Small scale permaculture nursery in Maine, education enthusiast, and usually verbose.
Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org It begins
Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org Me every autumn
Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org A cutting off the ol' bush
Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org Start em young
Animals and Pets @beehaw.org Some ducklings (mostly) grown up
Music @beehaw.org Streetlight Manifesto - Everything To Everyone - YouTube
Animals and Pets @beehaw.org We've hit brave bird stage
Animals and Pets @beehaw.org Guard duty
Animals and Pets @beehaw.org There's always one
Animals and Pets @beehaw.org Almost bumbled the shot
Animals and Pets @beehaw.org A puddle of cuddles
Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org FeaturedWhat's growing on, Beehaw?
Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org Sambucus nigra in flower
Animals and Pets @beehaw.org The colors
Animals and Pets @beehaw.org Duckling season begins
Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org What's growing on, Beehaw?
Animals and Pets @beehaw.org When dad tells you you turned seven today
Animals and Pets @beehaw.org Guarding the rhubarb
Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org Elderflower
Nature and Gardening @beehaw.org What's growing on, Beehaw?

"Invasive species" is a technical ecology term used to describe plants and animals that face no predation in a given environment and have a negative effect on the other species native to that environment. Like many other scientific terms, it was misused by people without the technical understanding.
The crux of your argument is species drift compared to forced mass introduction, but there's a huge difference between them. It's similar to the difference in outcomes that can occur when somebody surfaces after deep diving. Go slow enough, and the systems have an opportunity to acclimate to the changes and respond. Go quickly enough, and things break and start impacting systems around them in a cascade. That's the thing that gets missed every time I see this sentiment.