Monday, April 09, 2007

Update: US Unemployment data is false

It is time for an update. I have wanted to see how many dishonest, lying people will continue to saying things like “Jobs Americans won’t do” and “insufficient skilled labor!” The importance of this problem was brought home during a heated debate on FOX news between O’Reilly and Geraldo Rivera. Mr. Rivera, notice the ethnic origin, indicated that the illegal immigrant who killed two girls while driving drunk was not a failure of the US government’s decision not to enforce immigration law instead it was a problem of drunk driving. He further went on to say, “with 4.4% unemployment… we cannot punish people we asked to come to the US…”

No matter how you feel about drunk driving or this particular question there is a serious problem here. First, “WE THE PEOPLE” did not ask anyone to come here illegally and work for lower wages. Remember corporations are not people. WE THE PEOPLE do not benefit from the slave labor wages, most everything goes to lower costs increasing margins and allowing multimillion dollar salaries for Executive Management of Corporation and kickbacks to politicians. Second, you cannot deny that if the illegal immigrant had been deported when convicted twice previously he most likely would not have been in the US. Finally if we enforced our borders he would not have come in the first place. Open borders are an invitation for the criminals in one society to escape prosecution going into another country.

The proponents of Amnesty are using the false governmental data to support their arguments. Bill Gates and company are using the same data to say that they cannot find skilled workers. This is all bull. We have another WMD situation here. False information provided to influence public opinion to support something that most Americans would not have supported otherwise.

I will provide the update of my job survey later on this week. I think you will be amazed. I am living proof that there is no shortage of skilled labor, at fair market wages, in the US market. Check back over the weekend.




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