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Iowa Radio Host has interesting solution to ilegal immigration
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Quote:They used to be solid middle class work. Now they're "Steve" from Bangladesh.Phone support jobs were never middle class. In-person support jobs are, but those are pretty hard to outsource. There are lots of good examples for your argument, but this isn't one of them. I know a senior supervisor for a tech support company out here. He makes $17/hour after nine years with the company. Hardly a middle class income. We show less advertisements to registered users. Accounts are free; join today!
Quote:Phone support jobs were never middle class. In-person support jobs are, but those are pretty hard to outsource. There are lots of good examples for your argument, but this isn't one of them. I know a senior supervisor for a tech support company out here. He makes $17/hour after nine years with the company. Hardly a middle class income. That has been my experience as well. I don't work in a call center but the company I work for has one in the same complex. Most of the phone jobs pay 10-12 bucks an hour. I was surprised to find out the managers and senior managers had salaries on par with entry level positions in other areas. And alot of them work nights and weekend. Quote:I agree almost entirely. The way to stop illegal labor is to beef up e-Verify, fine the living crap out of companies that are using it improperly (or not at all), fine the living crap out of first-time offender companies that are caught employing illegal labor and build in penalties as high as being shut down (and criminal charges brought up against corporate officers) for habitual offenders. Again, well thought out. In all due respect, we have to secure the border first. Right now we are looking at nearly 3/4 of a million crimes committed by those in this country illegally in the state of Texas over the last 8 years. The first organizing principle of the federal government is to protect the citizens from all enemies foreign and domestic. Secondly, the point of an immigration policy in general, as an expression of the sovereignty of a nation, is to regulate the amount of people that come into a country. We can't have a carte blanche system by which all 6 billion of the worlds inhabitants can come to this country and compete against our citizens for jobs. We already have 93 million adults in this country that wake up and don't go to a job. At a certain point if the ratio of workers paying a high enough level of taxes to those drawing some form of benefit to the government becomes too low then you have greece. We should be talking about a moritorium on immigration period until the labor force participation rate normalizes. Third, the problem now is that we have too much undocumented cheap labor. A lower minimum wage for undocumenteds would just codify the current competitive advantage they have over american citizens. a.) its going to be hard to catch people employing people outside the system because they are already doing it and getting away with it. one of the inherent problems with an income tax as it currently exists is the level of inefficiency we have keeping up with the individual activities of 300 million people. And when you factor in the other overhead associated with legally hiring another person (like workmans comp, insurance, etc.) its more often than not cheaper to pay people cash. b.) e verify sounds great, but it would be handled by the same people that ran healthcare.gov into the ground. Then you would have people with a flower shop who couldn't get online facing fines and jail time for higher a gardener with a fake social security card. I think that what it would come down to is that after you secure the border (wall, fence, drone surveillance, whatever you choose) then and only then you would have the ability to deal with the people already here. The most common sense would be work permits for them in recognition that in large part their undocumented status devoid of rugged enforcement means that they are competing for jobs already and not paying into the system. On the employee side bump up their fica contributions and sur tax on income and call it a day. Mass deportation is going to be impossible with the 5th and 14th amendments and the sheer logistics, and incidentally i think this is the biggest political miscalculation that could keep Trump from the nomination. Quote:I see you've never needed technical support for anything.Jobs that pay squat and employ people who generally give you helpful advice like "turn it off and turn it back on" and "well I can't help you. let me send you a shipping label". Quote:Again, well thought out. In all due respect, we have to secure the border first. Right now we are looking at nearly 3/4 of a million crimes committed by those in this country illegally in the state of Texas over the last 8 years. The first organizing principle of the federal government is to protect the citizens from all enemies foreign and domestic.I hate quoting incredibly long posts, but I feel like I wouldn't be doing you justice here if I didn't. Regarding securing the border, I think the real answer is feet on the ground and a true dragnet of Border Patrol units stationed along the border itself (where practical) and