Topics

America the Beautiful

Arizona

Articles - Alan Caruba

Articles - American Thinker

Articles - Ann Coulter

Articles - Ben Johnson

Articles - Burt Prelutsky

Articles - Caroline Glick

Articles - Charles Krauthammer

Articles - Chuck Baldwin

Articles - Cliff Kincaid

Articles - Craig Cantoni

Articles - David Horowitz

Articles - David Limbaugh

Articles - David Roth

Articles - Frank Salvato

Articles - Frosty Wooldridge

Articles - Gabriel Garnica

Articles - IBD

Articles - James Taranto

Articles - Jerome R. Corsi

Articles - John W. Howard

Articles - Jonathan Tobin

Articles - MIchelle Malkin

Articles - Mac Johnson

Articles - Mark Steyn

Articles - Michael Reagan

Articles - Mike S. Adams

Articles - Newt Gingrich

Articles - Patrick Buchanan

Articles - Peggy Noonan

Articles - Phyllis Schlafly

Articles - Raymond Kraft

Articles - Red State Patriot

Articles - Sandra J. Miller

Articles - Sultan Knish

Articles - Thomas Sowell

Articles - Tom DeWeese

Articles - Tony Blankley

Articles - WSJ

Articles - Walter E. Willliams

Articles - William C. Douglas

Articles Laura Ingraham

Budget, Taxation and Fiscal Policy

Candidate - Barack Obama

Candidate - John McCain

Candidate - Sarah Palin

Congress

Congressional Spending & Earmarks

Constitution and Government

Domestic Issues and Politics

Economics and Business

Education

Energy

Entertainment

Environment

Featured Cartoons

Financial Market Commentary

Foreign Policy

Gender and Race

Gun Control

Humor

Immigration and Border Control

Iraq

Islam, Terrorism and WMD

Israel and Middle East

Law and Legal Issues

Media and Entertainment

Medicine and Healthcare

NAU & New World Order

National Defense and National Security

Philosophy

Political Thought

Public Service Announcement

Religion and Culture

Social Security

Socialism

Supreme Court

Technology

Trade and Commerce

U.S. Armed Forces

Video

Welfare and the Entitlement Culture

Search


Archives

September 2010
August 2010
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006

Failed Culture Wars

Cheap Labor.jpg

“Failed” Culture Wars

(On illegal migration, drugs, alcohol, cigarettes, illiteracy, obesity, crime, poverty, terror, corruption, pornography, trade, equal opportunity, gender equality, sexual mores, domestic violence, guns, environmental stewardship, ignorance, healthcare, child abuse, bigotry and most recently nation building).

The victim was first the Rule of Law and subsequently the United States of America.

Let's single out just one war and look at the problems of illegal alien migration for a moment. Let’s also try to do our examination objectively and somewhat differently from most widely held perspectives.

Unemployment (to the extent one can believe government statistics) is at or near its lowest level in decades, even after taking into consideration the 12, 20 or 40 million illegal aliens who are gainfully employed in the United States, part- or full-time. If the United States can employ everyone who ‘wants’ to work (citizens plus legal and illegal aliens), there is obviously a huge market demand for labor, both skilled and unskilled, and to some extent educated.

Like it or not, disturbing or not, there is also an incredible demand for labor with less educational achievement and fewer expectations. We’re talking about “cheap labor.” For analytical purposes, ethnic origin, education and citizenship are irrelevant in the discussion of cheap labor because when you need a job done, one that requires menial labor, it is the job that is your focus, not the person or their education, or even their ability to speak English. If the only workers available to you are both willing and motivated to work, and in most cases grateful for the work, and all you can do is communicate with hand-signals, that’s good enough.

Part of this insatiable demand for highly motivated (but minimally skilled) workers was solved by outsourcing manufacturing jobs and entire industries overseas. The seeds of this transition began cynically as politicians in the United States offered minimally skilled American workers a pernament economic subsidy in return for their votes. As a result, year after year minimally skilled workers in the United States became increasingly scarce as a result of large numbers leaving the labor market (no longer looking for jobs). Politicians had offered them a life on permanent income redistribution (employment in the welfare industry) and free medical care which provided them higher standard of living than their prior life as a minimally skilled worker without benefits. In most cases, it was a logical economic decision.

