FINISHING AMERICA OFF: THE FOREIGN INVASION
FOR “CHEAP” LABOR
Open the floodgates of our welfare state to the
uneducated, impoverished, and unskilled masses of the world and in a generation
or three America, as we know it, will be gone. JOHN BINDER
But many less-skilled migrants play their
largest role by simply shifting small slices of wealth from person to person,
for example, by competing up rents in their neighborhood or by competing down
wages in their workplace. The crudest examples can be seen in agriculture.
Overall, the Washington-imposed economic policy of economic growth
via immigration shifts wealth from young people towards older people by flooding the market with cheap white-collar and blue-collar foreign
labor .
CALIFORNIA UNDER THE
DEMOCRATS: Worst Lower Education System in the Nation!
"California’s
public education system, once the envy of the world, now ranks 49th in the
nation." ROBERT
J. CRISTANO, Ph.D
"The public schools
indoctrinate their young charges to hate this country and the rule of
law. Illegal aliens continue overwhelming the state, draining
California’s already depleted public services while endangering our lives,
the rule of law, and public safety for all citizens."
IMMIGRATION AS ECONOMIC WAR ON THE AMERICAN MIDDLE-CLASS.
However, the dominant
force in American politics for the last two decades has been economic warfare
against American citizens.
This
economic warfare has two primary
components; the use of government to
economically favor one group over another;
and the collusion of immigrant groups to
economically inhibit Americans who oppose
replacement migration. JOSHUA FOXWORTH
Jeff
Sessions: Let Americans Work and Earn — Halt Foreign Worker Visas Now
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3:48
When the worst of the pandemic ends,
tens of millions of Americans will be out of work. While the fundamentals of
the Trump economy are strong, the rebound will take some time. As the economy
comes back to life, we must put Americans, not foreign workers, first.
Americans
deserve every opportunity to find good-paying jobs, especially in tough times.
I am proposing that the federal government end all employment-based immigration
until we recover. We must pause new work-based immigration visas until the
economy reaches its pre-pandemic unemployment rate of 3.5 percent.
Our
guest worker programs can make sense when there is a real shortage of workers
to do temporary work. But the government’s primary duty is to our citizens, not
foreign nationals. This crisis is not the time to import more foreigners when
millions of Americans are itching to get back to work. Indeed, in a very real
sense, there are no available jobs in America. More than 22 million Americans
have filed for unemployment in the past few weeks.
Work
means dignity. Americans find purpose in their jobs, and the value they help
create. That purpose drives our communities. That honest income gives them the
means to provide for their families and support local businesses, charities,
and churches.
Conversely,
making it harder for Americans to reenter gainful employment after this
pandemic may reduce the likelihood of their ever reentering the workforce,
causing them to rely on government assistance. Government assistance is no
substitute for the benefits of honest, hard work.
When
we bring in foreigners to work, we are really offering them the right to take
one of a limited number of jobs in a recovering economy, taking jobs that would
otherwise go to unemployed Americans.
As
Harvard economics professor George Borjas explains , this hits
the working class the hardest: “When the supply of workers goes up, the price
that firms have to pay to hire workers goes down… immigrants admitted in the
past two decades lacking a high school diploma have increased the size of the
low-skilled workforce by roughly 25 percent. As a result, the earnings of this
particularly vulnerable group dropped by between $800 and $1,500 each year.”
And
this affects high-skilled and middle-income workers too. In recent years, big
companies like Disney, AT&T, and Bank of America have abused these
employment visa programs to replace American workers with cheaper foreign
labor. Some of these companies even made their American workers train their
foreign replacements as a condition of receiving severance.
Now,
while joblessness and pay cuts impact more
than 4 in 10 American workers, the special interests haven’t stopped clamoring
for more foreign labor. It is morally outrageous and economic insanity.
