[ ]   [ ]   [ ]                        [ ]      [ ]   [ ]

Warning: file_get_contents(/home/www/settings/mirror_forum_db_enable_sql): failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /var/www/html/content/Forum/functions.php on line 8

Framed - movie guessing game - Red_Dragon - May 12, 2025 - 9:42am
 
Wordle - daily game - marko86 - May 12, 2025 - 9:41am
 
Trump - Red_Dragon - May 12, 2025 - 9:29am
 
NY Times Strands - ptooey - May 12, 2025 - 8:48am
 
Today in History - islander - May 12, 2025 - 8:47am
 
Celebrity Face Recognition - islander - May 12, 2025 - 8:07am
 
Radio Paradise Comments - islander - May 12, 2025 - 8:02am
 
NYTimes Connections - ptooey - May 12, 2025 - 7:42am
 
No TuneIn Stream Lately - rgio - May 12, 2025 - 5:46am
 
Global Warming - rgio - May 12, 2025 - 4:39am
 
New Music - miamizsun - May 12, 2025 - 3:47am
 
Talk Behind Their Backs Forum - winter - May 11, 2025 - 8:41pm
 
Name My Band - GeneP59 - May 11, 2025 - 6:47pm
 
The Dragons' Roost - triskele - May 11, 2025 - 5:58pm
 
Photography Forum - Your Own Photos - Manbird - May 11, 2025 - 5:26pm
 
Bug Reports & Feature Requests - epsteel - May 11, 2025 - 12:30pm
 
Ukraine - R_P - May 11, 2025 - 11:03am
 
Things You Thought Today - GeneP59 - May 11, 2025 - 9:52am
 
Breaking News - Steely_D - May 10, 2025 - 8:52pm
 
May 2025 Photo Theme - Action - fractalv - May 10, 2025 - 7:54pm
 
Republican Party - Red_Dragon - May 10, 2025 - 3:50pm
 
Strips, cartoons, illustrations - R_P - May 10, 2025 - 2:16pm
 
Israel - R_P - May 10, 2025 - 1:18pm
 
Real Time with Bill Maher - R_P - May 10, 2025 - 12:21pm
 
Artificial Intelligence - q4Fry - May 10, 2025 - 10:01am
 
No Rock Mix on Alexa? - epsteel - May 10, 2025 - 9:45am
 
Kodi Addon - DaveInSaoMiguel - May 10, 2025 - 9:19am
 
What Makes You Laugh? - Isabeau - May 10, 2025 - 5:53am
 
Upcoming concerts or shows you can't wait to see - KurtfromLaQuinta - May 9, 2025 - 9:34pm
 
Immigration - R_P - May 9, 2025 - 5:35pm
 
Basketball - GeneP59 - May 9, 2025 - 4:58pm
 
The Obituary Page - GeneP59 - May 9, 2025 - 4:45pm
 
Pink Floyd - miamizsun - May 9, 2025 - 3:52pm
 
Freedom of speech? - R_P - May 9, 2025 - 2:19pm
 
Questions. - kurtster - May 8, 2025 - 11:56pm
 
How's the weather? - GeneP59 - May 8, 2025 - 9:08pm
 
Pernicious Pious Proclivities Particularized Prodigiously - R_P - May 8, 2025 - 7:27pm
 
Save NPR and PBS - SIGN THE PETITION - R_P - May 8, 2025 - 3:32pm
 
How about a stream of just the metadata? - ednazarko - May 8, 2025 - 11:22am
 
Baseball, anyone? - Red_Dragon - May 8, 2025 - 9:23am
 
no-money fun - islander - May 8, 2025 - 7:55am
 
UFO's / Aliens blah blah blah: BOO ! - dischuckin - May 8, 2025 - 7:03am
 
Positive Thoughts and Prayer Requests - miamizsun - May 8, 2025 - 5:53am
 
Into The Wild - Red_Dragon - May 7, 2025 - 7:34pm
 
Get the Money out of Politics! - R_P - May 7, 2025 - 5:06pm
 
What Makes You Sad? - Antigone - May 7, 2025 - 2:58pm
 
USA! USA! USA! - R_P - May 7, 2025 - 2:33pm
 
The Perfect Government - Proclivities - May 7, 2025 - 2:05pm
 
Musky Mythology - R_P - May 7, 2025 - 10:13am
 
Living in America - islander - May 7, 2025 - 9:38am
 
DQ (as in 'Daily Quote') - JimTreadwell - May 7, 2025 - 8:08am
 
Pakistan - Red_Dragon - May 6, 2025 - 2:21pm
 
SCOTUS - R_P - May 6, 2025 - 1:53pm
 
Canada - R_P - May 6, 2025 - 11:00am
 
Solar / Wind / Geothermal / Efficiency Energy - ColdMiser - May 6, 2025 - 10:00am
 
