by Twilight » Sun 29 Jul 2007, 12:55:49
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tyler_JC', 'A')nd based on my skills, I don't see cheap Mexican manual labor as a threat to my economic well-being either.
I'm sorry, I just don't see where the big threat is coming from.
Much of the fear may be coming from those who instinctively know that they are less able to adapt than others. Socially and economically immobile people who have a lot to lose from a change in the status quo in any direction, not just a particular one. This is one of the reasons close ties with the EU are such an unpopular prospect in the UK, a lot of people have a gut feeling that they have just one thing to offer (eg bricklaying), cannot easily adapt (eg limited education, limited awareness of world) and fear that the EU could displace them from their niche with no effort (which for some it could).
Those who thrive in a dynamic, volatile marketplace are probably already well-adapted for such change, and are probably confident they understand what is on offer. Many will not, especially at the bottom of the economic heap.
Though don't interpret that as unconditional sympathy, the experience of recent years shows that a Polish worker > a British worker, too much laziness and sense of entitlement out there, in some industries I wish we could do a like-for-like swap.