Every
year, the United States gives more
than 1.4 million “temporary” visas to foreign workers, and that doesn’t even
include the millions of illegal aliens who work off the books. President Trump
has done great work to strenuously enforce our laws against illegal
immigration, but he needs more support to continue his progress protecting the
American worker.
Our
small business assistance program has a strong focus on protecting the jobs of
Americans. Importing workers from abroad to take the few jobs being created
makes no sense whatsoever. We need an immediate end to the importation of more
foreign workers. This pandemic may have knocked America on its back, but we
will get back up and be stronger than ever. In the meantime, we need to give
struggling Americans a fighting chance.
Jeff Sessions
was the 84th Attorney General of the United States and previously served as the
United States Senator for Alabama.
THERE WILL NOT BE A 'DEPRESSION' FOR TRUMP'S WALL STREET
CRONIES!
Rush
Limbaugh: ‘We Are Headed to Great Depression’ with ‘Democrats Fully on Board’
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A
clearly astonished Rush Limbaugh warned his listeners Thursday that America is
headed for another Great Depression if the economy contracts any further due to
shutdowns in response to the coronavirus crisis.
“All we need is a 30 to 40% contraction in
this economy,” the conservative radio host asserted. “We’ll hit Great Recession
territory first and then depression, if this doesn’t stop — and the idea that
there are people advocating for this!”
Limbaugh stressed Americans need to know
this path to depression could begin a reversal immediately, but that “there are
forces arrayed against doing that”:
We know who they are. We know exactly. We
know they’re all Democrats. We know they are some in the health and medical
community.
…
The Drive-By Media, the media, and the
Democrats are fully on board with the Democrat agenda here … They are hoping
that coronavirus accomplishes what Robert Mueller and impeachment, Adam Schiff
failed to do.
Limbaugh, who was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by
President Donald Trump during the State of the Union address in February, told
his audience Americans are “doing this to ourselves – and it’s amazing how
quickly!”
He said:
Three years to revive an economy, create
roaring circumstances. It took less than two months to wipe it all out.
Twenty-two million people filing for unemployment compensation — 22 million —
and the idea that there is not an angry outcry from all over the world that
this must stop?
That outcry had better happen, because
this… We’re beyond now saying this is unsustainable. This is untenable! This is
cataclysmic! We’re in the midst of a self-created disaster that we could fix
(snap, snap, snap) at the snap of our fingers.
“How in the world can anybody sane want to
keep this economy shut down?” the radio host asked, repeatedly pointing out how
the entire concept of what has occurred in America over the past two months is
nothing less than astonishing:
How can anybody sane be anything less than
scared and outraged and mortified that 22 million people have been thrown out
of work over something that may end up killing fewer than 50,000 people? It is
unprecedented! And yet there are people who want to maintain the circumstances
we are in. And it boggles the mind.
“It is so counterintuitive to Americanism,”
Limbaugh continued. “We cannot go on! … I can’t believe it has gone on this
long! I can’t believe… In one way, I can’t believe the American people haven’t
arisen in outrage over this yet.”
Coronavirus unemployment: Bay Area loses 27,000 jobs in March,
ending economic boom
California loses nearly 100,000 jobs, first monthly job
losses in 10 years
An
empty San Jose International Airport, April 2020. The coronavirus economic woes
bludgeoned the Bay Area’s suddenly feeble economy during March and unleashed a
loss of 27,000 jobs — the worst month for the region’s employment market since
the Great Recession.
PUBLISHED: April 17, 2020 at 9:47 a.m. |
UPDATED: April 17, 2020 at 10:55 a.m.
The coronavirus
economic woes bludgeoned the Bay Area’s suddenly feeble economy in March,
unleashing a loss of 27,000 jobs — the worst month for the region’s employment
market since the Great Recession, a grim new government report released Friday
showed.
California
staggered to a loss of 99,500 jobs last month, a setback that abruptly
terminated the state’s record-setting economic expansion, the Employment
Development Department reported Friday.