Lyrics that strike a chord today... - ColdMiser - May 6, 2025 - 8:06am
 
What's your mood today? - GeneP59 - May 6, 2025 - 6:57am
 
China - R_P - May 5, 2025 - 6:01pm
 
Trump Lies™ - R_P - May 5, 2025 - 5:50pm
 
Song of the Day - rgio - May 5, 2025 - 5:33am
 
Love the Cinco de Mayo celebration! - miamizsun - May 5, 2025 - 3:53am
 
how do you feel right now? - miamizsun - May 5, 2025 - 3:49am
 
Mixtape Culture Club - miamizsun - May 5, 2025 - 3:48am
 
The Bucket List - Red_Dragon - May 4, 2025 - 1:08pm
 
260,000 Posts in one thread? - winter - May 4, 2025 - 9:28am
 
Australia - R_P - May 3, 2025 - 11:37pm
 
M.A.G.A. - R_P - May 3, 2025 - 6:52pm
 
Democratic Party - Isabeau - May 3, 2025 - 5:04pm
 
Philly - Proclivities - May 3, 2025 - 6:26am
 
Race in America - R_P - May 2, 2025 - 12:01pm
 
Multi-Room AirPlay using iOS app on Mac M - downbeat - May 2, 2025 - 8:11am
 
YouTube: Music-Videos - black321 - May 1, 2025 - 6:44pm
 
Museum of Iconic Album Covers - Proclivities - May 1, 2025 - 12:24pm
 
Regarding cats - Isabeau - May 1, 2025 - 12:11pm
 
When I need a Laugh I ... - Isabeau - May 1, 2025 - 10:37am
 
Index » Radio Paradise/General » General Discussion » Immigration Page: Previous  1, 2, 3 ... 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50  Next
Post to this Topic
kurtster

kurtster Avatar

Location: where fear is not a virtue
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 12:59pm

 oldslabsides wrote:
*bump*

 
oldslabsides wrote:

What does it say about us that we can't find enough of our own citizens willing to perform manual labor to harvest our own food?

 

 

Well one thing that is germane is that about 5 years ago we crossed the point where more people live in cities than in rural places.  The labor has moved away basically.
kurtster

kurtster Avatar

Location: where fear is not a virtue
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 12:51pm

 Proclivities wrote:

These illegal aliens are hired by American citizens who run construction companies and other businesses.  The lawsuit you mentioned was carried out against an employer, not against some Central American government.  I will agree that the presence of cheap labor, whether performed by legal or illegal workers, has often lowered, or, at least, stagnated the wages for tradesmen, but all of the jobs have not been "taken over" by illegals.  Arguably, someone who knowingly hires illegal workers is doing more harm than the illegal workers themselves.

 
Absolutely.  The job providers create the magnet that attracts these people.  Those that hire them need to be punished, severely.  That is one reason a real guest worker program is needed so badly.
Red_Dragon

Red_Dragon Avatar

Location: Gilead


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 12:48pm

 steeler wrote:


That we're lazy?

 
from you of all people, I was hoping for a somewhat more elaborate response.
kurtster

kurtster Avatar

Location: where fear is not a virtue
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 12:47pm

 aflanigan wrote:
You're generalizing from one specific example, which I'm afraid leads to a rather simplistic view of the issue.

Non-unionized workers may demand high pay if their skill is in demand and there are not enough other skilled workers to meet the demand.  When enough people in search of a living wage learn how to paint, that changes the supply/demand balance.

What you're saying is you want some form of "protectionism" similar to tarriffs, to keep wages artificially high.  Why don't we expand this to every walk of life?  No more baseball players from the Dominican Republic, for example.

