QUOTE=joab;2685733
Sprout,
Okay, if there are 1,499,500 Mexicans without work now due to NAFTA, then why are there 10-12 estimated illegal mexican immigrants in the US? The numbers are still not adding up for me to believe that I must be in an underpaid job, competing on an unfair field so that an “illegal” can feed his family.
How is it you are in an underpaid job competing on an unfair field? The 1.5 million displaced were
peasant farmers. This was back in the early nineties. In Mexico and Central America to be a peasant farmer means no education for the most part i.e. little or no ability to read or write even in their native language, little or no ability at math. Are you saying someone with little or no ability to read, write, do math, or speak English is forcing you to take an underpaid job?
Unless you are picking strawberries for a living, cleaning bathrooms, doing dishes, or mowing lawns I seriously doubt that’s the case. You seem quite astute at the written word and quite able to do much better for yourself.
If the US Gov’t can’t
afford to, or
doesn’t have the means to, provide for more than 5000 legal “unskilled workers” to *legally come to this country *to work, how is it then that the US Gov’t can and does “afford” and “has the means” and “is able” to the tune of 10-12 million workers to come here and work
without legal documentation?
Do you not realize that it is because employers “invite” them here, “offer” them jobs that they come? Do you not realize that if they were given “legal” access then employers woud not be able to underpay them the way they are doing now? It’s the very “illegality” that increases employers profits and US profits.
Wouldn’t it make sense, then, to remove these employers ability to pay lower wages by giving these people “legal” avenues whereby they can demand a fair wage?
Here are a few answers to commonly held myths:
Immigrants send all their money back to their home countries
In addition to the consumer spending of immigrant households, immigrants and their businesses contribute $162 billion in tax revenue to U.S. federal, state, and local governments. While it is true that immigrants remit billions of dollars a year to their home countries, this is one of the most targeted and effective forms of direct foreign investment. (Source:
cato.org/research/articles/griswold-020218.html.)
Immigrants take jobs and opportunity away from Americans
The largest wave of immigration to the U.S. since the early 1900s coincided with our lowest national unemployment rate and fastest economic growth. Immigrant entrepreneurs create jobs for U.S. and foreign workers, and foreign-born students allow many U.S. graduate programs to keep their doors open. While there has been no comprehensive study done of immigrant-owned businesses, we have countless examples: in Silicon Valley, companies begun by Chinese and Indian immigrants generated more than $19.5 billion in sales and nearly 73,000 jobs in 2000. (Source: Richard Vedder, Lowell Gallaway, and Stephen Moore, Immigration and Unemployment: New Evidence, Alexis de Tocqueville Institution, Arlington, VA (Mar. 1994), p. 13.
for more answers to common myths you can visit
justiceforimmigrants.org/myths.html
QUOTE=joab;2685733…I do know that the people who are emigrating here from places like Somolia, I have had no trouble with. In fact, I work with several of them and respect what they went through to get here and how they are working for what they have.
I see, so you only have trouble with Mexicans who come here. :tsktsk: