Page 9 of 12 FirstFirst ... 56789101112 LastLast
Results 81 to 90 of 120
  1. #81
    Never a dull moment hoglahoo's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Tulsa, OK
    Posts
    8,922
    Thanked: 1501
    Blog Entries
    1

    Default

    Spanish is the official language for much of Tulsa. Here it's more convenient for an English speaker to pick up Spanish than it is for a Mexican to pick up English.
    Find me on SRP's official chat in ##srp on Freenode. Link is at top of SRP's homepage

  2. #82
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Posts
    377
    Thanked: 21

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Wildtim View Post
    If there is an immigrant doing a job I won't do, they can stay and speak however they want.

    I have, however been unemployed for 9 months.

    I actually didn't get a job as a landscaper because I didn't speak Spanish.

    Now you tell me again, that they should be allowed to stay!
    Notice that any proposed legislation for checking the status of any hires conveniently allows enough time to bring in the crops. I keep hearing this BS about "they do work that we don't want to". Whenever a big employer is shut down by a very rare raid, the lines for application for the recently vacated jobs wrap around the block, all with legal citizens.

    What seems to be missing in all of the analyses is that THESE FOLKS ARE CHEAP BECAUSE THEY HAVE NO LEGAL STANDING. We'll see if they stay cheap if the "guest worker" program is expanded. I know the H1-B program pretty much requires a justification for why a citizen cannot be placed in the job. I think this should be standard for all work visas.

  3. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to ScottS For This Useful Post:

    jnich67 (07-23-2008), nun2sharp (07-23-2008)

  4. #83
    what Dad calls me nun2sharp's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Kansas city area USA
    Posts
    9,173
    Thanked: 1677

    Default

    They do not do work that we do not want to do , they do work far cheaper than we will, its easier for 20-30 people to paythe rent/mortgage on a place , even with cheaper wages, than it is for you and your wife trying to house your immediate family. The money/power brokers are out to kill the American dream. Its not that America cannot/will not work, its that slave labor is cheaper, bottom line business. They will not be happy until the American worker competes literally with the slave labor that is provided in Mexico, China. Pakistan. Ask your grandparents or great granparents what it was like in the old days, thats where we are headed. No decent wages, no rights, no insurance, no future, work until you drop and then get shoveled out the door.
    It is easier to fool people than to convince them they have been fooled. Twain

  5. The Following User Says Thank You to nun2sharp For This Useful Post:

    jnich67 (07-23-2008)

  6. #84
    Senior Member blabbermouth jnich67's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Westchester NY
    Posts
    2,485
    Thanked: 184

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by hoglahoo View Post
    Spanish is the official language for much of Tulsa. Here it's more convenient for an English speaker to pick up Spanish than it is for a Mexican to pick up English.
    I agree with your statement and this is what worries me. Apologists for illegals always seem to raise the point that the US was built by immigrants, etc. And yes the first generation may not have spoke English and they lived in some isolation - Little (insert nation here) in the large cities, BUT future generations had to learn English and assimilate to some degree in order to live the American Dream and their parents pushed them to do that. Now, it seems some are trying to say its OK not to assimilate. So then you'll have pockets where you have to speak Spanish or Vietnamese or Hatian, etc. That is not what built this country.

    Oh, the scale is also completely different from the past. I saw a documentary recently talking about how some 5 million Irish came here between 1600 and the 1920s (or something like that). 5 million is nothing compared to the waves we see today.

    You can assimilate and still maintain your heritage. Ugh, this topic is giving me agida!
    Last edited by jnich67; 07-23-2008 at 05:33 PM.

  7. #85
    The original Skolor and Gentileman. gugi's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Posts
    17,430
    Thanked: 3918
    Blog Entries
    1

    Default

    Right, so we're finally at the source of contention. It's not the language, that's bothering people, it's the money. The lower economic class of US citizens do not want to compete successfully with the immigrants (legal and illegal) because they do not want to lower their standard of living. On the other hand the more enterpreneural US citizens are quite happy to decrease their cost of operation by hiring this cheaper labor.