Unionization is the historically established way for workers to exert economic leverage to protect themselves from the vagaries of the supply/demand fluctuations in job markets.  Your "keep em all out" protectionism scheme is not really viable.  Not only is it prohibitively expensive, but employers and the job applicants they seek can, will, and do find ways around these barriers, be they physical or legal.

 
Protectionism is equated to keeping tresspassers or someone illegal from working ?

Boy have you got things backwards. 

I would love to see our country adopt the same immigration laws as Mexico.
Proclivities

Proclivities Avatar

Location: Paris of the Piedmont
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 12:46pm

 kurtster wrote:

I'm saying that in California in particular, illegals have quarmed these formerly excellent paying non union construction jobs.  Carpentry, drywall, masonry and painting to name a few.  I'm married to a displaced California painter.  Her ex won a suit against a former employer over being replaced by illegals, via age discrimination. My father is a licensed architect for the state of California.  I have much first hand knowledge of this.

We are not talking about union jobs.  A good non union painter in SoCal made $35 per hour and up without being in a union.  Non union carpenters averaged $25 and up for years.  These jobs have been taken over by the illegals.  There are some RPeeps who have made similar comments to this effect over the years.

And let's call them what they are, illegal.  Undocumented is bs.  Either you're legal or you're not.  Sorry if the truth hurts anyone's feelings on this, not.

 
These illegal aliens are hired by American citizens who run construction companies and other businesses.  The lawsuit you mentioned was carried out against an employer, not against some Central American government.  I will agree that the presence of cheap labor, whether performed by legal or illegal workers, has often lowered, or, at least, stagnated the wages for tradesmen, but all of the jobs have not been "taken over" by illegals.  Arguably, someone who knowingly hires illegal workers is doing more harm than the illegal workers themselves.


kurtster

kurtster Avatar

Location: where fear is not a virtue
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 12:42pm

 islander wrote:

I used to be able to charge $75/hour for AutoCAD work. There weren't many people with the tools or skills to do the work and I was able to pick and chose not only the work but the customers. Times were good. Then ITT started graduating a lot of people with basic AutoCAD skills and Computers got cheaper. I had to drop my rates to stay competitive. Then the customers started deciding that if people would work cheap enough, they would be okay with lots of rework and oversight as long as they didn't have to pay more than about $15/hour. So I stopped doing that work and went back to school.

My competition wasn't illegal, but the lesson is similar. No one is guaranteed a wage for life. Things change, markets evolve and so must its players.

What people are willing to pay for food drives what the cost of production must be. The piece I linked to earlier showed farmers offering $160/day for workers and not being able to get any takers.  Illegal workers are just responding to a market condition that is ultimately driven by the customer.  Our government is the one who should be making policy that supports a safe and reasonable workplace, not structuring the competitive climate.

What you are seeing is the free market at work. 

 
No, what we are seeing is an influx of cheap illegal labor.  The reason the wages were high in the trades was due to the skill levels of jobs usually learned by the apprentice route.  Anyone can slap paint on a wall.  Anyone can hang drywall or butcher wood. But for a really pretty and well crafted job, it takes years to reach those levels.  I used to help out my wife on jobs when she was still able to work.  She had 25 years of experience painting professionally.  What I learned watching her was mindblowing.  The skills involved were of a high level, commanding  up to $75 hour depending on the types of finishes and treatments required and that is here in Cleveland, after leaving California, only 11 years ago.  She had also reached the level of a licensed general contractor in California, which requires much certification.  You get what you pay for.  Hire some illegals at $10 hour to do your painting, you can see the difference and it ain't pretty.

Your CAD argument is not valid to this point.  Your CAD argument is valid in the deliberate overtraining of skills at the college level to create an oversupply of skilled labor.  The Cleveland Clinic has done that here in town with the overtraining of medical administrators and technicians in an effort to lower labor costs.  They partnered with the local Community Colleges and set up aggressively recruited programs to create this over supply.  And it has worked, for the Clinic.

The whole purpose of legal immigration is to only admit people who have needed skills so as not to displace American workers and lower wages.  At least that was the original purpose.  We admit millions per year legally already.  These people are willing to do the right thing, abide by the law.  What we are doing with the illegals is a sucker punch in the gut of all here legally, including citizens.

