discussion of the problem of child migrants that takes serious account of facts and of known reputable studies and serious recommendations, President Barack Obama and the House Republicans are trying to score points in a mid-term election year.
The current permissible debate as to causes of immigration is actually described as "push and pull". Democrats and the administration talk of children being pushed out of their home countries by high rates of violence. Republicans talk of children pulled into the US by imagined promises of permanent residence. Republicans cite a 2008 law passed with no opposition under President George W Bush that requires minors from countries with non-contiguous borders with the US (Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador) to have judicial hearings to determine their qualifications for asylum status. The law provides for humanitarian treatment in the meantime. Republicans want to change the law to allow rapid deportation of minors back to their home countries; the administration would consider such a law change but wants US$3.7 billion ($4.2 billion) first, to provide more immigration judges and better detention facilities.
Both parties appear to want to send the children back. The difference seems to be in the timing. Neither side is dealing in fact or even attempting to address the basic issues underlying the crisis.