at major, known "Rubicons" like Interstate 8 or Arizona Highway 86. How do you do that? Simple. Get rid of the "interior checkpoints" that do nothing but hassle American citizens. That'll free up a lot of money right there. Then take some of those funds that politicians want to throw at the fence and let the Border Patrol hire more agents at good salaries (to attract quality) and properly equip them for nighttime interdiction. That's how you secure the border, not pushing to finish an impossible fence. I will never support a moratorium on immigration, because that's about the most un-American immigration policy imaginable. What I would support is, again, a one-time deal with a guest worker program that would allow people who are already here to register, get ID, work for smaller companies (not Walmart) that need help, and stay in the US as long as they're employed. This program would not be a path to citizenship, nor would it allow a guest worker to bring their wife and three kids up to live with them. It would also not be an ongoing thing. It would be done once for anyone here illegally who chose to take part, then the doors are closed. If you enter the US the next day, too bad. Any immigrant here without a green card or a guest worker permit is deported and never welcome back, end of story. If you commit a misdemeanor or felony, you're deported after serving your time (or in lieu of serving your time) and never welcome back. That's not to say that the registration program couldn't be repeated if it's found to actually be helping the economy and the demand is clearly there, but there would have to be stipulations attached to the conditions for repeating it involving unemployment percentages in each state that takes part. If Arizona's at 10% unemployment, allowing illegal immigrants to come in and work the farms and ranches for sub-minimum wage just seems silly, doesn't it? As to point three, I think that it could be handled numerically. As mentioned above, if a state has 10% unemployment, forget it. If a state has 6% unemployment, but the majority of the open jobs are in low-wage sectors--i.e., the things Americans would rather take unemployment than do--then maybe they allow the first 25,000 illegal immigrants in that state who apply to stay in the country, assuming they find and maintain employment. That puts a very firm hold on things. There's a time deadline to go with a numerical deadline, and the numerical deadline is figured by demand. Consider that you probably wouldn't even get that many people to register--many illegal immigrants would be afraid that by giving information about who they are, where they're from and where they live, they're all but inviting INS to show up at their door. It's not like this would break the US workforce. If allowing a few thousand illegal immigrants to work at sub-minimum wage boosts small business production and the economy itself without displacing Americans, where's the harm? If it ends up displacing Americans or doesn't have the desired effect on the economy, hey, there's no need to ever do that again. That's the great thing about experiments. If they don't work, don't repeat them. I'm not advocating sending a gardener to jail because the website was down. Prison time would be reserved for only the most egregious offenses. Say Walmart is caught employing 5,000 illegal immigrants. They would pay a massive, massive fine (proportional to the amount they "saved" on labor by doing things illegally, with an additional penalty on top, maybe), and perhaps leadership in charge of staffing at the highest levels (EVP and C-level?) would be fined for negligence and given a very firm warning about what happens if there is a "next time". If the company gets caught again, then jail time is on the table for those in upper management who had oversight last time around. A gardener who gets caught once would face much more modest fines. If they persist in failing to verify (and hiring illegal immigrants as a result), then maybe jail time goes on the table after several violations, but I'm not saying just throw small business owners in prison left and right. Mass deportation would be all but impossible, but case-by-case deportation, made even easier by the fact that the person was given the opportunity to remain in the US legally just by getting a guest worker permit, would slowly stem the tide. Once the e-Verify regulations are in place and the problem of businesses hiring illegal immigrants is largely addressed, the illegal immigrants bringing their families north to find work will slowly stop doing so, and more and more of the people being chased down in the desert will be the drug smugglers and human traffickers that, imo, should be our number one priority anyway. We show less advertisements to registered users. Accounts are free; join today!
Securing the border is not going to be accomplished by boots on the ground, or walls, or drones or any other means to physically prevent the crossing. It's only going to be accomplished by eliminating the need for it to be crossed. These people crossing the border are trying to find jobs to make money to feed their families. We need to help Mexico, Nicaragua, Honduras, et. al. to build their infrastructure to support industrial and commercial growth and eliminate corrupt governments and drug cartels.