And you want to pick apples ?  Pay em by the bushel, not by the hour or day.  You'll prolly find more people willing to do the labor.  Piece work is a thing of the past.
aflanigan

aflanigan Avatar

Location: At Sea
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 12:32pm

 kurtster wrote:

I'm saying that in California in particular, illegals have quarmed these formerly excellent paying non union construction jobs.  Carpentry, drywall, masonry and painting to name a few.  I'm married to a displaced California painter.  Her ex won a suit against a former employer over being replaced by illegals, via age discrimination. My father is a licensed architect for the state of California.  I have much first hand knowledge of this.

We are not talking about union jobs.  A good non union painter in SoCal made $35 per hour and up without being in a union.  Non union carpenters averaged $25 and up for years.  These jobs have been taken over by the illegals.  There are some RPeeps who have made similar comments to this effect over the years.

And let's call them what they are, illegal.  Undocumented is bs.  Either you're legal or you're not.  Sorry if the truth hurts anyone's feelings on this, not.

  You're generalizing from one specific example, which I'm afraid leads to a rather simplistic view of the issue.

Non-unionized workers may demand high pay if their skill is in demand and there are not enough other skilled workers to meet the demand.  When enough people in search of a living wage learn how to paint, that changes the supply/demand balance.

What you're saying is you want some form of "protectionism" similar to tarriffs, to keep wages artificially high.  Why don't we expand this to every walk of life?  No more baseball players from the Dominican Republic, for example.

Unionization is the historically established way for workers to exert economic leverage to protect themselves from the vagaries of the supply/demand fluctuations in job markets.  Your "keep em all out" protectionism scheme is not really viable.  Not only is it prohibitively expensive, but employers and the job applicants they seek can, will, and do find ways around these barriers, be they physical or legal.


steeler

steeler Avatar

Location: Perched on the precipice of the cauldron of truth


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 12:32pm

 oldslabsides wrote:
*bump*

 
oldslabsides wrote:

What does it say about us that we can't find enough of our own citizens willing to perform manual labor to harvest our own food?

 

 

That we're lazy?


Red_Dragon

Red_Dragon Avatar

Location: Gilead


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 12:23pm

*bump*

 
oldslabsides wrote:

What does it say about us that we can't find enough of our own citizens willing to perform manual labor to harvest our own food?

 


islander

islander Avatar

Location: West coast somewhere
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 12:22pm

 kurtster wrote:


kurtster wrote:


The primary reason wages are so low for illegals is because they are illegal.  Establishing a guest worker program will raise wages because once legal, the workers can demand more money because there is no one behind them who is illegal and can undercut them.  We can do this without amnesty and without a path to citizenship.  I have no problems with a guest worker program as long as those who do not sign up and are caught are deported.


 
We agree on the policy. I don't think it will impact wages much. I do think it will improve the overall situation just by virtue of having a reasonable set of enforceable rules.  I think illegal activities tend to be inherently inefficient, they appear efficient by skirting the rules and not paying for the services they use (actually driving up the cost of most enforcement programs).
islander

islander Avatar

Location: West coast somewhere
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 12:19pm

 kurtster wrote:

I'm saying that in California in particular, illegals have quarmed these formerly excellent paying non union construction jobs.  Carpentry, drywall, masonry and painting to name a few.  I'm married to a displaced California painter.  Her ex won a suit against a former employer over being replaced by illegals, via age discrimination. My father is a licensed architect for the state of California.  I have much first hand knowledge of this.

We are not talking about union jobs.  A good non union painter in SoCal made $35 per hour and up without being in a union.  Non union carpenters averaged $25 and up for years.  These jobs have been taken over by the illegals.  There are some RPeeps who have made similar comments to this effect over the years.

And let's call them what they are, illegal.  Undocumented is bs.  Either you're legal or you're not.  Sorry if the truth hurts anyone's feelings on this, not.

 
I used to be able to charge $75/hour for AutoCAD work. There weren't many people with the tools or skills to do the work and I was able to pick and chose not only the work but the customers. Times were good. Then ITT started graduating a lot of people with basic AutoCAD skills and Computers got cheaper. I had to drop my rates to stay competitive. Then the customers started deciding that if people would work cheap enough, they would be okay with lots of rework and oversight as long as they didn't have to pay more than about $15/hour. So I stopped doing that work and went back to school.

