May 07, 2008
The Salmon Symptom: Hillary And The Democratic Party Abandon American Workers
By Ryan Kennedy
Ah, it's
springtime here in Alaska. And a young Alaskan's
fancy turns to.... fish!
The salmon will soon be returning. And with those fish
come tourists, jobs and fresh-caught salmon. Despite the
disturbing news you may read about
rising food prices and
dwindling fish stocks in other parts of the world,
last season was a banner year for us here in Alaska.[Pinks
lift '07 salmon catch to a near record, By Laine
Welch Anchorage Daily News, September 8th, 2007]
And this year's harvest promises to be no different.
Yes, life is sweet in the land of the midnight sun;
Alaska's state coffers swell with each new rise in oil
prices, the fish are at record numbers and
federal dollars keep flowing north. (Keep that up,
by the way, thanks!)
What's not to love? Well unfortunately we are in the
same boat as you suckers (err I mean folks!) with regard
to one thing:
immigration. Alaska is part of the Union and so
vulnerable to the same influx from the Third World.
Many of you outside Alaska seem to think we are immune
from the ravages of America's open border mayhem. But
sadly,
we get the same chaos.
I got to thinking about this and the venerable
Alaskan fishing industry as I watched the unending
Democrat primaries, and Hillary Clinton in particular.
You might be asking, what on earth do
Hillary and the Democrats have to do with fish in
Alaska?
Well I'll tell you. Every now and then Hillary likes to
tell a little fish story. No, I'm not talking about the
time she boasted to uniformed soldiers
about dodging sniper fire. No, I'm not talking about
the time she told some Kiwis she was
named after Sir Edmund Hillary despite the fact she
was born before he
ascended Everest and became famous.
Ironically, Hillary's fish story I am referring to is
true. During a summer break from college, she worked up
here in
Valdez, Alaska (pronounced Vald-e-e-z) in a
fish cannery.
She
worked on the slime-line. The slime-line is some of
the most unpleasant work you could imagine. Basically,
the job is to rip the guts out of a salmon as fast as
you can in order to do another, and another, and another
for 12+ hours, everyday, 7 days a week, all summer.
The stench is overwhelming. After work the slime-line
workers can look forward to some chow and then sleep. In
their tents.
I would speculate Hillary brings her Alaskan summer
hiatus up from
time to time to highlight her
relatively humble origins and sense of adventure.
That is, she was not one of those rich girls with
connections who got a prestigious internship during the
summer like say—this
girl.
When I first read about Hillary gutting fish, I thought:
"What on earth was a
Wellesley girl doing gutting fish for minimum wage?
No American would ever do that job."
Then it quickly occurred to me. This was before
mass immigration had displaced Americans from whole
industries, as humble as they were.
Back then, cannery work was relatively well-paid.
Canneries would advertise for work
at colleges boasting of adventure in Alaska and the
like. Today they do no such thing. They advertise for
foreign workers to depress labor costs. Today the
cannery workforce is
almost exclusively foreign and almost none speak
English. Last year Alaska public radio did this story:
International cannery workers crank through huge pink
run in Cordova September 19, 2007
In the story, Bill Gilbert was reported to have worked
in a cannery in 1967 for the equivalent of $19.55/hr in
2007 dollars. He was 15 years old at the time. Today he
manages the cannery. Hillary likely received a similar
wage in her summer of '69 up here. [Figure arrived at
using BLS inflation calculator
here.]
Today a worker doing the same thing gets
minimum wage—$7.15/hr.
Mr. Gilbert goes on to explain that
labor can be obtained from abroad, thereby
depressing overall wages. He may have gotten $19.55/hr
at 15 years old, but he'll be damned if his workers see
anything above $8/hr.
But not to worry, today's workers got a little something
extra last year. Due to record catches last year the
foreign workers had to put in
18 hour days. So the town and industry got together
and gave each worker a handsome bonus: a T-shirt for
each and every worker thanking them for their hard work.
Charming. 18 hours a day, and they get a T-shirt as
bonus—charming.
What is remarkable to me about this historical vignette
is how emblematic it is of the way in which the
Democratic Party has
essentially abandoned its traditional role of
attempting to minimize
economic class distinctions.
Democrats no longer seriously attempts to introduce
ostensibly racially-blind policies like the
New Deal, or
the Great Society. No, instead the Democratic party
has evolved into a new animal where it seeks to: 1)
shovel largesse into public institutions (e.g.
academia,
public sector unions,
government workers,
non-profits, etc) and 2) develop
hyper-racially conscious non-white constituents to
populate these aforementioned public sector
institutions.
As such, none of the Democratic candidates had any
interest in protecting the interests of
private sector workers, like those cannery workers
who do not fit into one of the aforementioned
categories.
Likewise,
Hillary is firmly in the open-immigration camp, as
are all the
major presidential candidates.
Does it ever occur to her that her $19.55/hr summer
adventure is an
anachronism—it could not be reprised today by an
ambitious
young co-ed slaving away through
finals as you read this?
Sad?
Ryan Kennedy (email
him) lives in Alaska. He has written us
many letters, but this is his
first article.