He's Anthony Freemont - the boy from the episode of The Twilight Zone (It's a Good Life) who sends anyone and anything he doesn't like to the corn field. The crazy thing is that for this orange blobfish, it's the people around him who give him that power, even though any one of them could be next.
Another reason why option 3 is good is that migrants are motivated. They've made an effort to get here. They're going to put some effort into making it work out. In some cases they've risked their lives to get here. Give them a chance to work and they'll show you what they're capable of.
I'm a computer programmer in a film. When aliens invade I hack into NASA in 10 minutes using nothing more than the circuit board of a vending machine, redirect every satellite on the planet to send a virus to the alien spacecraft that causes them to instantaneously explode.
If you watch only one short video today, make it this one. Remarkable bravery, and the looks on the various faces could be material for a dissertation on gender, the family, and authoritarianism. youtu.be/gVInX42IQD8?...
Nigel Farage, who leads a constant revolt against the metropolitan elite and foreigners, is a multimillionaire former city trader, whose kids have German passports, and who works as a brand ambassador for a gold billion firm.
'It looked like government as improv: a real-time Whose Lie Is It Anyway? in which members of the public called out ideas such as “fuck off”, or “no, seriously, fuck off”, and then the Conservatives did the opposite.'