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Jail the employers of criminal aliens


               
2017 Feb 22, 3:11pm   18,960 views  59 comments

by Patrick   follow (59)  

We need to jail the employers of criminal aliens, at least 30 days per violation. No easily paid fines, but mandatory jail instead.

Megafarms and other institutions are driving down US wages illegally. The criminal aliens themselves impose a large cost in tax money.

Both Democrat and Republican politicians profit at the expense of the public:

Democrats get more Hispanics who reliably vote Democrat.
Republicans get cheap labor for their rich patrons.

What you lose:

US wages, public safety, respect for the law

The more poor people there are in a society, the more you have to pay in taxes for social services and law enforcement, and the less healthy economic activity per capita there is, resulting in a decrease in material standard of living for all but the richest 0.1%.

Poverty does not just affect the poor.

How they rationalize their abuse:

"No human being is illegal."

How you should respond to their rationalizations:

True, no person is illegal, but everyone who entered the US illegally is a criminal so we should correctly call them "criminal aliens".

Criminal aliens have broken the law by sneaking over the border. They don't belong here.

Even if the criminals were actually brought here by farm owners, they are still criminals and should be deported.

Their illegal immigration results in no bargaining power for labor and thus effective slave labor.


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20   Patrick   2017 Feb 23, 9:31am  

Yes, because liberals have been so brainwashed and distracted from fundamental economics that they forgot what the Left was all about.

It's up to us to start reminding them that all this race crap is so that people don't have time to talk about taxing non-productive rent-seeking by billionaires.

21   Patrick   2017 Feb 23, 9:48am  

georgeliberte says

Hispanics tend toward conservatism and are far from a homogeneous group.

Yes, Hispanics tend to be Catholic and socially conservative, but for worker rights, which is a traditionally leftist issue.

All the race and gender crap is probably driving them away from the Democratic party just like it's driving white men away.

22   fdhfoiehfeoi   2017 Feb 23, 9:52am  

ddshutlz says

Can you propose a way to meet the demand for products these jailed employers produced before they were jailed??

Why should we give a fuck about a business that hires illegals? Let 'em go under, a better, LAW abiding business will rise up to take their place.

23   fdhfoiehfeoi   2017 Feb 23, 9:55am  

The cost of jailing employers will be infinitely cheaper than building a wall, and way more effective at stemming illegal influx.

24   Patrick   2017 Feb 23, 9:55am  

We need both: jailing employers, and the wall. Neither one is sufficient alone.

25   fdhfoiehfeoi   2017 Feb 23, 10:05am  

If you cut off all incentive to border hop, employment, social services, medical care, schooling, housing, what need is there to still build a wall? If anyone still wants to come after all that is taken away, maybe they really do need asylum, and we shouldn't try to hinder their entrance.

26   Heraclitusstudent   2017 Feb 23, 10:27am  

Strategist says

My gardener and the cleaning lady might be illegal. If they are gone, my wife will make me do all the work.

Nah..., you'll be in prison.

27   joeyjojojunior   2017 Feb 23, 10:33am  

"We need both: jailing employers, and the wall. Neither one is sufficient alone."

But, how do you know? We've never tried jailing employers. Let's try that first, then if it still doesn't work, we can talk about a wall.

28   Dan8267   2017 Feb 23, 10:35am  

Patrick says

What you lose:

US wages, public safety, respect for the law

You also lose a strong middle class and a good economy, and that affects your wages and standard of living even if you do not work in any field remotely related to cheap immigrant labor. The more poor people there are in a society, the more you have to pay in taxes for social services and law enforcement, and the less healthy economic activity per capita there is, resulting in a decrease in material standard of living for all but the richest 0.1%.

Poverty does not just affect the poor.

Patrick says

How they rationalize their abuse:

"No human being is illegal."

Why they, the capitalists, really want illegal immigration: it results in no bargaining power for labor and thus effective slave labor. This allows the owners to take a larger piece of the pie that was baked by other people.

Patrick says

How you should respond to their rationalizations:

Illegal immigrants have broken the law by sneaking over the border. They don't belong here.

Actually, most illegal immigration and work isn't Mexicans sneaking over the boarder but rather being brought in to work on farms. The farm owners and their bought politicians then want those farmers to leave and new ones brought in so that the labor remains powerless and cheap. However, the farmers, now illegal immigrants who overstayed their welcome, remain and either work illegally for the same owners, who absolutely know and encourage this, or work illegally elsewhere.

