July 31, 2003
Now They Tell Us: Mass Immigration Destroys American Jobs
By Sam Francis
With the state of California at the edge of
financial—and perhaps political—chaos, the truth
about the real meaning of uncontrolled immigration is
finally seeping into the state's major newspapers.
Last week in the Los Angeles Times Magazine,
Fred Dickey unleashed a 5,000-word feature on the impact
of illegal immigration on the state's legal—and
lower-income—workers. In a word, the effect is
disastrous. (Undermining
American Workers | Record Numbers of Illegal
Immigrants Are Pulling Wages Down for the Poor and
Pushing Taxes Higher By Fred Dickey, July 20, 3003.)
Mr. Dickey recounts the plight of a lady named
Patricia Morena, "a U.S. citizen of Mexican descent,"
a single mother who lives with three kids in a "ratty
little one-bedroom apartment." Mrs. Morena is on
her pathetic way down the drainpipes of history—and
she's beginning to figure out why.
"If she didn't have to compete with unauthorized workers
in the cheap motels that cluster just north of the
border, she thinks," Mr. Dickey writes, "she
could lift her wages from $7.50 per hour to maybe $10
and bargain for some
health insurance."
But, she told him, "If I ask for money, the bosses
say, 'I can get a young girl who is faster and cheaper.'
The bosses have
power over illegals. They know they're afraid and
not going to ask for overtime, even though I know the
law says they should get it."
Mrs. Morena "has learned a
fundamental economic truth: The only leverage
unskilled workers have is scarcity of labor. Morena
can't work her way up the economic ladder because the
bottom rungs have been broken off by the weight of
millions of new illegal workers. The Census Bureau
says the number of illegal immigrants in the country
doubled in the 1990s, from 3.5 million to 7 million,
the
largest such increase in the nation's history."
That's the truth that
newspapers like the Los Angeles Times—after
more than 30 years of unchecked mass immigration, legal
and illegal—have
finally gotten around to writing about.
Of course the truth is not at all compatible with the
brazen lie by which the
Open Borders lobby has derailed political discussion
of the immigration issue—the lie that mass immigration
is a substantial if not essential economic boon. The
illegals with whom Mrs. Morena's employers threaten to
replace her are themselves part of the vast 33 million
people living in poverty in the United States, and so of
course is Mrs. Morena herself and her three children.
Mass immigration, so far from benefiting the economy,
has simply
multiplied the numbers of poor.
The other big lie of the Open Borders crowd Mr. Dickey
exposes is the companion myth that (as the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce says in its
brief for yet another amnesty for illegal aliens),
"undocumented workers" are "performing tasks
that most Americans take for granted but won't do
themselves."
Mr. Dickey tells his readers a little story. He recently
discussed painting his house with an American contractor
who offered the lowest of three bids if he were paid in
cash. His reason for that stipulation was,
"'If I'm going to stay
in business, I have to do what the illegals do. They
never pay taxes, on profits or on their employees' pay.
Right there, I'm at a 20 percent disadvantage. They'll
come in here with about six guys with paintbrushes who
work for peanuts, do a fair job, and then they're gone.'
These competitors have driven every American out of
gardening, he added, and are doing it to
house-painting,
roofing and car repair."
It is simply a lie that American gardeners, roofers,
painters, roofers and mechanics are too lazy to work at
their professions. The truth is they have been pushed
out of such occupations by the
cheap illegal labor imported by
Big Business and its
Open Borders shills.
And the larger truth is that as pathetic as Mrs.
Morena's plight is, it's the same plight that more
skilled American workers face. The Detroit Free Press
recently
reported on a Mercedes Benz plant in Alabama that
has imported Polish workers—supposedly legal—to paint
luxury cars assembled there. [Officials To Check
Alabama Workers, by Jennifer Dixon, July 26, 2003].
The company claims the work is highly specialized and
Americans can’t do it. The reality is that the Polish
workers
"earn only a fraction of their American counterparts,"
so it makes sense to hire them instead of the
locals—whose taxes helped subsidize the
incentives that led Mercedes to build the plant
there in the first place.
It's terrific that newspapers like the
Los Angeles Times and the Detroit Free Press—which
have supported mass immigration
editorially for years—are now telling the truth
about what they've endorsed for so long has done to this
country and its workers.
Once those truths sink in, the Americans whose
jobs and
nation are being destroyed may even now still be
able to save both.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
[Sam Francis [email
him] is a nationally syndicated columnist. A selection
of his columns,
America Extinguished: Mass Immigration And The
Disintegration Of American Culture, is now available
from
Americans For Immigration Control.
Click herefor Sam Francis'
website.]