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Wall St. Journal Trying to Manipulate Small Biz Yeomanry into US Chamber/Biz Rountable Thinking
11/25/2016 | Charles O'Connell

Posted on 11/25/2016 12:13:20 PM PST by CharlesOConnell

'Small Businesses Lament There Are Too Few Mexicans in U.S., Not Too Many' is the poison pill they're currently pedaling. The US Chamber and the Business Roundtable have made themselves the class enemies of small business yeomanry. (I live by an upper-middle-class neighborhood heavy with craftsmen and tradesmen; they are just as substantial as elite Ivy League 'Boaters' and Wall St. "We Ripped Their FACES Off!" Sharks.) Latino small biz owners don't need the Wall St. Journal's take on immigration, they are equally substantial with 'white' biz, if anything, more conservative. The Journo/Chamber/Rountable Axis only promotes defiance of law. Small Biz are members of communities and families.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Conspiracy
KEYWORDS: anotherstupidvanity; chamber; cheaplabor; immigration; openborders; rountable; trumptransition; uschamber

1 posted on 11/25/2016 12:13:20 PM PST by CharlesOConnell
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To: CharlesOConnell
Trust me, I consider them as big an enemy as the Federal Government and a bigger one than my competitors. My allies are my customers and the overseas factories I buy from - which I wish could be located in the USA but this very same Big Business/Big Government cartel has made that impossible.

If Trump tries to fix this, he won't have a friend left in DC.

2 posted on 11/25/2016 12:18:17 PM PST by Mr. Jeeves ([CTRL]-[GALT]-[DELETE])
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To: CharlesOConnell

US Chamber of Commerce is the root of the problem.


3 posted on 11/25/2016 12:19:26 PM PST by hadaclueonce (This time I am Deplorable)
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To: CharlesOConnell

Link?


4 posted on 11/25/2016 12:34:38 PM PST by freedumb2003 (Good morning President Trump)
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To: hadaclueonce

Here is a good explanation on how the “big business” approach tries to work in concert with government. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economics_of_fascism

We really need someone to trump these swamp scums so our country has a future? Anyone got a suggestion on who can trump them?


5 posted on 11/25/2016 12:38:48 PM PST by Degaston
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To: Degaston

Interesting article, but it sort of misses the elephant in the room - cronyism is the driving force in such systems.


6 posted on 11/25/2016 12:46:37 PM PST by AndyJackson
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To: CharlesOConnell

Lets say that many of us can agree that the best and the brightest are good for the economy. And they strengthen our nation. So when we can attract the best and the brightest from foreign nations its in our best interest to let them in.

However, lets look at the other end of the economic ladder. It may not be so good to bring in those who are not skilled, not educated, and don’t wish to assimilate. I wonder how much the black population and to some extent the white population have been held back by massive numbers of Mexicans. And its not true that Mexicans are not a great people. They are. By most accounts they are hard working, generally civilized cultured. But is there not a limit? Or a cost?

Economics will tell you that when you create scarcity you create cost. Or in this case we call them wages. The reason a college educated engineer gets paid more than a McDonald’s worker is the scarcity of college educated engineers. Right now only 24% of the population has a college degree and fewer than 10% of those have engineering degrees.

But economics is not in play when a 100 million low skilled workers are able to flow across the boarder unchecked. Those people on the left who are so interested in income equality should look to themselves and their policies for the cause of that income inequality. Why can’t the left see the folly of their politics.


7 posted on 11/25/2016 1:30:56 PM PST by poinq
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To: CharlesOConnell
They are not entirely wrong. I am an immigration hard liner but I recognize contrary facts and evidence.

A cousin of mine who is a small contractor and developer in the Atlanta area says that he would be out of business without his crews of Mexican and Central American illegals. A friend who owns and runs a large ornamental landscape plant grower says the same thing.

These days, unemployed college kids often tend to scorn hard manual labor, insisting on easier indoor work even when it pays less. Those who in former times would be the basis for a flow of trained and work eager blue collar laborers developed by high school vocational ed programs now tend to be idle, have active drug habits, or serious criminal records and inclinations.

No small part of the harm of mass illegal immigration is that it has undermined the work readiness of a large segment of the American citizenry. And with the decline of vocational ed in high school, the damage has become institutional as well as generational and cultural.

Higher wages will help to redress the problem. Wages will rise if the border is closed, illegals deported, E-verify required, and legal citizenship requirements enforced in the workplace. The relative scarcity of good skilled labor will nevertheless pose severe problems for many employers.

8 posted on 11/25/2016 3:28:41 PM PST by Rockingham
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To: Rockingham
The relative scarcity of good skilled labor will nevertheless pose severe problems for many employers.

Automation. When you can't pick the seeds out of cotton by hand, you get a cotton gin. etc.

9 posted on 11/25/2016 11:43:21 PM PST by glorgau
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To: glorgau

I think that you mean mechanization more than automation. In any event, many essential tasks and lines of work require human labor. For example, block masons and auto mechanics will be in demand for some times yet. High wages will do much to draw people to those fields.


10 posted on 11/26/2016 11:04:45 AM PST by Rockingham
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To: Rockingham
I think that you mean mechanization more than automation

Nope, I mean automation. We don't need Mexican strawberry pickers, we need robot strawberry pickers.

11 posted on 11/26/2016 2:33:14 PM PST by glorgau
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To: glorgau

Don’t hold your breath. Robotic field hands are years away.


12 posted on 11/26/2016 10:16:31 PM PST by Rockingham
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