At the same time, workers in India and China were becomming plentiful and willing to work at a fraction of the cost of labor in the United States. There are still large numbers of minimally skilled indigenous workers in the United States, and arguably that number has gown exponentially with the disintegration of education in the government public school system. Two highly correlated factors are at work at the same time. While the American society and economy was devolving as a result of government interference with the labor market, major segments of our population were becoming less skilled (poor education) and less motivated (income redistribution).

Regardless of skill or education considerations, the labor pool in the United States is three-tiered, those who are highly motivated, those who are minimally motivated, and those who are unmotivated. Minimally motivated and unmotivated workers have come to expect (demand) so much in the form of total compensation that they cannot compete in a world labor market. It is difficult to entice them to work at all, particularly after Congress chose to provide the social alternative of relying on income redistribution as a respectable livelihood. Imagine, choosing not to work and still being subsidized by taxpayers in every imaginable way (health care, housing, no taxes, cash subsidy, transportation, education, food stamps, utility bills, etc.). What is the incentive for any minimally motivated and unmotivated worker to seek employment? Constructive employment (real jobs) for these individuals, in most cases, is a net financial and healthcare loss. Clearly pride is not a factor, nor ethnicity or self-respect, as large numbers of various demographic groups consciously seek, through sociopathic behavior and wilfull ignorance, to make themselves unemployable.

It should go without saying that manufacturing is the foundation of any economy, and particularly a global economy. Workers in India or China or Mexico can produce, for a labor cost of $1.00, the same product of the same quality as a worker in the United States for a labor cost of $30.00. In order to compete, the United States’ worker had better be able to produce 30 times as much, or substantially higher quality, in the same amount of time.

Meanwhile, the manufacturer has the objective, as does any business enterprise, to produce their product with the least consumption of scarce natural resources, including labor, in order to maximize profit. Even though the basic concepts are economic in origin, for a moment think of labor in environmental terms. In the course of all human activity, we should try to consume the least quantity of all natural resources whenever possible, including labor. Most people of liberal orientation understand that it is far more efficient and humanitarian to hire 30 Indians than one American (for the same labor cost) – unless there are overriding economic, nationalistic or ideological considerations.

At the same time that labor costs were becoming prohibitively uncompetitive during the 1990's, with lesser-skilled labor demanding too much to get of their sofa, government was simultaneously imposing too much regulatory overhead for any business in the United States to profitably function as a domestic corporation. The situation has grown worse each year without any sign of comprehension by lawmakers. The economic fires are raging, consuming the United States economy, and Congress is throwing combustible fuel on the fire as a solution. The absence of inexpensive labor in the United States, combined with oppressive government administrative agency interference and congressional malfeasance, continue to be important factors that weigh very heavily in corporate outsourcing decisions.

A wise man once remarked a long time ago, that it was a little late to close the barn door after the horses were gone. It isn’t always that easy to get them back. Yet in the case of many important United States’ industries, we must try.

We should pause for a well-deserved moment of silence in tribute to past and current Congressmen who have collectively engineered this debacle. The consequence of their ineptitude is that every manufacturing industry still remaining in the United States is facing increasingly stiff competition from overseas, forcing them to cut costs deeply, including wages and benefits, in order to compete with foreign rivals. So severe is the problem that since 1993, U.S. production has only met half of the increase in American demand for durable goods; the other half has come from overseas. So when you hear the President say that Americans are “addicted” to foreign goods, that claim is patently false. Americans want quality manufactured goods, and are more than capable of producing quality manufactured goods themselves, but they are just not made in the United States anymore.

Why not? In the fewest possible words, American manufacturing and its associated jobs are gone, courtesy of failed domestic socialism, regulatory programs and foreign trade policies enacted by Congress and successive American administrations. The United States Congress, state legislatures and courts have literally and unwittingly undermined the profitability of American industry until most fled overseas for survival. Halliburton is only the most recent to flee. Those that remain are circling the drain in ever-decreasing concentric circles. Keep an close eye on Ford Motor Company and U.S. Air, the two corporations voted the most likely to succumb and submerge in the near future.

