by Ibon » Mon 07 May 2018, 08:35:57
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jedrider', '
')
Ibon, wages are low in central america for the middle class because they can hire even cheaper labor as you explain. Cheap labor usually benefits the owner class the most. Every benefit that we have seems to originate in cheaper labor from elsewhere, whether immigrant or in the factories of China.
This is true. Even if we run out of sources like Bangladesh to perpetuate this it will not go away because within every national border you will still have an emerging young generation entering the work force starting at the bottom. Varying levels of intelligence, ambition, experience, etc. within any culture creates a weeding out where some members rise from lower wage status to excel to privileged positions while others stagnate for decades in more menial wages.
I will continue to play devils advocate and ramble a bit:
My last couple of posts was more about pointing out the difference in hunger and determination that you see inherent in most recent immigrants compared to the complacency of the existing established population.
An immigrant starts with a clean slate and has no status or privilege to preserve. Just raw hunger to advance. Compare this to say a generation emerging whose parents had higher wages and better standard of living like we see in different sectors of the economy in the USA today. There is an important differential here, one can almost say that the immigrant has an unfair advantage!
It was this unfair advantage that made America the great nation that it is, all these immigrants arriving with no expectations to preserve, only an unbridled and unburdened hunger to integrate and advance.
This is related to something else we all can recognize regarding the engine that deprivation creates. A poor person who climbs out of poverty to become wealthy goes on to have children. He or she wants to give their child all the toys and experiences that he himself was deprived of as a child. The child grows up and inherits the wealth of their parents, the privileged status, works perhaps in the firm his parents founded. And invariably, more often than not, the enterprise flounders or declines.
How many children of the privileged with all their advantages end up being losers?
What applies to individuals applies to the collective culture as well. In America several generations of being at the top of the worlds economic ladder has produced a collective culture full of entitlements, privilege, expectations, a sense of deserving the superior position we have enjoyed. When you bring in a young immigrant full of piss and vinegar, no wonder the established population feels threatened.
literally hundreds of millions of Chinese within one generation have left agrarian poverty behind as they collectively share this same hunger and appetite to advance. No wonder this nation is emerging in this century.
This dynamic of deprivation and ambition seems to underscore something fundamental. No pain no gain. No hunger, no ambition.
Satiated for several generations without experiencing the honing affect of deprivation has made the USA a spiritually impoverished nation.
And we want to cut off the fresh blood on new hungry immigrants.
Patiently awaiting the pathogens. Our resiliency resembles an invasive weed. We are the Kudzu Ape
blog: http://blog.mounttotumas.com/
website: http://www.mounttotumas.com