MSN Home  |  My MSN  |  Hotmail
Sign in to Windows Live ID Web Search:   
go to MSNGroups 
Free Forum Hosting
 
Important Announcement Important Announcement
The MSN Groups service will close in February 2009. You can move your group to Multiply, MSN’s partner for online groups. Learn More
THE SYNOD[email protected] 
  
What's New
  
  Welcome  
  ***Messages***  
  
  General  
  
  Archives  
  
  the unXplained¿  
  
  The Lighter Side  
  
  Technical Issues  
  
  Non Political  
  House Rules  
  Pictures  
  Links  
  Site Promotions  
  Old Geek's  
  Synod Exchange Folder  
  Why War?  
  Honer the Fallen  
  Web Sites  
  Progressive Links  
  oldgeek  
  Web Links  
  Web Links 2  
  Old Front Page  
  
  
  Tools  
 
Archives : ECONOMIC LOGIC MAY END MASS IMMIGRATION
Choose another message board
 
     
Reply
 Message 1 of 1 in Discussion 
From: Aprilborn  (Original Message)Sent: 10/26/2006 4:31 PM

ECONOMIC LOGIC MAY END MASS IMMIGRATION
by Samuel Francis

If you ever get into an argument about immigration, sooner or later (probably sooner) somebody will majestically inform you: "But immigrants take jobs that Americans won't do. Without immigrants, lettuce would cost 10 dollars a head." Sometimes the lettuce will cost 20 dollars a head, but the point—and absence of facts—is still the same: Immigration is necessary for national economic survival.

The argument was never very compelling, if only because it's long been known that the labor that goes into producing a head of lettuce accounts for a measly 10 percent of its retail price, so it would take a good deal more than raising the wages of farm workers to hike the price to 10 dollars a head. Today, however, the cheap labor argument has been definitively exploded.

The explosion took place last week on the pages of The New York Times, where a major story by Eduardo Porter went through the facts and figures—about how the cheap labor that mass immigration provides has helped keep American farm technology in the Dark Ages and caused American agriculture to wither in the face of global competition—and how the federal government has helped undermine the American farmer on behalf of Third World immigrants.

For decades, as everyone knows, American farmers have relied on the cheap, mainly illegal and mainly Mexican labor immigrants provide—but now, because of such nifty gimmicks as NAFTA and similar global trade agreements, the even cheaper labor of such paradises as Brazil, China, Chile and Turkey is making illegal immigrants unprofitable for the American farmer. American workers long ago discovered what "unprofitable" meant for them: They had to go, and that's what it means for the immigrants, too.

"The Florida industry has to reduce costs to stay in business," one agribusiness manager told Porter. "Mechanical harvesting is the only available way to do that today."

As a matter of fact, it has always been the way to do that, but agribusiness didn't want to believe it. Hence, as Porter writes, "Rather than make such investments (in new technology), farmers mostly focused on lobbying government for easier access to inexpensive labor."

The result was guest worker programs that let immigrants come here temporarily to work. In 1979, President Carter's Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland ended government financing of research into farming technology because he didn't want to replace "an adequate and willing workforce with machines." That was just about the time we started hearing about how Americans wouldn't take those jobs, anyway. The "adequate and willing workforce" Bergland was talking about was made up of immigrants.

Later still, in 1986, "farmers were instrumental in winning passage of the Immigration Reform and Control Act, which legalized nearly 3 million illegal immigrants—more than a third under a special program for agriculture."

Another result was that the progress of American farm technology shriveled. "Farmers' investments in labor-saving technology all but froze, and gains in labor productivity slowed," Porter writes. As mass immigration rose in the 1980s, "Farmers' capital investments fell 46.7 percent from their peak in 1980 through 1999."

Today, with the competition from the cheaper labor of those portions of the Third World that remain where they are supposed to be, the days when American farmers could ignore technological improvements and investments are gone. Hence, orange growers in Florida, for example, are now desperately trying to deploy mechanized "canopy shakers" that rake some 35,000 oranges out of a tree in 15 minutes. It would take four workers all day to do that.

There are theories about why the Greeks and Romans, who acquired a respectable knowledge of science and engineering, never developed an industrial revolution. One such theory is that they had too much cheap labor to need labor-saving industry—in the form of slaves. When you conquer the world, slaves are a lot cheaper and easier to take care of than machines. Today, we have our own form of slavery in mass immigration. Instead of America conquering the world, the world conquers us.

There are agricultural jobs that machines can't do, and there are certain kinds of crops and terrains for which machines aren't appropriate (yet), but one benefit that the otherwise disastrous globalization of the economy may yet bring could just be the end of mass Third World immigration into this country.

With the remorseless logic of Economic Man, the agribusiness manager Porter quoted earlier in his story summed up the implications of the new interest of American farmers in technological innovation: "If there's no demand for labor, supply will end. They will have to find another place to work, or stay in their country."

If a commitment to nation and civilization won't stop mass immigration, maybe economics finally can.

http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/News/Francis/NewsSF040304.html



First  Previous  No Replies  Next  Last