Deportation: Millions must go!

Heavy machine operators seem to travel from site to site for work for 9 - 10 months a year, make a solid annual wage in that time, then get laid off annually for unemployment to provide supplemental income for the gap.

Sort of like Walmart and employee benefits coming from the government, but with higher wages.

Some go international. One her dud summer in USA, Americans have cone here in our summer.

Boss pays for airfare.

Can pay very well on the big machines.
 
It does look like they seem to ne messaging in on deporting from arrests. Which dovetails with the campaign issue of focusing in on famous cases of immigrants raping and murdering.

I had a friend denied reentry a long time ago for a DUI he had paid for. That wasn't a republican administration. The messaging so far seems less extreme, other than the Assclowny numbers claimed to be the goal?
 
The Republicans sued the Obama administration when he made it clear that the Feds would be focusing deportation resources on criminals rather than Dreamers.
 
Yeah, they betrayed the path to citizenship right around then. Labor starting to flop over was then inevitable.

The realignment is ongoing.
 
Birthright citizenship is another target.
 
Yeah, but that takes an amendment.
 
Yeah we already lost equal protection in medical decisions thanks to the current court there's nothing stopping them at all from saying birthright citizens don't work how we historically think they do.
 
Roberts ans Gorush don't seem like they'd be game.
 
I agree there. They are the two, along with Kegsanaugh and Barrett that sometimes rescue the Court from going too crazy on certain cases.
 

Donald Trump’s Deportation Plan Causes ‘Panic’ Among Farmers who can’t find enough workers

(Bloomberg) — President-elect Donald Trump’s threat of mass deportations risks hurting US agriculture, dealing an additional blow to a sector already struggling with labor shortages and bracing for trade disputes.

It definitely has an impact,” the chief executive officer said during an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “Balance of Power.” “It’s still a very human-intensity business that we’re in.”

While the rural US has seen some population growth in recent years, it experienced an overall loss of population in the prior decade, according to the US Department of Agriculture. That makes the labor dilemma even more challenging as older farmers and ranchers find it tougher to pass down operations to younger family members.

The effect of deportations could be especially acute in areas such as California, which abounds in specialty crops like fruits, nuts and vegetables and relies on seasonal workers from Mexico and other countries. The USDA has said nearly half of hired crop farmworkers lack legal immigration status.

The grain and soybean-dominated Midwest also could be at risk, according to Carstens. The region depends in part on the government’s H-2A program that allows certain US employers to bring foreign nationals into the country to fill temporary agriculture jobs.

Trade TensionOn the trade front, any new tariff clash with China — the world’s largest importer of agriculture products — would hit American growers as they battle lower demand for exports and a plunge in crop prices.“When you lose volume like we have to China, that has a long-term ripple effect, and it’s hard to recover from,” Carstens said.Rural communities overwhelmingly backed Trump in his election win last week over Kamala Harris, even after a trade war with China during his first term put US growers at risk of losing global market share in the long run. Soybean sales alone to the Asian nation plummeted by almost 79% in the first two years of Trump’s presidency, though $28 billion in subsequent farm aid eased the pain.

He did come back around and square it up with the farmers,” Carstens said in an interview at Bloomberg’s Chicago office on Tuesday. “That’s a memory they have.”Since then, competition from Brazil for the world’s crop exports, including to China, has ratcheted up and led to serious concern about the future of America’s standing as a global agriculture leader.“South America is growing — they’re improving yields, they’re planting more acres,” Carstens said. “Combine that with tariffs and other disputes and debates that we’re having with other countries and that becomes problematic.”–With assistance from Kailey Leinz and Michael Hirtzer.
 
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