The root causes of the scarcity of inexpensive labor include such factors as federal and state legislation and local ordinances, administrative agency regulations to implement ill-advised legislation, litigation, equal opportunity, environmental restrictions, poor education and work ethic, union interference, worker’s compensation, mindless taxation, double taxation, political corruption, earmarks, occupational safety extremes, demographics, product liability, crime, etc. Far from last or least on the list of causes of labor scarcity are schemes intended to benefit special interest groups in return for their votes, i.e., income redistribution. The clearly visible but ignored effect of our national welfare state is to dramatically shrink the willing labor pool year after year. In fact, real incomes for middle-class taxpaying households were lower in 2005 than in the recession year of 2001. Democrat Jim Webb, who just won election in normally Republican Virginia, warned, “In the age of globalization and outsourcing, and with a vast underground labor pool from illegal immigration, the average American worker is seeing a different life and a troubling future.”

Why has the United States’ Congress, in their collective incompetence and Nero Syndrome, allowed America to become short the 20-40 million employees, educated or not, skilled or not, motivated or not, needed to sustain industrial manufacturing in the United States? That is a matter best left to ideologues. A lifetime could be spent analyzing past Congressional legislation and Supreme Court decisions that resulted in subsidizing whole groups of people, effectively removing them from the need to work, institutionalizing discrimination and disenfranchising American industry. It would be easier to understand if social engineering was being used by the courts and legislatures to advance the cause of socialism. What logical explanation could there be for Congress to have created a permanent and expanding underclass whose literal survival today depends on income redistribution through entitlement programs (in exchange for votes)? Did we answer the question inadvertently? Sorry.

If that were not enough, and regardless of ideology, there is still another factor that exacerbates the huge unfilled demand for workers, i.e., American citizens who would have entered the workforce by the millions, between twenty and forty million, but were not born. The relevant point now is that demand for labor in the United States is far greater than the ‘willing’ supply. The shortfall in the willing labor supply, even after outsourcing, is being met by vast numbers of illegal alien migrants. The behavior of the unwilling indigenous labor supply, i.e., sloth, ignorance and degeneracy, is being subsidized by taxes extracted from the top 50% of wage earners at the forceful behest of the United States government.

In the fewest words possible, it has been the unrelenting, broad and pervasive government interference with free markets, and abandoning long established cultural norms, that has caused a loss of manufacturing jobs and a severe labor shortage in the United States.

An abundance of skilled tradesmen and service jobs requiring lesser skills have replaced the manufacturing jobs. We have a knowledge and skill economy at the top, a tradesman and service economy at the bottom. The “Middle Class” who used to make widgets have become an endangered species. While it is true that both the population of the United States and the number of people employed has increased dramatically, constant-dollar real wages of the average American citizen has been decreasing for decades. With the Fed’s engineered devaluation of the U.S. dollar, with the worst yet to come, the standard of living of all but the wealthiest Americans is declining. That is not the fault of American citizens – talk to Congress. As for what remains of the Middle Class, they struggle to maintain their standard of living. Consumption expenditures of the Middle Class, which once came from discretionary income and savings, have all but been replaced by consumption spending using debt as a funding mechanism, i.e., refinancing their home and buying what they cannot afford.

Instead of Upper, Middle and Lower classes in society, two new classes have emerged – those few who are debt-free and the debtors. As the ranks of the debtors grow, and consumables continue to increase in price due to a combination of foreign manufacture and the devaluation of the Unites States' currency, consumption of durable goods will ultimately diminish.

Regardless of conservative philosophy or liberal ideology, illegal alien migration is factually and simply the “market” supplying a “demand.” Any market demand will be met by human beings seeking to profit by providing a supply – in this case, labor. The demand is so strong that millions of human beings, many of whom believe they have few or no viable economic alternatives in other parts of the world, are willing to risk their lives to meet the labor demand in the United States. Make no mistake. They’re not coming to the United States to become loyal citizens – that ended with the Era of Conservatism. They have no knowledge or respect for the borders of the United States or any of its laws. They’re coming solely to work and to avail themselves of an economic paradise on earth, a well-spring in social services and taxpayer funded benefits with absolutely nothing expected from them in return. Think of it as the illegal alien’s modern day California Gold Rush, but for social services and taxpayer funded benefits.

