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Tyson Foods Loves Immigrants!

Corporations Love Immigrants. We have tried to tell you that for years, but many of you refuse to listen and understand that there are some jobs that Americans simply refuse to do. Working in a field and picking produce is one example. Working in a meat/poultry processing plant is another. These are backbreaking jobs.
There is a labor shortage for these jobs. So please stop with your anti-immigrant hate, especially for those who perform jobs that you refuse or are physically unable to do.

Are you familiar with Tyson Foods? Tyson Foods is one of the top four meat companies in the US, selling one out of every five pounds of beef, pork, and chicken eaten by American consumers. The company has been family-run ever since it was founded in 1931, with chairman John H. Tyson — grandson of founder John W. They also own Jimmy Dean Foods.

The latest from Scripps News:

Tyson Foods wants to hire 52,000 asylum seekers for factory jobs.
The food processing company wants to hire migrants who are arriving in New York for jobs Americans don't want.

New York City shelters are overwhelmed with migrants.

Many of them have arrived in Texas or Florida and then taken buses to New York, where shelter and benefits are guaranteed. However, the city is scrambling as the number continues to climb and the migrants look to build a new life in America, which includes housing and work.

But for companies like Tyson Foods Inc., struggling to fill unpopular jobs with a U.S. unemployment rate of 3.9%, this new population presents an alluring opportunity.

The food processing company wants to hire 52,000 asylum seekers for factory jobs, offering a starting wage of $16.50 per hour along with benefits. The company understands and is aware that these are jobs that many find unpleasant, such as washing meat, placing the cuts into trays, final inspections for bones and packing meat, but believe this will help the refugees to start a life in America.

For example, the company says that it has allocated $1.5 million a year for legal aid services and will be providing its new employees with temporary housing, on-site child care, transportation, a relocation stipend, and paid time off to attend court hearings and to adjust to their new homes.

The company joined forces with the nonprofit Tent Partnership for Refugees, a network of over 400 major companies committed to helping refugees find jobs, with the plan to hire as many people as possible from the more than 180,000 asylum seekers that have come through New York City’s shelter system. Tyson, for example, already employs about 42,000 immigrants.

According to an Economic Policy Institute analysis of federal data, about 50% of the labor market’s recent growth came from foreign-born workers between January 2023 and January 2024.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said last week that immigration and labor participation contributed to economic strength.

"The immigration that we saw was a notable factor of 2023 and 2024 economic outcomes, and of course we're aware of that, and it plays a role in our way of thinking about economic policy and in the path of the economy," Powell said.

While asylum seekers are not authorized to work as soon as they arrive in the U.S., they are expected to apply for asylum within the first year of their arrival and can receive a work permit 180 days after submitting the application. However, because of immigration backlogs, it’s taking some people longer.

So far this year, Tyson says they have hired 87 migrants from New York.

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Do you support the US economy? Of course you do. Everyone wants our economy to be strong. So you can help by contacting your elected officials and demand that they fund additional judges so that immigrants seeking asylum can have their case heard in a court of law, and their fate determined, and provide the necessary resources to improve the process, so these people allowed into the country, can fill the jobs that you don't want.
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twiigss · M
Couple of important things to note. They are illegal aliens, secondly there's not much we can do about it. Sure okay we'll call our elected officials and leave a voice message. Yeah that's not going to go anywhere. We could stand on a sidewalk for 4 hours holding signs walking around chanting, that's not going to do anything either.

All any of us can do is sit back and watch.

I've done emailed my elected official. Never once got a reply back from them.
JSul3 · 70-79
@twiigss They are people seeking asylum.
Entering the US illegally is a misdemeanor....not a felony.

If you do not like corporations, like Tyson foods, hiring them, then demand that corporations use E-verify to check their status, and tell your elected officials to fine and/or shut them down for hiring them.
twiigss · M
@JSul3 again, I can make 100 phone calls, I can send 100 emails, I can participate in 100 protests, but at the end of the day, nothing is going to change.

Has anything changed for you since making your post? Has Tyson Foods stopped hiring illegal aliens because of your post?

This is my point I'm trying to make. You can make all the posts in the world, you can holler and yell about it, nothing is going to change.
JSul3 · 70-79
@twiigss "Illegal aliens" and those 'seeking asylum" are not the same.

