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Naomi, I'll assume you genuinely (not deliberately) misunderstand what I said so I will elaborate a little.
Yes, the "floodgates" to the UK have been firmly shut for decades and the total number of Syrian refugees taken in, to mention but one group, is 20,000 (check out the figures, especially the Syrian total overall). We are constantly told that the UK can't afford to be more generous (in political terms that is undoubtedly true) but that, on pretty much everything, once "the will of the people", "democracy", etc. have been forced through then everything will be so much better (for the UK). My question is whether in the light of such comfort the UK's attitude will then change at all.
I am, as you no doubt are as well, aware that there exist advocates for completely suspending controls on the movement of people worldwide. While it would be nice if that ultimately became the case, in my opinion introducing it would/will take a long time and right now the differences from area to area are too large for even a generous relaxation to be possible without serious chaos resulting. I think even the advocates of freedom (that kind) will acknowledge this and I am not aware of anyone suggesting "limitless numbers" of refugees be given unfettered access to anywhere as things stand - although Uganda, Turkey, et al have hitherto more or less permitted that (go compare).
Now I trust you understand that I was not saying that "opening the floodgates to a limitless number of refugees will result in everything here becoming ‘so much better’" - but I think I too may correctly understand why you took it that way.
The wider perspective opened by the figures gives at least me pause for thought as to the misery suffered by far too many. Some of us are very fortunate, so many are not - are we to bar the doors forever to see to it that our luxuries do not drain away to others by even the smallest drop (I'm all right Jack) ?