My competition wasn't illegal, but the lesson is similar. No one is guaranteed a wage for life. Things change, markets evolve and so must its players.

What people are willing to pay for food drives what the cost of production must be. The piece I linked to earlier showed farmers offering $160/day for workers and not being able to get any takers.  Illegal workers are just responding to a market condition that is ultimately driven by the customer.  Our government is the one who should be making policy that supports a safe and reasonable workplace, not structuring the competitive climate.

What you are seeing is the free market at work. 
kurtster

kurtster Avatar

Location: where fear is not a virtue
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 12:14pm

 islander wrote:
 
So where were all the workers that needed jobs?  This article is from last year. We are having the same debate in the state right now. "tough on immigration" policies have caused a shortage of farm workers here. The result hasn't been higher wages and more Americans back at work in the field. It has caused crops rotting in the fields, and ruin for farmers. So now that we know this isn't working, how about some reasonable discussion of a guest worker program?  Let's get people to come do work, then go back home without fear of being locked out of the country. Perhaps if we reduced the barrier to entry under acceptable circumstances and allowed more free movement across the borders we could have better compliance with the rules, fewer problems with illegals and more resources available to address the fewer trying to game the system and stay here improperly.

 

kurtster wrote:


The primary reason wages are so low for illegals is because they are illegal.  Establishing a guest worker program will raise wages because once legal, the workers can demand more money because there is no one behind them who is illegal and can undercut them.  We can do this without amnesty and without a path to citizenship.  I have no problems with a guest worker program as long as those who do not sign up and are caught are deported.

kurtster

kurtster Avatar

Location: where fear is not a virtue
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 12:10pm

 aflanigan wrote:

Are you sure you've identified the correct scapegoat on this issue?  Are you saying undocumented construction workers come into a unionized construction site and chase away all the unionized workers, scabbing their jobs forcing the construction company to pay them lower wages?  Or have "right to work" laws and other lobbying efforts on behalf of construction company owners eager to maximize profits created an environment where demand for unionized workers has dried up and demand for undocumented laborers willing to work for peanuts has increased?

 
I'm saying that in California in particular, illegals have quarmed these formerly excellent paying non union construction jobs.  Carpentry, drywall, masonry and painting to name a few.  I'm married to a displaced California painter.  Her ex won a suit against a former employer over being replaced by illegals, via age discrimination. My father is a licensed architect for the state of California.  I have much first hand knowledge of this.

We are not talking about union jobs.  A good non union painter in SoCal made $35 per hour and up without being in a union.  Non union carpenters averaged $25 and up for years.  These jobs have been taken over by the illegals.  There are some RPeeps who have made similar comments to this effect over the years.

And let's call them what they are, illegal.  Undocumented is bs.  Either you're legal or you're not.  Sorry if the truth hurts anyone's feelings on this, not.
aflanigan

aflanigan Avatar

Location: At Sea
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 9:56am

 mzpro5 wrote:

In addition each type of crop requires unique knowledge on how to pick/harvest that particular crop at a productive pace. Tomatoes are different than apples which are different t,Han lettuce, etc.

 
Shade tobacco pickers were required to pick a minimum of 100 bents a day (a bent is the distance between two of the array of poles that hold up the tent cloth that shades the tobacco from direct sunlight, approx. 33 feet apart).  That represents somewhere between thirty and forty thousand leaves a day, that had to be carefully picked (without bruising the leaf) and carefully stacked in pads of 6-12 leaves for a dragger to come by and pick up for the drying shed.  Some fast pickers were able to pick up to 200 bents a day (I never made it to 200, came close a few times).

There were essentially two techniques used to pick the leaves off the plant:  "fan" picking, or "butterfly".  In "fan" technique, you placed your palm on the top surface of the leaf while grabbing the stem with your thumb and pressing downward. In the "butterfly" technique, you placed your palms on the underside of the leaves and gently curled your fingers and thumb around the edges of the leaf until your hand almost closed around it, and snapped the leaf stem off the plant.  Slow pickers who were not likely to last the season would use the fan technique with one hand  and stack their leaves into a pad held in the other hand.  You had to take three leaves from each plant at a time (the rest were left for the next "pick" the following week). Fast pickers tended to favor the butterfly technique, and would pick nine to twelve leaves at a time (distributed in both hands) before combining them into a pad deposited on the ground for the draggers.  Do the math; in an eight hour day with half hour for lunch and two ten minute coffee breaks, you had 25 thousand seconds in your work day.  You also had down time moving from one row to the next, and riding a bus from one field to the next (pickers trying to make 200 bents would often run to their next row and would be the first ones off the bus at the new field).  So you had about a half a second or less to harvest each leaf.  If you spent more than one second on each plant, you'd never pick anywhere near the limit.