[stupid comment limit]

29   Dan8267   2017 Feb 23, 10:41am  

Stopping all illegal border crossings won't put a dent in illegal immigration. Any reduction will be offset by allowing more Mexican slave labor to legally cross the border and then illegally stay beyond the season they had permission to stay for.

The only solution is to stop the practice of using powerless illegal workers and temporary foreign labor. This can only be done if the pay of the owners is tied directly to the pay of their employees. Fix the total income of the owners of farms to the median income of the farmer, i.e. farm worker. Let the owners have a total income from the farm equal to five times the total income of the farm laborer. If the owners want more money, they have to make it so that the farm laborer gets more money.

Do this and the immigration problem will cease. The immigration problem is inherently a problem of capitalism. The solution is the removal of the mechanism of capitalism from commerce and production. As long as there are financial incentives for owners to exploit labor, these problems will continue. The solution is to align the financial incentives of owners with the interests of society, and that requires that society rather than owners determine how much of the pie the owners get.

Abandoning capitalism in favor of more rational business and commerce systems would motivate owners to increase the size of the pie because they cannot increase the percentage of the pie they get. Right now the owners do the math and find that a bigger cut of a smaller pie means more pie for them, and they don't give a shit that it's less pie for everyone else. This is the fundamental problem with capitalism.

And remember, capitalism has NOTHING to do with commerce, business, or free markets. Those four terms mean completely different things.

30   Dan8267   2017 Feb 23, 10:45am  

FortWayne says

Liberals call everyone racist who disagrees with them.

That's bullshit. Show one example where I have done that? Oh, you can't? What a surprise.

Once again conservatives demonstrate their complete lack of grasp on reality. No wonder they are so bad at running economies and the government.

Oh, and this whole immigration problem, is caused by conservatives, particularly right-wing conservatives, and even more particularly, those that advocate Reaganomics. It's trickle down economics and unregulated capitalism that causes the very immigration problem being discussed here. And yet you continue to use the image of that buffoon Ronald Reagan as your avatar.

As always the problems that conservatives complain about are caused by those same conservatives.

31   Patrick   2017 Feb 23, 10:53am  

Dan8267 says

You also lose a strong middle class and a good economy, and that affects your wages and standard of living even if you do not work in any field remotely related to cheap immigrant labor. The more poor people there are in a society, the more you have to pay in taxes for social services and law enforcement, and the less healthy economic activity per capita there is, resulting in a decrease in material standard of living for all but the richest 0.1%.

You made some good points. I added them above.

32   Dan8267   2017 Feb 23, 10:55am  

There is no wall along the Mexican-Guatemala border. Yet, there are no Mexicans crossing over to Guatemala. Why? No jobs.

33   Patrick   2017 Feb 23, 11:00am  

Dan8267 says

Actually, most illegal immigration and work isn't Mexicans sneaking over the boarder but rather being brought in to work on farms. The farm owners and their bought politicians then want those farmers to leave and new ones brought in so that the labor remains powerless and cheap.

@Dan8267 this is very interesting.

Are farm owners actually arranging or paying for illegals to be brought in?

Is there evidence of that?

34   Dan8267   2017 Feb 23, 11:25am  

rando says

Are farm owners actually arranging or paying for illegals to be brought in?

They don't have to be. The way to commit a crime and not be prosecuted for it is to have other people do the leg work while you just provide the financial incentives. Our society never prosecutes those who incentivize others to carry out crime even if the crimes would not exist at all if not for the incentives.

The owner class is above the law. We jail and deport the Mexican who illegal stays longer than the season he was given permission to work. We don't jail the farm owner who hires those illegal immigrants precisely because they cannot petition for better wages or living conditions, but it's those farm owners who are creating the problem.

It's like if a rich person didn't hire someone to assassinate Donald Trump but made it known that if someone did, he'd give that person ten million dollars for "unrelated" reasons. Not illegal because of the sneaky mechanism -- evidently one layer of indirection is all it takes to get around the law -- but certainly any justification for making an action illegal is also a justification for incentivizing that action illegal. The farm owner has far more influence on illegal immigration and working than the migrant farmer has.

Ultimately, illegal immigration is fundamentally an economic, not a political or social, problem. Thus it requires an economic solution.

