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Filed: Country: Belarus
Timeline
Posted

May 20, 2011

Overpopulation Devaluing Unskilled Labor

By Ira Mehlman, FAIR Media Director

People who are concerned about overpopulation generally think of the problem in terms of impact on the environment and depletion of resources. Another concern, perhaps just as significant, is that overpopulation is leading to a worldwide surplus in low and unskilled labor.

Ironically, President Obama noted in his May 19th speech about the Middle East that millions upon millions of people without any marketable skills in the Arab world pose a threat to regional and global stability. Yet in a speech delivered nine days earlier in El Paso, Texas, on immigration policy, President Obama laid out a plan that would legalize millions of low and unskilled illegal aliens and create for millions more such workers to immigrate legally to the United States.

Illustrative of just how low overpopulation and technology have driven the value of low and unskilled labor is a story that ran earlier this week on NPR. Desperate Pakistani workers are fleeing desperately overpopulated Pakistan in search of jobs elsewhere. In this story they're not headed to the United States, or Canada, or Europe; they're moving, in large numbers, to Afghanistan! (Not surprisingly, the story notes that Afghan workers are none too happy about the competition they face from the Pakistani illegal aliens.)

Every human being possesses inherent value and is entitled to respect and dignity. But the reality of the world in which we live is that low and unskilled labor, as a commodity, is rapidly losing whatever value it might still have. And, as the president correctly points out, millions of people with little or nothing to contribute economically pose a threat to social stability. Unfortunately, the president has a hard time reconciling this reality to his immigration policy.

http://www.steinreport.com/archives/overpopulation_devaluing_unskilled_labor.html

"Credibility in immigration policy can be summed up in one sentence: Those who should get in, get in; those who should be kept out, are kept out; and those who should not be here will be required to leave."

"...for the system to be credible, people actually have to be deported at the end of the process."

US Congresswoman Barbara Jordan (D-TX)

Testimony to the House Immigration Subcommittee, February 24, 1995

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: China
Timeline
Posted

May 20, 2011

Overpopulation Devaluing Unskilled Labor

By Ira Mehlman, FAIR Media Director

People who are concerned about overpopulation generally think of the problem in terms of impact on the environment and depletion of resources. Another concern, perhaps just as significant, is that overpopulation is leading to a worldwide surplus in low and unskilled labor.

Ironically, President Obama noted in his May 19th speech about the Middle East that millions upon millions of people without any marketable skills in the Arab world pose a threat to regional and global stability. Yet in a speech delivered nine days earlier in El Paso, Texas, on immigration policy, President Obama laid out a plan that would legalize millions of low and unskilled illegal aliens and create for millions more such workers to immigrate legally to the United States.

Illustrative of just how low overpopulation and technology have driven the value of low and unskilled labor is a story that ran earlier this week on NPR. Desperate Pakistani workers are fleeing desperately overpopulated Pakistan in search of jobs elsewhere. In this story they're not headed to the United States, or Canada, or Europe; they're moving, in large numbers, to Afghanistan! (Not surprisingly, the story notes that Afghan workers are none too happy about the competition they face from the Pakistani illegal aliens.)

Every human being possesses inherent value and is entitled to respect and dignity. But the reality of the world in which we live is that low and unskilled labor, as a commodity, is rapidly losing whatever value it might still have. And, as the president correctly points out, millions of people with little or nothing to contribute economically pose a threat to social stability. Unfortunately, the president has a hard time reconciling this reality to his immigration policy.

http://www.steinreport.com/archives/overpopulation_devaluing_unskilled_labor.html

We produce our own unskilled labor here.

The new statistics, part of a push to realign state standards with college performance, show that only 23 percent of students in New York City graduated ready for college or careers in 2009, not counting special-education students. That is well under half the current graduation rate of 64 percent, a number often promoted by Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg as evidence that his education policies are working.

But New York City is still doing better than the state’s other large urban districts. In Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse and Yonkers, less than 17 percent of students met the proposed standards, including just 5 percent in Rochester.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/08/nyregion/08regents.html

If more citizens were armed, criminals would think twice about attacking them, Detroit Police Chief James Craig

Florida currently has more concealed-carry permit holders than any other state, with 1,269,021 issued as of May 14, 2014

The liberal elite ... know that the people simply cannot be trusted; that they are incapable of just and fair self-government; that left to their own devices, their society will be racist, sexist, homophobic, and inequitable -- and the liberal elite know how to fix things. They are going to help us live the good and just life, even if they have to lie to us and force us to do it. And they detest those who stand in their way."
- A Nation Of Cowards, by Jeffrey R. Snyder

Tavis Smiley: 'Black People Will Have Lost Ground in Every Single Economic Indicator' Under Obama

white-privilege.jpg?resize=318%2C318

Democrats>Socialists>Communists - Same goals, different speeds.

#DeplorableLivesMatter

Filed: Country: Belarus
Timeline
Posted

On the other hand, current instability in the middle east is being caused by those with education and skills and no opportunity to use it. I wonder how the NEETS and FREETERS of world will reshape our existence.

I didn't know what a NEET or a FREETER was until I Googled it up.

The old idiom, "Idleness is the devil's workshop" comes to mind.

"Credibility in immigration policy can be summed up in one sentence: Those who should get in, get in; those who should be kept out, are kept out; and those who should not be here will be required to leave."

"...for the system to be credible, people actually have to be deported at the end of the process."

US Congresswoman Barbara Jordan (D-TX)

Testimony to the House Immigration Subcommittee, February 24, 1995

 

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