newbie11 said:
If they're so essential let them get work visas
When my company has work in Mexico the Mexican government requires them to have work Visas to work in Mexico. Strange concept
newbie11 said:
If they're so essential let them get work visas
Call it what you want but in the end you either fix it or embrace it.Ags4DaWin said:docb said:
It will be interesting to see where all of this ends up. I guess I really don't care that much but I think if US citizens were willing to put in the hard work then these "illegals" wouldn't be snatching up all these labor jobs. They are just filling a void. I think the bigger issue is what caused that void to begin with?
The 90's called and would like their political and economic philosophy back.
Rumpus said:
Thank you for the lecture on economics where you forgot about supply and demand.
What kind of poles are kept in a safe?CanyonAg77 said:Rumpus said:
Thank you for the lecture on economics where you forgot about supply and demand.
That was the vaulter guy, not me
And there is where you are so horribly wrong. We've imported over 10 million mostly low skilled workers (let's call it 7 just for kids and such) most who are legally allowed to work. First, they aren't going anywhere. Second, the same folks picking 4 years ago are likely still available in addition to the new labor. Supply of labor will catch up and come to work long before fruit rots.Rumpus said:
Well...he was very thorough in showing where the cost of a good comes from under existing market conditions. Where the example was purposefully dishonest was ignoring the supply/demand mechanics. Remember the cost of gasoline during the pandemic? It plummeted for a while because demand was reduced. A few percentage points of demand/supply mismatch usually mean huge price swings in the final goods cost. Another example would be toilette paper during the pandemic.
A 75% reduction in citrus supply (give or take) due to the fruit rotting on the trees because it's not picked would mean that the entire world would have less citrus to buy. The prices would adjust acordingly.
What is this 75% reduction in citrus supply? If based on the thread title and OP, that is wildly baseless.Rumpus said:
Well...he was very thorough in showing where the cost of a good comes from under existing market conditions. Where the example was purposefully dishonest was ignoring the supply/demand mechanics. Remember the cost of gasoline during the pandemic? It plummeted for a while because demand was reduced. A few percentage points of demand/supply mismatch usually mean huge price swings in the final goods cost. Another example would be toilette paper during the pandemic.
A 75% reduction in citrus supply (give or take) due to the fruit rotting on the trees because it's not picked would mean that the entire world would have less citrus to buy. The prices would adjust acordingly.
Good grief.Quote:
A 75% reduction in citrus supply (give or take) due to the fruit rotting on the trees because it's not picked would mean that the entire world would have less citrus to buy. The prices would adjust acordingly.
Somebody gets it. The pickers are easily frightened…..but will return in greater numbers.[/Obi-Wan voice]Quote:
Tom Homan laughs at the idea that in week 1 of Trump 2.0 the BP is focused on a citrus farm in the Central Valley that is likely picked by legal migrants and those on temporary migrant worker programs - but who fear that any interaction with officials is bad, given their lives of shakedowns and bribes they grew up with.
CanyonAg77 said:
I had a Hispanic roomate at A&M. U.S. Citizen. When he was in high school, he was working at his dad's feedlot in Eagle Pass. One day, all the workers started running like their hair was on fire. He didn't know why, but he figured he'd better run, too. A Border Patrol agent tackled him as he was climbing a fence.
Agent was pissed when he discovered he had tackled a citizen, not an illegal, and asked why he ran?
"Well, everyone else was…"
punkintrumpers said:
Looking forward to grocery prices skyrocketing!
Is that true? There are a lot of hispanics working farms all across the country. It is likely in the long run that it is easier to hire illegals than to go through the visa process. If most farm workers were H-2A there would be little grousing about the ability of farms to function without them. Have you been to a plant nursery lately? There are commonly mobil homes in the back that house their south of the border employees. I doubt this is all above board.Fins Up! said:
Most farm workers are H2A, so that means they are legal.
I'm not buying that mass deportations are going to disrupt agriculture.