When viewed as a labor demand being met and satisfied, from an economic perspective, illegal migration is not a problem. This is a triumph of market forces. There are two really big problems, however. The first one is that the triumph belongs to the “black market.” The triumph of the “black market” in labor is in stark contravention of United States law – just as is the black market in drugs. The second problem is the apparent illicit and prescription drug-induced psychosis to simply give away boundless American wealth and jobs to illegal aliens – to forcibly take hard-earned wealth from Americans and give it away, without any commensurate obligation from non-citizens. Those who support amnesty for illegal aliens, or their continued access to social services, are advocating nothing less than the wholesale transfer of American wealth to illegal aliens - and still more to subsequent generations of illegal aliens.

Either the black market or the rule of law will ultimately prevail, but not both. In the “war on drugs,” which economic force has prevailed? Was it the black market in drugs or United States’ laws? Where incredible demand exists, human beings will supply the commodity in their own self interest. There are no exceptions. You may say, “I wouldn’t,” but the fact is that someone will and that person may not speak English or be a United States citizen. Embedded among them may be some (or many) of our nation’s most deadly enemies.

Extending the analysis further, why does a black market in labor exist? Very simply, the black market exists because of government intervention. The United States’ government has been trying to circumvent natural market forces by regulating (imposing) wage scales and labor eligibility by every artifice imaginable. They have gone to the extremes of favoring one ethnic group over others, all of whom are in competition to be part of the labor supply.

The black market in labor has become a big problem for two primary reasons – (1) illegal alien migrants have been led by our elected politicians to expect goods, benefits and services from the different levels of government that only those citizens in the top 50% of wage earners must pay for, and (2), the actual overhead costs of the illegal alien labor pool far exceeds the perceived national benefits, particularly in crime and cultural degradation.

The most significant goods and services that illegal aliens have come to expect include: medical care, citizenship for children born in the USA, chain migration, and welfare in numerous forms, public school education of their children, in-state tuition, voting rights, affirmative action privileges, and preferential language consideration.

Overhead costs include a range of political demands by illegal aliens that impinge on people's expectations concerning the English language (such as ballots printed in multiple languages), security, property ownership, conferring civil rights without citizenship, repeated criminal victimization of American citizens, criminal injustice toward Americans, disproportionate numbers of illegal aliens who must be incarcerated at taxpayer expense, the economic failure and closing of hundreds of hospitals, and fading political and cultural cohesion. (As an aside, if you think illegal alien migration is a social and fiscal crisis, it is only the opening gambit. Next will come the Muslim demands and the associated civil unrest widely seen in Europe. By that time it will be too late.)

Statistically, 25 Americans die every day at the hands of illegal aliens. In one year, 9125 people die at the hands of illegal aliens; more than the combined total of our military losses and civilian casualties since the Marine Barracks bombing in Beirut in 1983. In one year, more Americans die at home from the criminal actions of illegal aliens than the nation has experienced from a total of 23 years of foreign military adventures. You might want to re-read those last two sentences to realize the enormity of the overhead costs to society. Think of their families whose lives have been devistated. Where does it end?

There is also the “small nagging detail” that illegal alien’s pay no taxes (except after engaging in document fraud in conjunction with identity theft) and contribute little to America except their labor, yet derive/demand a vast majority of the benefits.

There is also the 'not-so-small problem' of the justice (courts) and security (police) systems in this country, which don't work particularly well for citizens, much less for illegal alien migrants. And because politicians and judges have worked to the advantage of illegal aliens and disadvantage of citizens, more often than not, a citizen revolt such as the 2006 Mid-term elections was all but predictable. Add to the demographic equation the size and density of the illegal alien population, their distribution, vital statistics and capacity for expansion. Then factor in the dynamic balance with, or disruption of, the existing culture that is being displaced. Houston, we have a problem.