The statewide
unemployment rate jumped to 5.3 percent, a huge one-month increase from
February’s all-time record-low jobless rate of 3.9 percent.
The Bay Area
lost 27,200 jobs during March, the region’s worst one-month job loss in nearly
11 years, this news organization’s analysis of the EDD figures shows. The EDD
report was the first to sketch out a comprehensive picture of the coronavirus
impact on the Bay Area economy.
The San
Francisco-San Mateo region accounted for more than half of all positions shed
in the Bay Area with a devastating loss of 13,700 jobs. Tech-heavy Santa Clara
County lost 8,400 jobs in March. The East Bay fared the best of the Bay Area’s
three major urban centers, losing just 3,300 positions.
“The decline of
99,500 jobs in California does not capture all the pain the state is going
through,” Sung Won Sohn, a veteran economist, wrote in a research note on
Friday. “California employment is in free fall and no bottom is yet in sight.”
By the time the unemployment reports for
the Bay
Area roll in over the next couple of
months, the
Bay Area could suffer a loss of 835,000
jobs,
Research that’s
headed up by economist Jeffrey
Michael.
Mandatory
lockdowns to combat the spread of the coronavirus have forced countless
businesses to shut their doors, dismiss or furlough employees, and retail
shoppers remain in their homes amid an array of shelter-in-place orders.
Friday’s report was the first to reflect the first job losses since the
regional and statewide stay at home orders were issued.
Coronavirus-driven slump has wiped out 22 million jobs in the US
The US Labor Department reported Thursday that 5.2 million more
workers had filed for unemployment last week, bringing the total number of claims
in the last four weeks to an unprecedented 22 million. This marks the sharpest
rise in unemployment ever recorded in the country and equivalent to all jobs
created since mid-2009, the beginning of the official recovery from the Great
Recession.
The unprecedented job losses come amid a wave of economic
figures showing the shattering impact of the coronavirus epidemic on the
American and world economy. On Wednesday, the Commerce Department reported the
biggest monthly decline in retail sales since the figures were first compiled
30 years ago, 8.7 percent, more than double the previous monthly record, set
during the 2008 Wall Street crash. Meanwhile the Federal Reserve reported the
biggest decline in industrial production since the shutdown that followed the
end of the Second World War in 1946.
Industries hit with full force by the coronavirus lockdowns
suffered the worst. The US airline industry has collapsed, with just 4 percent
of the typical number of daily passengers when compared to last year, as interstate
and international travel has largely come to a halt. Big retailers are going
out of business. Best Buy said it would lay off 51,000 store workers, 40
percent of the total, beginning Sunday. J. C. Penney failed to make a $12
million interest payment on debts Wednesday, putting it 30 days from outright
default.
People wait in line at The Campaign
Against Hunger food pantry, Thursday, April 16, 2020, in the Bedford-Stuyvesant
neighborhood of the Brooklyn borough of New York. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)
The mass layoffs come as factories, restaurants, theaters, and
most small businesses have been ordered closed by state governors to slow the
spread of the deadly coronavirus, which has already infected over 670,000 in
the US and killed more than 34,000.
While the states that remain epicenters of the disease—New York,
New Jersey, Michigan and Louisiana—are beginning to see some signs that social
distancing has eased the growth in the number of cases, there are reports that
COVID-19 is now beginning to hit other states as well as small cities and rural
areas of the country, resulting in the closure of slaughterhouses and meat
processing plants.
One month into criminally belated government initiatives to
contain COVID-19, millions of people are desperate for money, missing payments
on their rent, mortgages, and auto loans as well as credit card and student
loan debt. Thousands have been lining up for hours in every city and community
to receive much needed food aid, including members of the middle class who have
never before had to rely on such support.
Economists project that the US and the world economy will suffer
the worst contraction since the Great Depression of the 1930s. Retail sales and
industrial output in the US have already collapsed by record amounts and are
expected to fall further even if social distancing measures are lifted.