JayM said:Is that true? There are a lot of hispanics working farms all across the country. It is likely in the long run that it is easier to hire illegals than to go through the visa process. If most farm workers were H-2A there would be little grousing about the ability of farms to function without them. Have you been to a plant nursery lately? There are commonly mobil homes in the back that house their south of the border employees. I doubt this is all above board.Fins Up! said:
Most farm workers are H2A, so that means they are legal.
I'm not buying that mass deportations are going to disrupt agriculture.
My house painters are hispanic and my lawn mowers also. Add my tree cutters and some roofers. As I think about it, we need to solve this immigrant thing because all those guys do good work.
No, I think what most of these folks are saying, particularly Dems, is that people of color who do menial labor are either here illegally or are former slaves who need to maintain plantation style subsistence in order to survive.CanyonAg77 said:
So all Hispanics are illegals?
I would have no problem replacing every able-bodied American who's lived their entire lives on Welfare with an illegal who can be shown to have been working for an employer and acting as responsible as any American citizen in their community.JayM said:Is that true? There are a lot of hispanics working farms all across the country. It is likely in the long run that it is easier to hire illegals than to go through the visa process. If most farm workers were H-2A there would be little grousing about the ability of farms to function without them. Have you been to a plant nursery lately? There are commonly mobil homes in the back that house their south of the border employees. I doubt this is all above board.Fins Up! said:
Most farm workers are H2A, so that means they are legal.
I'm not buying that mass deportations are going to disrupt agriculture.
My house painters are hispanic and my lawn mowers also. Add my tree cutters and some roofers. As I think about it, we need to solve this immigrant thing because all those guys do good work.
flown-the-coop said:No, I think what most of these folks are saying, particularly Dems, is that people of color who do menial labor are either here illegally or are former slaves who need to maintain plantation style subsistence in order to survive.CanyonAg77 said:
So all Hispanics are illegals?
Rational folks understand you cannot tell a person's legal status by their appearance and job.
The paperwork always checks out, and the employers know when they've had the same name and social work with them before, even though the new guy doesn't look anything like the other guy before.docb said:flown-the-coop said:No, I think what most of these folks are saying, particularly Dems, is that people of color who do menial labor are either here illegally or are former slaves who need to maintain plantation style subsistence in order to survive.CanyonAg77 said:
So all Hispanics are illegals?
Rational folks understand you cannot tell a person's legal status by their appearance and job.
It's more than most want to believe. We have family that owns a large dairy operation and employ several workers from various parts of Central America. Their paperwork checks out but they are not legal. Hard and dependable workers who are content with their job. They are lucky to have them.
Trying to honestly make sense of this. I understand the concept of phony documentation and that it ain't that hard to get it, but how would one know its fake as a dairy farm owner?docb said:
It's more than most want to believe. We have family that owns a large dairy operation and employ several workers from various parts of Central America. Their paperwork checks out but they are not legal. Hard and dependable workers who are content with their job. They are lucky to have them.
Your reminder that immigrants feed our nation. They're not stealing your jobs and deserve respect and dignity for the service they provide to us. Really impressed with this insightful explanation by @OwyheeProduce. pic.twitter.com/M257GTherJ
— John Ryan E (@RyanElward) August 11, 2024
docb said:
Maybe we need to just make it easier to become citizens. I'm all for bringing in folks who want to work hard.
Bondag said:docb said:
Maybe we need to just make it easier to become citizens. I'm all for bringing in folks who want to work hard.
Maybe we need to quit paying people not to work and get them in the field.
docb said:
Maybe we need to just make it easier to become citizens. I'm all for bringing in folks who want to work hard.
docb said:Bondag said:docb said:
Maybe we need to just make it easier to become citizens. I'm all for bringing in folks who want to work hard.
Maybe we need to quit paying people not to work and get them in the field.
Yea right. Those lazy ****s are going to work hard. Lol.
Bondag said:docb said:
Maybe we need to just make it easier to become citizens. I'm all for bringing in folks who want to work hard.
Maybe we need to quit paying people not to work and get them in the field.