    I imagine that they way things got here was that a not so long ago there were more 'better' jobs available to americans which are now gone because they have been outsourced. But that's just the way things work as the world becomes increasingly globalized. I suppose that americans can take back the landscaping and lettuce picking type of jobs, and these positions may even get a slight pay increase, but this is still only getting ahead from being unemployed.

    The way I understand it, the american dream is not moving from an IT consultant to landscaper - it is more like moving from IT consultant to a sucessfull IT consulting business owner.
    Everybody wants to give examples of highly sucessful stories, but in reality there are much fewer sucesses than there are failures. Bill Gates built an empire from winning a contract with IBM, but Henry Ford failed over and over and over again.

    I find it a bit dishonest to put the blame on the immigrants. Yes the illegal immigrants are breaking the law by crossing the border, yet somehow to me this seems like shifting the burden of protecting a country's border from that country onto its neighbors. As far as border towns turning from english-speaking to spanish-speaking - is this worse than another alternative 'ghost towns'?

    In any case, back to the 'requirement' of immigrants learning english - as you may have guessed I would favor market oriented approach. The majority of this country speaks english and if one day that becomes spanish, or chinese, to me that would only mean that those people were economically and demographically more viable than the rest, and then that's how it should be.

    In any case it seems to me that the current economic problems of US have very little to do with legal and illegal immigrants. And my understanding is that in historical plan, the numbers as fraction of the population are not too high - a higher fractions have been sucessfully integrated in the past.

  8. #86
    what Dad calls me nun2sharp's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Kansas city area USA
    Posts
    9,173
    Thanked: 1677

    Default

    I myself am not putting the blame on the immigrant, I put the blame squarely where it belonged, on the big money people who want something for nothing and they want it out of my pocket.
    It is easier to fool people than to convince them they have been fooled. Twain

  9. #87
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Posts
    377
    Thanked: 21

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by gugi View Post
    In any case it seems to me that the current economic problems of US have very little to do with legal and illegal immigrants. And my understanding is that in historical plan, the numbers as fraction of the population are not too high - a higher fractions have been sucessfully integrated in the past.
    Sarcastically, I say "True". At one time, we were 100% immigrants.

  10. #88
    Never a dull moment hoglahoo's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Tulsa, OK
    Posts
    8,922
    Thanked: 1501
    Blog Entries
    1

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ScottS View Post
    Sarcastically, I say "True". At one time, we were 100% immigrants.
    Not really. There are a lot of US citizens of native American Indian ancestry including myself.

    Quote Originally Posted by gugi View Post
    Right, so we're finally at the source of contention. It's not the language, that's bothering people, it's the money.
    The source of contention (for me) is the lack of respect for the laws, language, customs, and common practices of the US by people who want to live in the US
    Find me on SRP's official chat in ##srp on Freenode. Link is at top of SRP's homepage

  11. #89
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Virginia
    Posts
    852
    Thanked: 79

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by gugi View Post
    Right, so we're finally at the source of contention. It's not the language, that's bothering people, it's the money. The lower economic class of US citizens do not want to compete successfully with the immigrants (legal and illegal) because they do not want to lower their standard of living. On the other hand the more enterpreneural US citizens are quite happy to decrease their cost of operation by hiring this cheaper labor.
    Hi again.
    I think this is a bit of oversimplification. It is just one facet of many. The jobs being done by illegal aliens are typically paid under the table at rates that an employer would not legally be able to pay a citizen. Sure it is illegal that the employers are hiring illegal aliens and paying them less than minimum wage. Unfortunately there is so little enforcement against the employers that actual citizens essentially need not apply. Many say these are jobs Americans won't do, but this simply isn't true. Many of the jobs formerly occupied by Americans (high school students, laborers, even more skilled trades) are now filled instead by illegal, off the books employees, who do not "live" here, but share an apartment with 20 other men. So, the effect is compound. Rental prices in such areas are artificially high, because even a high rent divided by 30 is cheap-therefore regular families can afford less and less; teens who would have been working a summer job putting shingles on houses or mowing lawns-are now called lazy and unwilling to work, when in reality, they cannot compete with an illegal alien with 30 years experience willing to do it cheaper than the employer is allowed to hire them(the legal citizen) at. I'm not proposing the minimum wage be dropped, but that the employers be taken to task. I also say illegal alien, because, in many cases they have no intent of living here, which is why they split apartments 30 ways. The money goes back to (Mexico/Guatemala/wherever).