Rather than fostering free and open markets, the most serious problems (resource dislocations) have been caused by our own government’s attempting market manipulation and outright intervention, trying to artificially regulate the laws of economic exchange between rational human beings. Without our government’s intervention, everything could otherwise be a peaceful trading environment – in theory. The liberal mindset has prevailed for so long that it has become a pathological obsession to regulate everything, even human nature itself. By making the same mistakes over and over and over, Congress responds to crime by banning guns, Congress responds to bigotry by banning speech, Congress responds to terrorism by banning profiling and opening the borders, Congress responds to illegal aliens running wild within United States’ borders by discouraging enforcement of existing law, Courts respond to homosexuality by banning the Boy Scouts, Courts respond to secularism and immorality by banning Christianity, and Congress responds to child abuse by banning pornography. You can easily think of a dozen more examples. In every case, the programmed liberal mindset refuses to hold the individual responsible for the crime, including the illegal alien, and instead casts the crime perpetrator or illegal alien invader as the victim of an evil racist society or child abuse. Is it possible that there is more sanity and fewer drugs in the story of Alice in Wonderland?

There are still more issues, and one that is huge – multiculturalism. Federal, state and local governments are now presiding over a multi-cultural and multi-lingual land, that they created, that is incrementally becoming unstable. All levels of government are vainly attempting to “rule” using government-institutionalized discrimination augmented with force, suppressing the majority will of Americans in order to make room for illegal aliens and facilitate what appears to be the inevitable advent of the North American Union.

The United States, with its rapidly decreasing cultural homogeneity, is becoming less and less politically and socially stable with each passing year. To better appreciate the future of America, think of the Jews and Arab Palestinians who occupy and claim the same “holy ground” in Israel. Now add to their mix a vast welfare and regulatory state, layered with multiple religions, disparate cultures and languages, and you can see why Israel has such an explosive situation on their hands. Israel’s national stability is inversely correlated with multiple cultures and beset with institutionalized government and religious discrimination. And we are not? Unless politicians change course soon, Israel’s present situation is a glimpse into America’s future, but ours will be on a much larger scale.

Before the November 2006 election, United States’ citizens were already taking to the streets and the internet in protest because the sources of their angst were not being addressed by politicians. Most people have come to realize that there is less than 15 cents in difference between Democrats and liberal Republicans. Most relevant is a single fact: Democrats are now in control of Congress. The problems, from the viewpoint of border control advocates, and conservatives in general will grow worse – much worse. More citizens will probably join the anti-illegal migration protest incrementally. Most will not realize the issues are wrapped around an axle called market forces, i.e., supply and demand – and nobody is addressing market forces. To do so would require Congress to increase the supply of cheap labor (workers) inside the United States from among American citizens by providing fewer unearned subsistence alternatives to working. There is no workable solution that does not include significantly increasing the supply of American “cheap labor.” Reducing income redistribution will not be a political Happy Meal among Congressmen. Odds-makers would probably give a 60-year old disabled veteran better odds of winning the Boston Marathon.

As long as the over-supply of jobs goes unfilled by American workers, it will be filled by foreign workers, and they will continue to flood into the United States just as a tide floods the lowlands. The only changes possible are to alter the natural geography (increase the cheap labor pool from American sources) or build a dam (wall) to keep the water out. As long as industry can be more profitable using less expensive foreign labor, vital industries that were once the cornerstone of the United States’ economy will not return to the United States. Congress has indeed squandered our industrial base and national heritage.

One more example will suffice. Democrats coming into office have voiced concern about the plight of industry and loudly criticized the Bush Administration’s policies; but they don’t have anything that remotely resembles an alternative model that will meet the challenge. Democrats and liberal Republicans refuse to recognize that their role is twofold, (1) to increase the supply of manufactured goods “made in America,” which is the only solution to reducing the demand for goods from India, China, Mexico, Peru and Columbia, and to increase the supply of willing cheap labor from internal sources comprised of United States citizens and “legal” aliens.

While legalizing the “illegals” is the easiest political solution, it is by far the most damaging to national sovereignty and dangerous to the American culture. Just as France is rapidly becoming a Muslim nation, the United States is arguably becoming a Hispanic nation. If the plight of Mexico and its citizens is what we want for ourselves, Mexico being our national role model, then we should make every effort to adopt their culture (or permit it to be forced on us with amnesty for illegal aliens).