Even though the unemployment figures reported so far are unprecedented,
suggesting a current unemployment rate of 17 percent, they still do not capture
the scope of the crisis facing the working class and small business owners. The
weekly filings were limited by the Easter holiday weekend and many workers
still report that they are unable to file a claim due to overloaded call
centers, crashing websites and archaic application systems. Contractors and
workers in the “gig economy” face long delays in gaining access to unemployment
payments, while millions of undocumented workers have no hope of any sort of
government assistance.
People who are fired from their jobs are ineligible for any
unemployment and those who have recently moved from one state to another are
having great difficulty filing. Every hurdle is placed in the way of workers to
jump over in order to receive a few hundred dollars every week. It is estimated
that as many as 35 million people could lose employer-paid health insurance due
to the mounting layoffs. Nothing is being done for anyone who is not already
rich.
The $349 billion Paycheck Protection Program, which was
ostensibly aimed at helping small business owners keep their employees on the
payroll, has already been exhausted, leaving tens of thousands of business
owners and their employees in the lurch. Meanwhile among the “small businesses”
which have received multimillion-dollar loans through the program are giant
conglomerates including Potbelly Corporation, which employs 6,000 people and
operates 474 sandwich shops in the US and internationally, and Ruth’s
Hospitality Group, which operates a chain of more than 100 steakhouses across
North America and Asia.
Under these conditions millions are being given the option of
staying home and starving or going to work and risking illness and death.
President Donald Trump, who yesterday released his plan for
reopening the American economy, is seeking to use the desperation of workers
and the middle class to his advantage to force open the economy after funneling
trillions of dollars to the big banks and corporations, a move that will lead
to tens of thousands more deaths from COVID-19. Protests organized by Trump
supporters against Democratic governors in Michigan, Kentucky and North
Carolina and other states demanding an end to the lockdowns are a particularly
backward expression of the very real desperation millions now confront.
Workers should reject with contempt this framework and fight for
the democratic distribution of trillions of dollars in social aid to every
section of society which is being devastated by the pandemic.
What is required to meet the interests of workers without
sacrificing their lives and the lives of their families to the profits of Wall
Street?
1. Nationalize the
banks and large corporations, redirecting the trillions which are being
funneled to the rich to fully support workers and small businesses for the
duration of the pandemic.
The $6 trillion bailout authorized by the misnamed CARES Act,
most of which has been funneled immediately to Wall Street, would be enough to
provide every man, woman and child in America with a check of roughly $18,000.
Instead, workers have had to wait weeks for a mere $1,200 stimulus, with many
more left to wait months for any sort of cash aid. Thanks to a tax provision of
the act, the average multimillionaire who owns a pass-through company will
receive $1.6 million in stimulus. Billionaire Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos has cashed
in on the pandemic, increasing his net worth by $23.6 billion, enough to give
every Amazon worker a bonus of $31,000. The claim that there is no money for
the needs of the working class has never been more of a lie.
2. No return to work
for nonessential businesses, and safe working conditions guaranteed for all
those who work in essential jobs until the pandemic is over.
If the lives of hundreds of thousands around the world are to be
saved the coronavirus must be contained, until a vaccine is developed people
have to maintain social distancing measures, which means keeping most
businesses closed. Workers in hospitals, grocery stores, food processing,
transportation and logistics must be given every possible protection from the
coronavirus and provided full pay and have all health care costs covered if
they get sick.
3. Full funding for
testing, tracing and quarantine.
Testing for COVID-19 and efforts to control its spread are still
criminally lacking in the United States. Hundreds of billions must be spent on
developing, distributing and carrying out tests and subsequently tracing
contacts of those who test positive and provide them with safe quarantine
conditions. The answer to the historic economic crisis sweeping across the
globe is not an immediate return to “normalcy” but a mass independent movement
of the working class, leading behind it the best elements of the middle class,
fighting for a reorganization of society to meet human need, not the rapacious
and murderous needs of the profit system.
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