    Quote Originally Posted by gugi View Post
    I imagine that they way things got here was that a not so long ago there were more 'better' jobs available to americans which are now gone because they have been outsourced. But that's just the way things work as the world becomes increasingly globalized. I suppose that americans can take back the landscaping and lettuce picking type of jobs, and these positions may even get a slight pay increase, but this is still only getting ahead from being unemployed.
    This is a different topic, perhaps, but it would be a good one I think. The outsourcing of jobs has nothing, however, to do with those here speaking the language or even people coming here illegally to take advantage of what others have paid for (although a bit tongue in cheek, one could say this is actually becoming the new "American dream" only it doesn't actually involve Americans). Outsourcing is just another way for employers who have become global corporations to skirt labor laws. Personally, while things would be a bit more expensive, I think that people should be paid fair wages for fair work. If a shoe company or (just about any company in China) wants to have 12 year old slave girls make its shoes (or insert other product here...) for $0.15 per hour, then I feel that company's products should be penalized so as to cost exactly the same as if they had paid the employees minimum U.S. wages. I believe in the market, etc. but we cannot sit here and complain about child labor, slavery, etc etc. here in the US then by default support such activities in other countries by allowing corporations to use slave (or *almost*) labor to make their products more competitive against companies which do not support such activities. I also feel that if a foreign company does pay its workers fairly, that should be taken into account and their products should receive less restrictions, IMHO. The global market is only a free market if everyone is playing by similar rules; if we require things of an American company in order to allow them to sell their product to us, the same should apply to foreign, and nominally American(but not) global corporations, as well.

    Quote Originally Posted by gugi View Post
    The way I understand it, the american dream is not moving from an IT consultant to landscaper - it is more like moving from IT consultant to a sucessfull IT consulting business owner.
    Everybody wants to give examples of highly sucessful stories, but in reality there are much fewer sucesses than there are failures. Bill Gates built an empire from winning a contract with IBM, but Henry Ford failed over and over and over again.
    This is true to a point, especially wrt. the failures involved. It seems too often people miss this part.

    Quote Originally Posted by gugi View Post
    I find it a bit dishonest to put the blame on the immigrants. Yes the illegal immigrants are breaking the law by crossing the border, yet somehow to me this seems like shifting the burden of protecting a country's border from that country onto its neighbors. As far as border towns turning from english-speaking to spanish-speaking - is this worse than another alternative 'ghost towns'?
    I will say this. It really disturbs me to see people speaking of illegal aliens as "immigrants". They are not the same thing. An immigrant is just as American as any other in my opinion. An illegal alien is someone who felt it necessary or even appropriate to cheat everyone else doing things legally, jump the line, then in turn cheat others willing to do work legally by undercutting their wages. Illegal aliens may or may not intend to stay here, may or may not have good intentions (there is no difference IMHO between crossing a nation's border at night in a remote location and "infiltrating" that country). It isn't *that* difficult to come here legally, especially for the majority of those who arrive illegally nightly at the US borders-so why did they not wait their turn like everyone else? I lay the blame on much of this on unscrupulous employers as much as I do those sneaking in, but both are attempting to get something for an unfair profit.

