You know you actually have to address the argument that a person is actually making to prove them 'wrong'...
All you've done is created a handful of strawmen and presented them as my positions, but I'll bite on a few points anyway.
With the exceptions of Australia, England, PNG, arguably France, and some of the nations newer to the sport, most of those nations have totally failed to develop their domestic competitions beyond tiny park football competitions despite the sport having been played in those nations for decades. As a general rule their domestic comps are also incredibly unstable, and info on the net about them is often extremely out of date.
You don't improve those circumstances by disincentivizing investment into domestic competition and development by making it easier for federations to source their players from the Australian and English development systems.
Take RU in Japan as a singular example; they've seen massive growth domestically over the last 30ish years, none of that would have happened if the Japanese RU had the power to build a competitive team out of players from other nations. The Brave Blossoms may have been more competitive that way, hell they might have even won some major competitions by now, but it wouldn't have benefited RU on the ground in Japan like the massive investment they've made to improve their standings over the last 30 years has.
Before you say it, obviously your average RL doesn't have access to resources anything near what Japanese RU had and has, but that's just an argument about the scale of what is realistically achievable in each nations individual case.
You're seriously going to stoop to that leave of pedantry?
For most teams the percentage of domestic players and players born in the nation they are representing is laughable, and it's astounding that you'd to pretend otherwise.
You will never convince me that it's better for RL in those nations to give a jersey to Australians/Kiwis/Englishmen whom are only interested because didn't make their national side over giving it to local players.
Among other things, it gives domestic players a goal to achieve, the experience they gain from it is invaluable, and it stops the resource suck you see in some nations where they are overcommitting resources to match payments to convince foreign players to represent them.
Oh you actually replied this time. Usually when I call you out on your terrible arguments you just stop replying to save yourself the embarrassment.
Ok, to your points...
You were the one that said that Rugby League was not being played in the countries represented. I showed you that it was. Your opinion of the size of that competition is irrelevant. RL is played in those countries by people from those countries so don't try and twist out of what you said.
In terms of countries like Jamaica, Greece (RL illegal until this year), Italy, Lebanon, the game is a decade or two old, not sure how much development you want to see from scratch in 10 or 20 years. A bit harsh considering Lebanon and Jamaica particularly are in the school systems now.
Glad you brought up the Japanese situation in Union. Do you have anything to say about the 16 players in their squad that are not Japanese? I didn't think so. This is rife in Union, even surprisingly amongst established nations like Scotland, Wales, Italy, Samoa and Tonga just to name a few. Again, you don't mention this.
On heritage representation in RL, are you going to tell Taumalolo he's not Tongan? Are you going to tell Adam Doueihi, who speaks Lebanese-Arabic that he isn't Lebanese?
Are we going to ignore that El Mazri and co kicked started domestic activity in Lebanon back at the 2000 WC? Just remember, because the comp is not up to your satisfaction in a mere 20 years, without these players doing it for their heritage to kick-start a future back in the original country, the game wouldn't exist at all there.
And yes, if Moses is putting his hand up for Lebanon and you were the coach, you would 100% pick him every time, don't even try and say you wouldn't. Moses, Doueihi and Mansour provide valuable experience to the Lebanese based players in the squad who then take that experience back to the Lebanese domestic comp to improve it. It is actually a smart thing to do. The other thing that Moses and co do is make the side competitive, which makes news back in Lebanon, which boosts the profile of the game. Again, a smart thing to do. How else do you think they built a senior comp and got into the University system in two decades with virtually zero resources?