I am not raising my voice one octave, because I know we have a labor shortage and need labor.

You cannot force people to do a job they refuse to do, for whatever reason.

I have no issue with Tyson hiring migrants.
They should be vetting them and using e-verify. If they are following the law, good!
twiigss · M
@JSul3 People in media are using the word "migrant" synonymously with "illegal alien". Because PC police are everywhere. However... coming here "legally" makes you a citizen of The United States once you have gone through the process of becoming a legal citizen. Those people seeking asylum aren't doing it the right way, they come here, are caught, see a judge and are released into our country. That's not how it should be working in my mind.

But people are gonna do what people are gonna do. I'm tired of wasting my breath because none of what I say or do matters, which is what I was pointing out in my first post. I can do all the things in the world, protest, make phone calls, send emails, nothing is going to change because of what I do or don't do.

I've signed petitions before, guess what signing the petition got me? Absolutely nothing. Nothing ever once changed by me signing a petition. I'm done trying to "speak up and go haywire and yell and scream and email and call!!!" It doesn't matter. That's the point I'm trying to make.
JSul3 · 70-79
@twiigss It is unfortunate that you have given up.
Change is difficult. Look at the gridlock in Congress....can't or won't pass bills that the majority of Americans want passed.

I would hope you have some empathy and compassion for those who have a crisis in their homeland and simply seek a better life here.

If there were more judges, they could process more people and determine their claim.
twiigss · M
@JSul3 Don't get me wrong, I want change for the better. But as an ordinary US citizen, there isn't much I can do, other than email my local officials. I can't walk into their offices and demand change and expect it to happen the next minute. In a perfect world it would be, reach out to local officials, they acknowledge and respond to your concerns, solving the dilemma at hand and making change happen.

But that typically doesn't happen. I've sent several emails to my local officals with no reply's back. Matter of fact I believe I may have unsubscribed from the emails I get, just because they say things like, "Contact our office and we will reach back out to you" and they simply don't. I even contacted my local news station, all I got back was crickets. So if I put out the energy and I'm not getting anything back, then what's the point in trying? I'm not going to keep expelling energy for nothing.

But change is very difficult. And it seems like a lot of people in the higher up chain simply don't care. And it also depends on the situation. If a person who is one way does something to a person who is a different way then it blows up all over the news. But if there's a problem that's been going on for the last 5 to 8 years, and it doesn't really involve an individual, then it's like no one cares.

But I always go back to that one thing: There's nothing I can do that will influence an issue to change that I am concerned about. Thousands upon tens of thousands of people would all have to clamor for the same thing, for some issue to be addressed. Like the right-to-repair shops. Legislation was introduced because sooooooo many people, including elected officials were complaining how when their device breaks, they can't simply go into a repair shop, they have to buy a whole new device when it's just a simple fix. And see that is a perfect example. With right-to-repair, I don't know if change happened, but if it did, it's because it affected people who can make change happen. But if it's something that directly affects you or me, well we're just peons to them. We don't matter.

And I hate to say it like that, but that is the truth. That is why I say, if you're concerned about an issue with a corporation doing some shady thing, corporations are corrupt along with government. So right off the bat you won't see any change happen. What I mean by corrupt is, a person in a high power knows someone who knows someone who knows someone who knows someone who gives money to the corporation to keep quiet, but it keeps happening. Until THAT stops (which never will) then change *might* happen.

It's all about money and power and evil. That's what it's about. The events you see and hear, I believe are real, but there are events that are distractions to take away from REAL things happening that we never ever hear about. The whole thing with Tyson, what's REALLY going on?? You won't even get the chance to find out because someone has already paid someone else off to keep the whole entire thing quiet.

That, is corruption, and that is the money, power and evil I am talking about. I would be very curious to see what this world would look like if money was never invented. I honestly think we would be a trillion times better off than we are today. Everything revolves around money. If in the next 2 years the world was in a dire situation and 1 full year of research could solve the problem, BUT, because money that research doesn't get done. If we were in a dire situation, money wouldn't matter to me, and it shouldn't matter. But it does.

No, I don't do the whole conspiracy stuff either. These are my thoughts and my opinions. Sorry for the long long post, but this is just how I feel about most things.
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