It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to realize that no child labor laws, organized unions or environmental standards will do anything to reduce the demand from the United States for manufactured goods. Instead, the measures championed by the Democratic Party as economic reform will only increase the cost of everything manufactured in any country which will then be passed on to the consumer in the United States - once again reducing the Middle Class' standard of living.

What about a citizen protest? Will it do any good? Are the Minutemen effective? Yes, they have been effective in raising awareness and politicizing the issue. It is also relatively easy to predict that any attempt by individual American citizens to stem the tide of illegal aliens into the United States will be met with severe government retalliation. At some point, American citizens have only two alternatives, i.e., turn into civil unrest or abdicate and flee. There is the distinct possibility that illegal alien migration will someday become an explosive social issue.

Ask yourself, if the Democrats who now control Congress fail to stem the tide of illegal aliens, will they have succeeded or failed? The more astute members of the Democratic Party know it has fallen to them to deal with illegal alien migration or be swept aside in the 2008 election. Regardless of political and media rhetoric, illegal alien migration will still be an issue in 2008 because it will still be an unresolved matter of supply and demand. All of the politician’s made-for-TV hand-wringing changes nothing, but then it was never intended to change anything.

The Democratic Party leadership (and liberal Republicans) has a preferred solution. They wish to legalize every living creature within the United States’ borders, plus any other life-form in our solar system, and make them all the responsibility of U.S. taxpayers in exchange for their votes. The tax responsibility to subsidize this mass of humanity and alternate life forms will fall squarely on corporations (small businesses) who will then pass on the costs to the consumer. The tax burden will fall especially heavily on the top 50% of citizens who are the only wage earners currently paying taxes. None of the bottom 50% of wage earners (who vote), and all non-citizens who reside within the borders of the United States, will have to pay a dime to subsidize the social services of the growing numbers of illegal aliens.

There is a finite limit and there is a long-term price to be paid. Total government dependency can finally be yours with a vote for any Congressional candidate that is neither a conservative nor a libertarian. Why are conservatives and libertarians more desirable – and only them, and not liberals, neo-conservatives or paleo-conservatives? True Conservatives and Libertarians, not some hyphenated alphabet soup, are the only Americans who are espousing a very limited government, the rule of law, personal responsibility, low taxes, self-reliance and a military whose sole responsibility is to defend the United States.

What the end result will be? If we continue to elect advocates of liberalism, we will receive in return a vastly larger government driven by ever more income redistribution. As socialism becomes more and more pervasive, existing problems of civil liberties and private property that rile American sensibilities today will become much, much worse. Civil liberties and private property DO NOT EXIST under socialism (liberalism) - nor does class mobility, personal wealth, small business or private enterprise. How could anyone but the most ignorant among us wish that on themselves?

The political competition in 2008 is not be to become the President of the United States. Nor is it between elected representatives who desperately want to improve the lot of all Americans. No, in most cases, theirs is a quest to rule, to become Caesar.

Hopefully you consider yourself to be one of the proud indomitable Americans who were born free and intend to remain free, defiantly refusing to live under the yoke of any religion, particularly Socialism or Islam.

Red State Patriot

Posted March 6, 2007 10:48 AM
Read more on Articles - Red State Patriot ~ Immigration and Border Control ~ Socialism

Navigation

About
Submissions
Subscribe
RSS Feed
Home

Recent Articles

Heirs to Fortuyn?

Muslim immigration and sclerotic welfare states push Europe right (sort of). Spring 2009 When the New Left emerged in the...

Read more...

The Left Is Making a Grave Mistake

The Left Is Making a Mistake in Ridiculing the Tea Parties The political Left in the United States is...

Read more...

Government Motors

President of the United States is a job with no shortage of responsibilities, but last week the Obama administration added...

Read more...

Steelers to loose Super Bowl Trophies

ESPN Updated: March 32, 2009 Pittsburgh, PA. The Super Bowl XLIII Champion Pittsburgh Steelers, the only team to win...

Read more...

Welcome to Mississagua



Read more...

Blogroll

Credits

Powered by Movable Type 3.2

Site design by Sekimori