Originally posted by: Socio
Originally posted by: Excelsior
You totally missed most of my post didn't you (also note I never said that they were a value, it was only directed at the person I quoted). I absolutely guarantee you that someone else just like you was spouting the same sh!t ~100 years ago about the huge numbers of low-wage, low-skilled immigrants coming into the country.
And your numbers are completely out of whack. Mind posting where you got them from? Or is your source complete bollocks as I suspect.
You can't honestly believe that. Sure the business owners profit extremely from it, I won't disagree, but to say that it doesn't benefit the average American is a load of sh!t. They cut lawns for cheaper, they build houses faster (and just as well), they clean houses cheaper....etc, etc. All of this directly benefits the American.
Edit: I forgot to mention that everyone ranting about "Best of the best! We can only let those in who have 4 year degrees at a minumum" is fracking retarded. This country was BUILT by people who were not highly educated and didn't make much money. They just worked hard. Imagine that.
The numbers are not ?bollocks ?and you do not need a source as it is not that hard to figure out;
Low wage worker head of households qualify for $10,000 a year in welfare benefits, he also qualifies for HUD Section 8 Housing Assistance Payments, free (no deductible, no co-pay) health care, subsidized high energy bills and utilities, Food stamps, his kids get free education, free breakfasts and lunches at school, his kids also require "at extra cost? bilingual teachers, classes and books. There is probably a lot more I am missing but as you can see it adds up to easily being $17,000 to $19,000 a year and that is pretty conservative. Then you tack on the free Earned Income Tax Credit and their net salary and they pocket about an average of $35,000 a year in cash & benefits.
As far as needing best of the best that is exactly what we really only need.
With children of illegal/legal south of the border immigrants having the highest drop out rate and lowest college attendance rate in the nation we already have a perpetual cycle of low wage workers with a 3.4% growth rate what we will be short on is highly educated skilled workers.
I do not need a source? Are you mad? You can't just post statistics and claim they are fact without providing a trustworthy source. This is simple.
And this sh!t you keep posting, please, post a link where you're getting it from. I'd like to know. How can an undocumented, illegal immigrant family qualify or get any of the crap you just listed in that paragraph?
Lowest college attendance rate in the nation? Gee, I wonder why? Maybe it is because for the most part they are not allowed to go to school if they're illegal. Also because it is expensive for anyone to go to school, and many have to get loans, but how is an illegal immigrant going to get a student loan from anywhere especially the government?
That and believe it or not, there is a language barrier. This affects ANY immigrants ability to succeed in school. This generation is no different than the past when German, Spanish, Italian, Swedish, Polish, and whoever else came in not knowing the least bit of English. Many of them came through Ellis island you know, and they needed an interpreter just to make it through the naturalization process. The difference then is that the Government didn't cater to these people by putting different languages on all of the public signs. The immigrants just got by and learned english the best they could. And guess what? Their offspring learned it from the get-go. It only takes one generation.
And again, no, "the best of the best" isn't exactly the only thing we need. If it was, the millions of "low skilled" immigrants working here today wouldn't have a job. There is obviously a place for them in the economy. Anyone who can't see that is blind.
Read this:
http://library.thinkquest.org/20619/Irish.html
Emigrating to the U.S. wasn't the magical solution for most of the immigrants. Peasants arrived without resources, or capital to start farms or businesses. Few of them ever accumulated the resources to make any meaningful choice about their way of life. Fortunately for them, the expansion of the American economy created heavy demands for muscle grunt. The great canals, which were the first links in the national transportation system were still being dug in the 1820s and 1830s, and in the time between 1830 and 1880, thousands of miles of rail were being laid. With no bulldozers existing at the time, the pick and the shovel were the only earth-moving equipment at the time. And the Irish laborers were the mainstay of the construction gangs that did this grueling work. In towns along the sites of work, groups of Irish formed their small communities to live in. By the middle of the nineteenth century, as American cities were undergoing rapid growth and beginning to develop an infrastructure and creating the governmental machinery and personnel necessary to run it, the Irish and their children got their first foothold- on the ground floor. Irish policemen and firemen are not just stereotypes: Irish all but monopolized those jobs when they were being created in the post-Civil War years, and even today Irish names are clearly over-represented in those occupations (Daniels, 1990). Irish workmen not only began laying the horsecar and streetcar tracks, but were some of the first drivers and conductors. The first generations worked largely at unskilled and semiskilled occupations, but their children found themselves working at increasingly skilled trades. By 1900, when Irish American mend made up about a thirteenth of the male labor force, they were almost a third of the plumbers, steamfitters, and boilermakers. Industry working Irish soon found themselves lifted up into boss and straw-boss positions as common laborers more and more arrived from southern and eastern Europe- Italians, Slavs, and Hungarians.
And another:
http://library.thinkquest.org/20619/Italian.html
In the U.S. where the abundance of cheap land could no longer be found, the mostly agricultural Italians in Italy, became mostly urban. Starting from the bottom of the occupational ladder working up, they worked jobs such as shoe shinning, ragpicking, sewer cleaning, and whatever hard, dirty, dangerous jobs others didn't want. Even children worked at an early age, as in Italy, even at the expense of their educations. The Italians were known for rarely accepting charity or resorting to prostitution for money, another reflection of patterns in Italy.
The living conditions for the Italians tended to be over crowded and filthy all over the U.S.. Italian laborers also tended to skimp on food in a desperate attempt to save money. However, after time and new generations of Italians, the dirtiness of their homes disappeared along with the complaint of weak Italians from lack of nutrition.
The Italians were noted for their diligence and sobriety as workmen. In the late 19th and 20th centuries, Italians often became fishermen, shoemakers, waiters, fruit sellers, and tradesmen. Most were unskilled laborers though, working in mines and construction jobs. Over the years, the Italians rose up the economic scale but acquiring job skills in blue-collar job rather than by becoming educated and entering that profession.
Can you people not see that history is repeating itself? The PRIMARY difference being that the large numbers of "low skilled poor immigrants" that came in the past were legal. That is all. They were just as poor, just as "low skilled", and just as discriminated/looked down on (if not more so) as these Hispanic immigrants are today.
We just didn't call them illegal because we naturalized them. Then Immigration "reform" began, leading up to the problem today, where we have millions of undocumented "illegal" immigrants. Instead of reforming the screwed up system and actually making legal immigration a much more feasible prospect, we turned a blind eye to the border.
I don't know about you lot, but I'd much rather have had an "Ellis Island" or two on the border to help facilitate legal immigration for the millions that have come here rather than ignoring them then trying to face the problem years later (which is exactly what we've done). By doing so we could have drastically limited the number of illegal immigrants and the ones "jumping the fence".