35   BayArea   2017 Feb 23, 11:35am  

Dan8267 says

There is no wall along the Mexican-Guatemala border. Yet, there are no Mexicans crossing over to Guatemala. Why? No jobs.

Stopped a bit prematurely didn't you?

No jobs, no wealth, no 1st world medical system that can't turn them away, no major liberal movement that is fighting for the rights of illegal Mexican immigrants in Guatemala... essentially no immigration problem because there's nothing to chase relative to where they are coming from.

36   Dan8267   2017 Feb 23, 11:44am  

That just furthers my point. The solution to massive migration and the illegal immigration problem is to properly align the selfish financial incentives of individuals, both the poor migrant worker and the lazy-ass farm owner, with the interests of society. People act on incentives. We humans -- hell, all life -- is inherently selfish. It's time to use the selfish nature of life for good rather than evil. This is possible only by aligning selfish interests with selfless interests. It all comes down to mechanics.

37   ddshutlz   2017 Feb 23, 12:15pm  

Yet, some people want to build a wall, persecute undocumented immigrants, clap their hands and say "done". Wasn't it so easy?

38   Dan8267   2017 Feb 23, 12:18pm  

ddshutlz says

Yet, some people want to build a wall, persecute undocumented immigrants, clap their hands and say "done". Wasn't it so easy?

Simpsons explains human behavior.

www.OkV_ztynYDM

www.zDFo2Iok06Y

39   Strategist   2017 Feb 23, 12:22pm  

NuttBoxer says

If you cut off all incentive to border hop, employment, social services, medical care, schooling, housing, what need is there to still build a wall? If anyone still wants to come after all that is taken away, maybe they really do need asylum, and we shouldn't try to hinder their entrance.

Criminals would still come. They are the ones we need to stop first.

40   Patrick   2017 Feb 23, 12:36pm  

So if I want to be reasonably correct I would call you a racist?

@ddshutlz You should not be calling any other user anything on this forum.

Attacking the person and not his point is the very definition of ad hominem.

If you have an argument to make, please make it. If you just call users names, that helps nobody, and moves everyone further away from an amicable resolution to the argument.

41   fdhfoiehfeoi   2017 Feb 23, 12:59pm  

Strategist says

Criminals would still come. They are the ones we need to stop first.

I assume you mean criminals on the run from Mexican authorities? If you eliminate 98% of the illegals crossing now, the criminal illegals who still cross to run away, will be pretty easy to spot and deport.

42   Dan8267   2017 Feb 23, 2:16pm  

rando says

@ddshutlz You should not be calling any other user anything on this forum.

Shit, I've been calling people conservatives. That's the worse ad hominem attack.

43   ddshutlz   2017 Feb 23, 2:57pm  

I guess I can't call anyone racist, but I can make comments that are racist.

44   Patrick   2017 Feb 23, 3:01pm  

Yes, please attack the argument and not the person!

It's easy to attack people and call them names without actually making any counter-argument at all.

No one benefits from that. All discussion stops there. Name-calling is exactly what got Trump elected. So many people are sick of its utter pointlessness.

Let's actively try to understand each other's ideas instead.

45   Dan8267   2017 Feb 23, 4:51pm  

rando says

Name-calling is exactly what got Trump elected.

I thought it was his huge hands.

46   Strategist   2017 Feb 23, 5:41pm  

NuttBoxer says

Strategist says

Criminals would still come. They are the ones we need to stop first.

I assume you mean criminals on the run from Mexican authorities? If you eliminate 98% of the illegals crossing now, the criminal illegals who still cross to run away, will be pretty easy to spot and deport.

No, i mean real criminals who come across the border for the sole purpose of committing crimes. The US is a rich country, lots of ways to make money illegally. Drugs, auto theft, burglaries, welfare fraud etc.

48   HeadSet   2025 Mar 9, 8:38pm  

Patrick says





"There are no people to come and pick this." Gee, where have we heard that before? I know. its "Now that the Yankees have freed the slaves, who will pick the cotton?"
49   MolotovCocktail   2025 Mar 9, 8:46pm  

Patrick says


It's reasonably correct, since just over half of illegal immigrants are from Mexico:

In 2012, 52% were from Mexico, 15% from Central America, 12% from Asia, 6% from South America, 5% from the Caribbean, and another 5% from Europe and Canada.[4]


That has changed radically since 2012. Mexican birthrates dropped substantially in the late 90s and onward.

