THE DEMOCRAT
PARTY’S WAR ON AMERICA’S LEGAL WORKERS, BORDERS AND LAWS as they build the LA
RAZA welfare state on our backs.
One in every eleven
persons born in Mexico has gone to the U.S.
The National Review reported that in
2014 $1.87 billion was spent on incarcerating
illegal immigrant criminals….Now add hundreds of billions for welfare and
remittances! MICHAEL BARGO, Jr…… for the AMERICAN
THINKER.COM
"Chairman of the DNC Keith Ellison was even
spotted wearing a shirt stating, "I
don't believe in borders" written in Spanish.
According to a new CBS news poll, 63 percent of Americans in competitive
congressional districts think those crossing illegally should be immediately
deported or arrested. This is undoubtedly contrary to the views
expressed by the Democratic Party.
Their endgame is open borders, which has become evident over
the last eight years. Don't for one second let them convince you
otherwise." Evan Berryhill Twitter
@EvBerryhill.
http://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2018/07/assault-on-american-worker-college-grad.html
College-Grad Salaries Eroded by Hidden Army of 1.5 Million Visa-Workers
Every
CEO in every company sees the business opportunity: Will I earn higher profits
by replacing my American staff with cheaper H-1B workers? The answer is an
obvious yes.
The
Washington-imposed economic policy of economic growth via mass-immigration
shifts wealth from young people towards older people by flooding the market with foreign labor. That process spikes profits and Wall Street values by cutting salaries for manual and skilled labor offered by
blue-collar and white-collar employees. The policy also drives up real estate prices, widens wealth-gaps, reduces high-tech investment, increases state and local tax burdens, hurts kids’ schools and college education, pushes Americans away from high-tech careers, and sidelines at least 5 million
marginalized Americans and their families, including many who are now struggling
with opioid addictions.
STARING IN THE FACE of
AMERICA’S UNRAVELING and the ROAD TO REVOLUTION
“It will more likely come on the heels of
economic dislocation and dwindling wealth to redistribute.”
"The
kind of people needed for violent change these days are living in
off-the-grid
rural compounds,
or the “gangster paradise” where the businesses of drugs, guns,
and
prostitution are much more lucrative than “transforming” America along
Cuban
lines." BRUCE THORNTON
There can be no resolution to any social problem confronting the
population in the United States and internationally outside of a frontal
assault on the wealth of the financial elite.
The political system is controlled by this
social layer, which uses a portion of its economic plunder to bribe politicians
and government officials, whether Democratic or Republican.
Report exposes rise in alcohol-related deaths among Millennials in US
By Isaac Finn
20 July 2018
A study published last Wednesday in the British Medical Journal exposes
the devastating and long-lasting impact of the 2008 economic crisis on the rise
of deaths related to alcoholism, cirrhosis and liver cancer among 25- to
34-year-olds within the United States. The increase is one part of a rising
number of “deaths of despair” caused by suicide and drug and alcohol abuse,
which have contributed to declining life expectancy in the US.
The study, entitled “Mortality due to cirrhosis and liver cancer
in the United States, 1999-2016: observational study,” was written by University
of Michigan Medical School assistant professor and liver specialist Dr. Elliot
Tapper and fellow professor Dr. Neehar Parikh. The two liver specialists drew
extensively from federal data in death certificates and from the US Census
Bureau.
The report’s findings include a decline in cirrhosis-related
deaths among a number of subgroups within the population between 1999 and 2008
followed by a reversal of this process among nearly all groups between 2009 and
2016. This data is particularly shocking since medical treatment for leading
causes of cirrhosis, a condition where the liver does not function properly due
to damage, such as hepatitis C, have been developed. As a result, the growth in
cirrhosis has largely come from alcoholic liver disease and non-alcoholic liver
disease.
The total number of deaths from cirrhosis was 460,760 throughout
the entire period covered in the report, with the annual total increasing by 65
percent from 1999 to 2016. The authors note, “Deaths due to cirrhosis are
expected to triple by 2030.”
According to the study 25- to 34-year-olds were particularly
hard-hit and experienced the highest average annual percentage change in death
from cirrhosis, increasing by 10.5 percent in the period between 2009 to 2016.
It also clarified that whites and Native Americans had the most rapid increase
in mortalities compared to other identified ethnic groups.
There was also a 2.1 percent increase in deaths caused by
hepatocellular carcinoma, a form of liver cancer, over the period covered in the
study. Similar to cirrhosis, deaths from hepatocellular carcinoma should have
likely decreased since the principle cause—hepatitis B—is easily treatable.
Unlike cirrhosis, however, deaths from hepatocellular carcinoma had been on the
decline among younger sections of the population but have risen among
individuals older than 55.
The authors explicitly state that the rise in cirrhosis and
hepatocellar carcinoma is likely caused by the devastating conditions facing
workers and youth. They note in the study, “Given that worsening trends began
after 2008, a year marked by the global financial crisis and a subsequent
economic recession in the USA, a differential economic impact on specific
states may explain some of the results.” They also note that rise in both
cirrhosis and liver cancer is disproportionately impacting young men compared
to older women, which would back up their claim that it was related to economic
instability.
“We hypothesize that there may be a loss of opportunity, and the
psychological burden that comes with that may have driven some of those
patients to abusive drinking,” Parikh told NPR.
Other physicians have concurred with the study’s findings, such as
liver specialist Dr. Sumeet Asrani, who noted, “It fits with what we see in
practice. We’re seeing younger and younger patients with alcoholic liver
disease.”
The development of cirrhosis at such a young age, however,
reflects the devastation of an entire generation of young workers that do not
see a future for themselves, or feel that their only escape from their
difficulties is through drugs or alcohol.
A recent British
Medical Journal editorial pointed out that more than 64,000
people died in 2015 from drug overdose, with a 137 percent increase in
fatalities from drugs between 2000 to 2014. This is the outcome of the opioid
crisis that is devastating large sections of the US, which is the direct result
of deindustrialization and a conscious policy of pharmaceutical companies
flooding impoverished areas with cheap pills.
Similar sentiments of despair find expression in the rise of
suicides among 10- to 19-year-olds by more than 12 percent between 2013 and
2016. Suicide rates have also increased among the general population by 25
percent between 1996 and 2016, according to the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
The rise in suicides and drug and alcohol related deaths is a
stark indictment of the entire capitalist system and its failure to provide
opportunities for a new layer of youth as they are starting their adult life.
These failures have found a depressing expression in the last period is due
largely to the artificial suppression of the class struggle by the pro-company
unions. The eruption of mass workers struggles will allow this dissatisfaction
to find a progressive expression as young workers and students take up the
fight for jobs and decent living standards.
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