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03-13-2009, 12:48 PM #1
Commentary: Immigrants didn't cause your problems
This will get your blood boiling...
SAN DIEGO, California (CNN) -- Here's the good news: Authorities say that fewer illegal immigrants are crossing the U.S.-Mexican border. The Los Angeles Times recently reported that arrests along the U.S.-Mexico border in the last five months are down 24 percent from the same period last year.
At the current rate, the level of apprehension this year could be the lowest since 1975.
A big reason is the frightful U.S. economy. After all, you don't often see people trying to break into a house when the house is on fire. Some illegal immigrants are even going home to Mexico.
But here's the bad news: There are still plenty of illegal immigrants in the United States who have families here, and they aren't leaving. And apparently those who are here are, because of the bad economy, more threatening than ever to those low-skilled U.S. workers who have to compete with them.
And now this issue has become part of the debate over the economic stimulus law recently signed by President Obama. Researchers at The Heritage Foundation and the Center for Immigration Studies (which favors limiting all immigration, even the legal kind) estimate that illegal immigrants could fill as many as 300,000 construction jobs. That's about 15 percent of the 2 million jobs that new taxpayer-financed projects are expected to create.
Advocacy groups say there is no way to predict how many jobs might go to illegal immigrants.
No matter. The topic is grist for talk radio and those blood-pressure-raising curmudgeons on cable TV. Why, they ask, should American tax dollars go to illegal immigrants? As if illegal immigrants don't pay taxes. They do -- sales taxes, property taxes, even income taxes thanks to something called an ITIN (Individual Taxpayer Identification Number), which Uncle Sam helpfully created to allow those who don't have valid Social Security numbers to still dread April 15.
Conservatives are miffed that Congress ignored their pleas to require employers who compete for stimulus funds to use the E-verify program. Run by the Department of Homeland Security, that program lets those employers who choose to participate verify the validity of Social Security numbers provided by new hires.
But the E-verify system needs to have its own accuracy verified. According to the Wall Street Journal, in 2007, DHS commissioned an independent study of the program, which found that "the database used for verification is still not sufficiently up to date to meet the requirements for accurate verification." The error rate was almost 10 percent. Someone using a valid Social Security card that doesn't belong to him would go undetected. Oh, is that all?
I understand that there is a larger issue here. As I've said for the last 15 years of writing about immigration, those who hire illegal immigrants should be prosecuted and jailed. But, in those cases where illegal immigrants squeak by and wind up on the job, U.S. workers have to compete with them, like it or not.
And that brings me to what really bothers me about this controversy. It's a sad state of affairs when people who were born in this, the freest and most prosperous country on Earth -- instantly becoming U.S. citizens, no less -- with a free education and every other opportunity to improve their lives find themselves afraid to compete with a group of people who don't have legal status, often can't speak English, and usually have no more than a 6th-grade education.
My fellow Americans, stop your trembling. Show some dignity. If you don't like competing with illegal immigrants, try making better choices. Stop feeling sorry for yourself. Turn off those TV shows that constantly bash globalization and immigration.
Go back to school. Get more training. Move out of the comfort zone of your hometown to take a job in another state, if necessary. Take responsibility for your own life. And stop thinking the world owes you a living.
That was the "tough love" message I shared with the construction worker who called into a Las Vegas, Nevada, radio show about a year ago to complain that construction firms on the Strip were paying the same wage they were 20 years earlier. The caller blamed illegal immigrants, who he said were keeping wages low.
It's interesting that he didn't blame the companies that employed the firms, or the firms themselves. And of course, he never thought to look in the mirror and blame himself for not taking steps to improve his skills in the last 20 years. Maybe he could have gone into a different line of work long ago. He decided not to.
I suppose illegal immigrants were to blame for that, too.
http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/03/13/ ... index.html
Let's all tell Ruben what we think of his article
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/op-e ... index.htmlavatar:*912 March in DC
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03-13-2009, 01:05 PM #2Go back to school. Get more training. Move out of the comfort zone of your hometown to take a job in another state, if necessary. Take responsibility for your own life. And stop thinking the world owes you a living.Work Harder Millions on Welfare Depend on You!
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03-13-2009, 01:10 PM #3
This is the same tripe that was shoved at us white collar workers. How can you compete with someone who is willing and ready to work for pay so low you can't live on it? That happened to us in the IT industry (and is still going on). Some talking points:
1. Why should working class Americans have to move aside because illegals move in? If I entered a country illegally, I would not feel aggrieved if they caught me and threw me out - I'd expect it. I'd consider them to be within their rights. Why does that not apply to our illegals? Where are they getting this sense of entitlement?
2. Why do supporters of illegal immigration criticise and blame Americans all the time? All the Americans did was follow the rules of the country they were born in, only to be displaced by opportunistic illegal immigrants. Why does that imply that the fault lies with the citizens? Why are the citizens always being accused of harboring defects, such as cowardice to compete and lack of willingness to retrain and flexibility? Why are the burdens on the citizens instead of the illegals?
3. The world may not owe us a living (and Americans NEVER made that claim), but aren't legal citizens owed preference for jobs in their own land? You bet they are - and to say that Americans feel an unjustified sense of entitlement to a living is a classic straw man argument. Americans ARE owed protection in their own sovereign nation from harmful foreign actions. What else is illegal immigration.
Those of us in IT have been having this crud slung at us for about a decade.Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)
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03-13-2009, 01:50 PM #4
Why spend time retraining for a different career when you already have knowledge and experience in your present one?
"Men of low degree are vanity, Men of high degree are a lie. " David
Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)
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03-13-2009, 01:52 PM #5
The problem with this article is that it is theoretical. It is easy to tell someone to just suck it up. But if you are competing with illegals for a job that pays $10 an hour and you don't get that job than you just got screwed. And the same thing is true with just about everything else you have to compete for like higher education, success in business etc. Can you imagine how it must feel to lose your life savings in business because you were forced out of business by illegals who work for next to nothing?That happens every day in the U S.
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03-13-2009, 02:31 PM #6
Duplicate. Please post any further comments to:
http://www.alipac.us/ftopict-149538.htmlSupport our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn
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