So since about the late 2010s the number of Mexicans crossing the border illegally has dropped substantially. Now the majority are from Central America.
50   Patrick   2025 Apr 19, 10:12pm  

https://x.com/jacoburowsky/status/1912674927179887002


Let me tell you the dark secret of hiring illegals. It's not about saving money.

In fact, I hire them through a temp agency - meaning that I pay 2x per hour more than a regular full-time employee. That's right, every hour I pay the employee AND the temp agency. I'm paying the cost of two laborers for one illegal. FT employees get benefits, holiday pay, matched 401k, and the illegal STILL costs me more. Why? Because the temp agency is doing the work of falsifying e-verify and giving me plausible deniability. Okay, so why go through this at all? Let me give you an example:

I'm in charge of the widget machine. My boss wants me to increase throughput for this quarter. My biggest issue with the widget machine is that it's loaded to the hilt with safety features. Light curtains, estops, safety procs, deadman's switches and so on. Now, if I disable one of these safety features the widget machine will increase productivity, because it doesn't shut off when an operator pulls out parts. So let's say I tell Bubba or Tyrone, "hey I just disabled a safety feature, go stick your fucking hands in there please" they're going to Google the ACLU and sue me. Jesus is going to ask me, "is good?" And I'm going to reply "is good." And he's going to stick his fucking hands in there. Things will go great for about six months, and then one day Jesus will be a millisecond too slow on the draw and lose three fingers. Is this bad for me? No not really. Jesus doesn't really understand what happened to him. I can blame the whole thing on him actually. I tell OSHA that he disabled the safety features himself. Shit, I even have a paper he signed saying that he was trained to never ever, ever disable safety features! Jesus is going to get fired. No compensation. Sent back to Honduras. Do not collect 200 pesos.

This is what illegal immigration is for. Paying absurd amounts of money to sideskirt regulation and labor rights.
51   HeadSet   2025 Apr 20, 2:05pm  

Patrick says

I tell OSHA that he disabled the safety features himself. Shit, I even have a paper he signed saying that he was trained to never ever, ever disable safety features! Jesus is going to get fired. No compensation. Sent back to Honduras. Do not collect 200 pesos.

I call baloney on this one. It will not matter who disabled the safety device. The employer can fire someone who did noy follow procedures, but once an accident occurs the injured party can sue and will likely win. I know a guy in Texas who lost his arm exactly because a safety device was removed. In Texas at that time, it was illegal to sue one's employer. However, he was able to sue and win against the manufacture of the machine. Ironically, the employer later used his attorney after he won to sue the manufacturer as well. The manufacturer was in no way to blame for the safety device being removed, but a jury will want to award damages anyway to someone who lost an arm. The lawyer took 45% right off the top of the award, before any deductions like paying back worker's comp.
52   Patrick   2025 Apr 20, 3:57pm  

Maybe the key is that a criminal alien is not going to go to the authorities or sue even if he gets injured.
53   HeadSet   2025 Apr 20, 5:22pm  

Patrick says

Maybe the key is that a criminal alien is not going to go to the authorities or sue even if he gets injured.

Not a chance. Too much money involved and too many lawyers. California even has special laws to make it easier for illegals to sue.
https://lawshun.com/article/can-an-undocumented-person-file-a-law-suit
54   TheAntiPanicanLearingCenter   2025 Apr 20, 5:29pm  

We should allow illegals who turn in their employers to remain on a work visa.
55   HeadSet   2025 Apr 20, 5:49pm  

AmericanKulak says

We should allow illegals who turn in their employers to remain on a work visa.

Then the illegal would just steal another job somewhere else.
56   Patrick   2025 Apr 21, 11:21am  

True, but maybe it's a worthwhile deal because prosecuting the employer would presumably result the elimination of in many illegal jobs in exchange for that tolerating that one illegal guy.
57   HeadSet   2025 Apr 21, 1:59pm  

Patrick says

True, but maybe it's a worthwhile deal because prosecuting the employer would presumably result the elimination of in many illegal jobs in exchange for that tolerating that one illegal guy.

In that case, the illegal would have no incentive to turn in his employer because he would lose his job and have nowhere to go. Who would hire a guy who turned in his last employer, even if the employers were not already afraid of hiring illegals in general?
58   Patrick   2025 Apr 21, 3:15pm  

His incentive would be freedom to stay.

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