by Oneaboveall » Thu 10 Jul 2014, 14:49:40
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sixstrings', 'T')o try to tie together my very much conflicting views I've just expressed,

:
1. Elites always use "the little people" issues, for other ends. That goes for right wing populism, but also left wing too -- a Hillary Clinton is too busy feeling poor compared to her hedge fund friends, to ever really fight for a living wage. That minimum wage should be double what it is, just to make up for 30+ years of inflation.
Would be good for the economy too. It's what is needed -- to get money into workers' hands, people that have jobs, it's better than just having a poor country or gov sending checks out. Have jobs pay a living wage again, for the working class.
They would go spend that money patronizing local businesses, and voila, you've got real economic recovery.
Democrats USE the issue, but never really do anything about it, now do they? It's the same as right wing elites that just use the immigration issue, but aren't really interested in fixing it.
Limousine liberals and Koch brothers, riding in the same limo, to the same opera, funded by the same hedge funds and billionaires. They have their world and we have our world, and they just use us for fights amongst themselves.
I'm going to sound like a right-winger when I say this, but It needs to be said. Those same limousine liberals are going to pay lip service to how we should take care of these kids, but it's not going to be their neighborhoods that are going to take these kids and bear the brunt of immigration. It's going to be working class/poor people that are going to see their neighborhoods change.
I remember seeing an episode of Donahue back in the 80s where they were discussing an integration crisis in which a poor white community was going nuts because black dudes were being shipped in. During the show, Phil made a good point that moving people from poor black projects to poor white trailer parks doesn't really solve anything. He then said that moving them to better areas might be better (in his opinion) have a positive affect, but
"I guess, if you're rich enough, you don't have to be integrated". The same thing could be said about immigration. I'm all for immigration as long as they don't show up in my neighborhood.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sixstrings', '2'). Being "anti-immigrant" can get ugly real fast and before you know it you're like some right wing hateful nut about it.
You just need some common sense policies. Truth is, we've needed more Mexican immigration than the paltry amount the law allows. That law isn't even enforced, nobody comes in legally, they just walk over the border.
The border does need controlled. Generally, immigration is always good it builds the economy up, but there's just a line there where it's getting to be too much. In total, we've had too much Mexican and central American immigration. It's starting to overwhelm, it's not enough time for assimilation which takes a 2nd generation. You gotta have a breather now and then, a big wave then a second generation, it can't just be wave after wave.
Real economy is still bad right now. I know that rationally, immigration has always wound up good, but OTOH I can't help thinking we're turning into a Mexico ourselves and we're just going to be a messed up South American country ourselves. It's just been too much. Too much immigration, from one place, and people that come in without a nickel on them.
Others come in here with some savings, and they start a business or something. Or they have an education and get right to work (when my mom was in the hospital, it was like the United Nations in there with doctors from around the world. India, Poland, South America).
I guess I'm mixed up on my views, but I KNOW for sure that I wouldn't want to see my country become Mexico. Mexico has some great things about it, but overall, it's a messed up place and I don't want that here. If I wanted to live in Mexico I'd move to Mexico. I'm talking about: all the drug cartels, and all the horrible 3rd world poverty, and the cartels owning the local and federal politicans.
And all the south america stuff that goes on down there, like Columbia with judges getting hit jobs and all that.
If we take too many Mexicans in without time for them to assimilate then don't we run the risk of that happening, here? It looks like it's happening, with these cartels crossing over now.
Secondly, we need to lift up working class wages over here. And I guess that would attract even more immigrants. Well, if it got to be too much then finally build that wall on the border -- which, honestly, should have been done already a long time ago. Globalists thought NAFTA would solve the problem, but it didn't.
I suppose the bottom line on it all is that we've had *too much* working class immigrants coming in. You actually need a bit of a labor shortage to get wages moving upward, and then after that you want to maintain growth without too many flooding in again to depress wages again. And then on top of that, we just shipped so many jobs off with NAFTA and all the trade deals.The world has billions of people. We can't take them all in, coming over without a nickel on them. Immigrants are good for growth, but there's a limit to what we can take in without looking like the 3rd world ourselves, you know?
One of the things that bugs me about this board is the almost constant (though at times justified) criticism aimed at middle class white Americans, while completely ignoring the actions those in the third world. I'm sorry, but it's not the white middle class that are breeding like tribbles and having kids they can't take care of, birth rates among whites have dropped. I also don't think you're doing the people of El Salvador/Honduras/Guatemala a favor by letting their elite export their population to the US instead of addressing the country's problems. Our oligarchs also love this because it floods the labor market lowers wages.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '.')..on the southwestern US border, authorities are “at a loss” to explain the explosion of undocumented Central American (including EL SALVADOR) children attempting to enter the country.
The only reasonable conclusion is that plans to create a less educated, more subservient and dependent US population, with lowered expectations and less respect for and knowledge of the “Constitution,” are underway. And proceeding as anticipated.