These countries are 3rd World countries because of government corruption intertwined with illegal activities. This is the problem with illegal immigration into the U.S. Stop the need to leave and you stop illegal immigration. Regards........................the Chiefjag
Quote:Securing the border is not going to be accomplished by boots on the ground, or walls, or drones or any other means to physically prevent the crossing. It's only going to be accomplished by eliminating the need for it to be crossed. These people crossing the border are trying to find jobs to make money to feed their families. We need to help Mexico, Nicaragua, Honduras, et. al. to build their infrastructure to support industrial and commercial growth and eliminate corrupt governments and drug cartels.Nice take. One nobody is really talking about. I like it. Quote:Securing the border is not going to be accomplished by boots on the ground, or walls, or drones or any other means to physically prevent the crossing. It's only going to be accomplished by eliminating the need for it to be crossed. These people crossing the border are trying to find jobs to make money to feed their families. We need to help Mexico, Nicaragua, Honduras, et. al. to build their infrastructure to support industrial and commercial growth and eliminate corrupt governments and drug cartels.That'd be a very tough sell, particularly as it relates to Mexico where the stigma (fair or unfair) is that every dollar of aid sent lands in the hands of the cartels. I think you'll have a very hard time selling Americans on the notion that the way to stop illegal immigration is to send money to the countries that people are immigrating from.
Quote:Securing the border is not going to be accomplished by boots on the ground, or walls, or drones or any other means to physically prevent the crossing. It's only going to be accomplished by eliminating the need for it to be crossed. These people crossing the border are trying to find jobs to make money to feed their families. We need to help Mexico, Nicaragua, Honduras, et. al. to build their infrastructure to support industrial and commercial growth and eliminate corrupt governments and drug cartels. I can agree in some aspects, but not all. While these countries could benefit from aid and help to make life better for their average citizens, that isn't the whole problem. Drug cartels more-or-less control those countries and the flow of illegal drugs across the border is a serious problem. There are 10 kinds of people in this world. Those who understand binary and those who don't. We show less advertisements to registered users. Accounts are free; join today!
There are many ways to help sans just sending money. Everybody here seems to be willing to spend the money on fences, or walls, or border patrol, or drones to stop what cannot be stopped anyway. Talk about idiocy!
It's not an easy task but we need those who possess enough foresight to see beyond just sending money. The impossible just takes a little longer. Regards.................the Chiefjag
To those saying fine the companies hiring illegals, that's exactly what is in place now.
Fines and possible jail time. Quote:I hate quoting incredibly long posts, but I feel like I wouldn't be doing you justice here if I didn't. I agree that those who wish to do our country harm should be our top priority. I just know from experience that most people already paying their people under the table (and getting paid themselves under the table by customers attracted to cheaper prices) aren't in a rush to all of a sudden incorporate an LLC and start paying the proper insurance, workman's comp and unemployment taxes that they aren't used to paying. There are a myriad of reasons that contribute to the shadow economy and I think that While E-verify is a common sense approach, i also know that there is a large cross section of the economy already catering to those who don't want their name on paper so to speak (be it immigration status or worse... Child support). I think that we can agree the border should be secure. We can agree to disagree about the means of securing the border but no plan is going to be effective if we are talking about this in twenty years. I think that the concept of basing our immigration plan on demand and math is beyond common sense. I would just argue that at current we have to recognize that the economic underpinnings of our current job market are soft at best and we should be bracing for a global slowdown. As for the people on unemployment who choose not to work... I get up every day and i go to work. Most of the time its not because its my calling in life or because i'm deeply fulfilled. It's because i have a wife, want a child and want to do it on my terms. There are plenty of people in this country and others that are true victims of circumstance and can't find work in their current plight. I think that someone who is able to work and doesn't want to because its just easier to sit home is part of the greater problem facing our society. We as a collective have a responsibility to help those in need (be it through public programs or private charities) but as individuals we also have a responsibility to be productive contributing members of our society and those who just skip out for convenience aren't holding up their part of the bargain (just to clarify those who can work and choose not to for convenience, not a jab at anyone simply for taking government assistance.) |
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