Edit:  This old photo shows boys performing the first "pick" of the season.  The plants were fairly short in early July, and you were not allowed to stand.  You had to scoot backwards down the row on your butt (but you had a lap to assemble your pad in).  They marked a line on your forearm 14 inches from your fingertips; any leaves shorter than that were discarded.


By the end of the day, these boys would have the hairs on their head stuck together with tobacco plant residue; their hands would be covered with a dark, gummy mixture of this residue and dirt.  Their clothing would also have a layer of this sticky substance on it.
sirdroseph

sirdroseph Avatar

Location: Not here, I tell you wat
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 9:32am

 oldslabsides wrote:

What does it say about us that we can't find enough of our own citizens willing to perform manual labor to harvest our own food?

 

That is actually a bigger issue than immigration IMO.{#Yes}
Red_Dragon

Red_Dragon Avatar

Location: Gilead


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 9:30am

 islander wrote:

No disagreement, that's why we need a guest worker program.

 
What does it say about us that we can't find enough of our own citizens willing to perform manual labor to harvest our own food?
islander

islander Avatar

Location: West coast somewhere
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 9:29am

 mzpro5 wrote:
Harvesting produce is extremely hard work and these days few Americans would stoop to do the work (pun intended). In addition each type of crop requires unique knowledge on how to pick/harvest that particular crop at a productive pace. Tomatoes are different than apples which are different t,Han lettuce, etc.

 
No disagreement, that's why we need a guest worker program.
sirdroseph

sirdroseph Avatar

Location: Not here, I tell you wat
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 9:28am

 kurtster wrote:

How about we pay our food harvesters a real working wage so that Americans might be willing to do the work.  I hear so much as to how everyone is willing to pay higher gas prices to keep demand down.  So how about we pay higher food prices to reflect a living wage for legal farm hands ?  When I was a kid, our crops were picked by Americans.  I picked fruit as a kid in the summer several times for extra money.

Ceasar Chavez who oganized the farm labor in California in the 60's did so for Americans not illegals.  Rememeber the California Table Grape Boycott ?

And what about the illegals who take away good paying construction trade jobs that used to pay on average $25 to $35 an hour and up away from Americans.  No one talks about that.

This is a lot more than just about farm labor.  They have stolen all the traditional entry level jobs from American youth.  If we deported all the illegals our unemployment problem would be solved.  Who do you want working ?  Americans or illegals ?

 

Yes, this statement is spectacularly incorrect!{#Eek}


mzpro5

mzpro5 Avatar

Location: Budda'spet, Hungry
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 9:25am

 islander wrote:
 
So where were all the workers that needed jobs?  This article is from last year. We are having the same debate in the state right now. "tough on immigration" policies have caused a shortage of farm workers here. The result hasn't been higher wages and more Americans back at work in the field. It has caused crops rotting in the fields, and ruin for farmers. So now that we know this isn't working, how about some reasonable discussion of a guest worker program?  Let's get people to come do work, then go back home without fear of being locked out of the country. Perhaps if we reduced the barrier to entry under acceptable circumstances and allowed more free movement across the borders we could have better compliance with the rules, fewer problems with illegals and more resources available to address the fewer trying to game the system and stay here improperly.

 



Harvesting produce is extremely hard work and these days few Americans would stoop to do the work (pun intended).

In addition each type of crop requires unique knowledge on how to pick/harvest that particular crop at a productive pace. Tomatoes are different than apples which are different t,Han lettuce, etc.


aflanigan

aflanigan Avatar

Location: At Sea
Gender: Male


Posted: Jun 26, 2012 - 9:22am


Page: Previous  1, 2, 3 ... 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50  Next

Warning: pg_close(): supplied resource is not a valid PostgreSQL link resource in /var/www/html/rp3.php on line 474