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Finally, someone expresses my views on immigration

And it surprisingly comes from a conservative writer (Mollie Engelhart) in an opinion piece in the right wing Epoch Times. I can't figure out how to upload a link, although it pops up regularly in my in box as spam. So I will attempt to briefly summarize:

Basically, the immigration issue is one of a free labor market: free in the sense of free trade, not just cheap labor.

We have a society that looks down on "vocational" jobs in agriculture, construction, hospitality, meat packing, etc. And a generation, or two, of Americans who feel such jobs are unskilled and beneath them, while increasing numbers of them suffer from depression, drug addiction, and unemployment.

We have an education system that has eschewed offering education & training in those "vocational skills" -- from high school through junior and four-year colleges -- to focus on science, business administration, and the arts.

Meanwhile, the aforementioned industries are desperately seeking workers in those jobs. Historically they have been filled by immigrants, but our immigration system is so dysfunctional and broken it takes years at high cost to be able to get into the U.S., or as she says "It is impossible to get in line, when there is no line." Consequently, we have created a lucrative market for the cartels in smuggling people across the border, as few make it on their own.

The solutions have to come on two fronts, as she points out:

1. We need to end all the distraction of political gamesmanship with fingerpointing and labeling, scare and hate tactics, and recreate an immigration system that really meets both our workplace needs and those seeking better economic opportunities from our neighbors to the south.

2. We need to retool our educational systems to provide training in needed skills as well as academic fields, and our pay systems to more equitably reward -- thus value -- these needed workers to entice more Americans to consider working in them.

It really is a good, well-written piece, imho. And from a woman who is both a chef and a rancher in Texas.
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ViciDraco · 41-45, M
One of the key features of the broken immigration system is the ability to abuse immigrants. You aren't going to unionize or raise a fit about working conditions if it means your boss will just give you over to ICE.

Immigration isn't broken by incompetence or accident. It was broken by design and for a purpose.
@ViciDraco and because it still serves its purpose perfectly, it's not going to change. And the fear mongering about immigrants is part of it too: that's necessary for the public to support threatening them and not care about their exploitation.
ViciDraco · 41-45, M
@NerdyPotato I'm not sure about that. It has been changing a little as some farms and businesses have had their workers raided and taken. One of the issues with the GOP these days is that the people who knew the game have been getting replaced by the people who bought the con and don't know that it's a game.
@ViciDraco true, it may be changing in the wrong direction. Maybe I should have said it won't improve, as in valuing immigrants and making the legal process easier.
ViciDraco · 41-45, M
@NerdyPotato That would be more accurate, I believe. It's only going to improve when the current model breaks down completely. So it likely has to get worse before it gets better. To the point where you can't blame problems on immigrants because there aren't enough to blame. But if it ever does improve it would just reset the cycle and we'd end up right back here again eventually.