The New York Times is good to go page one with a story on a fascinating lawsuit in Georgia that alleges racial discrimination… in favor of Mexican guest workers.
But as Congress weighs immigration legislation expected to expand the guest worker program, another group is increasingly crying foul — Americans, mostly black, who live near the farms and say they want the field work but cannot get it because it is going to Mexicans. They contend that they are illegally discouraged from applying for work and treated shabbily by farmers who prefer the foreigners for their malleability.
“They like the Mexicans because they are scared and will do anything they tell them to,” said Sherry Tomason, who worked for seven years in the fields here, then quit. Last month she and other local residents filed a federal lawsuit against a large grower of onions, Stanley Farms, alleging that it mistreated them and paid them less than it paid the Mexicans.
Wait, but John McCain said Americans wouldn’t pick lettuce for $50 an hour!
This quote, from a manager at Southern Valley farm, is revealing about the power relationship between capital and labor:
“When Jose gets on the bus to come here from Mexico he is committed to the work,” he said. “It’s like going into the military. He leaves his family at home. The work is hard, but he’s ready. A domestic wants to know: What’s the pay? What are the conditions? In these communities, I am sorry to say, there are no fathers at home, no role models for hard work. They want rewards without input.”
That’s why employers like Southern Valley push for loose immigration laws: American workers, even from the underclass, have the gall to ask for a raise or for better working conditions. They’re too difficult and too expensive. It’s much easier to import obedient poverty-stricken foreign workers.
— How many times have we heard politicians, usually unchallenged by the press, trot out the false notion that government finances are like household finances.
Bloomberg View’s Josh Barro calls out Speaker John Boehner for trotting out this old chestnut on Bloomberg TV the other day. Boehner:
We have spent more than what we have brought into this government for 55 of the last 60 years. There’s no business in America that could survive like this. No household in America that could do this. And this government can’t do this.
Barro notes that “It’s hard to think of better evidence for the sustainability of budget deficits than the fact that we have run them for 55 of the last 60 years.”
Of course, budget deficits work because the government is different from a household. A government does not have a life cycle, does not ever expect to stop generating income to support itself, and, therefore, does not ever have to retire its debt. It must keep its debts at a manageable size relative to the economy, which the U.S. has done over that 60 year period. If the economy is growing over the long term, that means the government can run a deficit and grow the debt every year — sustainably.
Just like Walmart, as Barro points out. He shows how the retailer exponentially increased its debt levels over the past quarter century, from almost nothing to more than $46 billion. Thing is, its sales also grew exponentially, so it can afford the debt.
And Walmart can’t even print money.
— The Wall Street Journal’s MarketWatch asks a really dumb question:
Are frequent-flier miles pointless?
Similar perks now doled out to frequent tweeters
Does MarketWatch troll for clicks with stupid-question headlines?
Seriously, the story is a good personal-finance piece tainted by a clickbait headline. But “Airline miles tougher to redeem”—what the story’s actually about— doesn’t tempt the mouse finger like “Are frequent-flier miles pointless?”
These short-term clicks come at the expense of long-term credibility.

Except nowhere in the linked NYT article does it say that "employers like Southern Valley push for loose immigration laws," because they don't. They are happy to hire illegal immigrants instead, who will take lower salaries. Meanwhile, organizations like the SPLC stupidly fight immigration reform, because they only care about the relatively well off local "workies" in the US, not the dirt poor hispanics coming in over the border. So the only ones fighting for more immigration or guest workers are the enlightened few who want to change the unfortunate status quo and they're pilloried from both sides, for incredibly stupid and self-interested reasons.
This is why I've always said immigration reform is a non-starter: the business owners, likely conservative but who knows, are happy to take advantage of the illegals' status to price their labor down, while the progressives stupidly keep insisting that there are locals who want to do the work. Between tweedle dee and tweedle dum, nothing changes.
Haha, loved that McCain quote, never saw that before, too bad he wasn't elected. You do know that Yuma is the hottest town in the US, right?
As for those Barro quotes, just have to shake my head at the sheer ignorance and stupidity. Of course, the govt's finances are like any household's, why would they be any different? Just as a household can keep borrowing and rolling over its debt until it can't, when the creditors decide it's taken on too much, the same applies to govt. The only difference is that a govt is so much bigger, so it can take that borrowing to an extreme that's much worse, leading to a collapse that's much worse, look at Argentina.
Walmart's current debt of $54 billion is a little more than 10% of the $470 billion in revenue it pulled in over the last year. By comparison, the federal govt had almost $17 trillion in debt against $2.5 trillion in revenue last year, a multiple of 7. Only in wacko liberal land is that sustainable.
"And Walmart can’t even print money."
Wow, the stupid just drips off this one. You do realize that printing money and the inflation it causes is an extremely regressive tax on those that hold cash and debt without floating interest rates, stealing value from them in order to pay off the US govt's creditors? In what crazy liberal wackjob land this is either a viable or even politically feasible move, who knows.
#1 Posted by Ajay, CJR on Fri 10 May 2013 at 02:22 AM
+1
#2 Posted by Dan A., CJR on Fri 10 May 2013 at 10:27 PM