Many of our peer countries, for example, have mandatory detention for all or most asylum claimants, whether or not they arrive in a smuggling operation. That's the case, for example, in Australia. In the U.K., all asylum claimants coming from designated safe countries are put under mandatory immigration detention, not just smuggled migrants. That's a very typical tool in the United States.
In some European countries, if you're a claimant coming from a designated country, you are given basically a pre-emptory paper-based review of your application—in some countries in something like 48 hours. I believe that's the case in Belgium, if I'm not mistaken, or in some of the western European countries. In Portugal, it's nine days.
By the way, António Guterres, who's the current United Nations High Commissioner of Refugees, is the former prime minister of Portugal who brought in an asylum system that has a nine-day turnaround on decisions for asylum applicants coming from designated countries.
I will not take any lectures from other democratic countries when it comes to the fairness of this asylum system we're proposing.