    Quote Originally Posted by gugi View Post
    In any case, back to the 'requirement' of immigrants learning english - as you may have guessed I would favor market oriented approach. The majority of this country speaks english and if one day that becomes spanish, or chinese, to me that would only mean that those people were economically and demographically more viable than the rest, and then that's how it should be.
    This I could agree with; however right now the common language happens to be English. It is only sensible that people should attempt to learn it. Above there have been a few posts speaking of older people who had difficulty with the language-unfortunately for this argument, it is almost NEVER the older person who stands in a hospital demanding they only be spoken to in their native tongue. It is younger people, and to be honest, I wish the laws were different and these people could be informed that just across the border they came over, there is a perfectly good hospital waiting for them. After all, haven't we been told again and again by filmmakers and other knowledgeable medical types that Cuba and other countries like that have much better medical care than we? So stop using our tax money and putting our hospitals out of business unless one is at least willing to try. TRY. It isn't too much to ask. I really don't understand why people decry Americans for wanting those newly here to do this. Every nation in the world does this, why should we Americans be the only ones to take it in the shorts.

    Quote Originally Posted by gugi View Post
    In any case it seems to me that the current economic problems of US have very little to do with legal and illegal immigrants. And my understanding is that in historical plan, the numbers as fraction of the population are not too high - a higher fractions have been sucessfully integrated in the past.
    You would only be partially right. Go to San Diego or some other border town. Look at the hospitals that have went out of business. Higher fractions of legal immigrants have been successfully integrated, sure, but we aren't speaking of legal immigration, and the number has lots of zeros on the end of it these days. Legal immigrants are ALWAYS welcome, and are a great contribution to what this country is all about. People who come unlawfully and flaunt the laws of our country show it no respect and, call a spade a spade, they are breaking multiple laws. Demanding (and getting) home loans when citizens can't get them, undercutting wages, artificially inflating the prices of housing, taxing the medical, educational and social security systems...
    A real immigrant would not demand to be spoken to in his or her native language, but would endeavor to learn English instead. Five years as suggested above is PLENTY of time, even for the slowest to learn enough English to function; at any rate even elderly etc. coming here to assimilate into society at least should (and do!) attempt the language at the very least. Some may never be fluent but functional is much easier to achieve, after all they put the effort forward to get here in the first place, right? no problem. It is the illegal who gets here, cheating the system and breaking the law from the first step on US soil, who, with no respect to his or her host country, demands also to be spoken to in his or her native language. Like our country, he or she has no use for the language the rest of us use, either.

    It is my feeling, however, that regardless of one's opinions on those arriving illegally, people who break the law to get here and or stay here are not going to respect any law about language, either. On the other hand, those who put forward the effort to do things correctly, and respect the country they wish to live in, should IMHO be given a certain amount of time to learn some basic skills in English, and if need be, I'm all for help for those people in learning it, as they have shown the effort to do things right in the first place. Learning "Hello," "Stop" "Help" "Where is the (bank/hospital/grocer etc)" and such does NOT take five years even for an elderly person. Typically however, as above, the elderly person at least tries and is not the one from the hospital example.

    One day I'll be able to be succinct with my thoughts...

    I promise.


    John P.

  12. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to JohnP For This Useful Post:

    jnich67 (07-23-2008), nun2sharp (07-24-2008)

  13. #90
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Posts
    377
    Thanked: 21

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by JohnP View Post
    Many of the jobs formerly occupied by Americans (high school students, laborers, even more skilled trades) are now filled instead by illegal, off the books employees, who do not "live" here, but share an apartment with 20 other men. So, the effect is compound. Rental prices in such areas are artificially high, because even a high rent divided by 30 is cheap-therefore regular families can afford less and less; teens who would have been working a summer job putting shingles on houses or mowing lawns-are now called lazy and unwilling to work, when in reality, they cannot compete with an illegal alien with 30 years experience willing to do it cheaper than the employer is allowed to hire them(the legal citizen) at. I'm not proposing the minimum wage be dropped, but that the employers be taken to task. I also say illegal alien, because, in many cases they have no intent of living here, which is why they split apartments 30 ways. The money goes back to (Mexico/Guatemala/wherever).
    Sounds like you're starting to understand where the "living wage" arguments are coming from.

Page 9 of 12 FirstFirst ... 56789101112 LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •