This thread isn’t in support of Trump. |
Interesting take. Yes, war has a tendency to impoverish societies and cause hunger. The civil war created a lot of poverty. Should we not have fought it, and kept people enslaved? |
So we should exploit people so that low income people can afford strawberries?? More people can grow their own. Or be paid a higher wage with less downward pressure on wages, and might even be able to splurge on $15 strawberries sometimes. And maybe they don’t need to be a year round readily available thing. The world is changing. Maybe teach your kids some practical skills. |
Rabbits savage the strawberries. But if we all get poor enough, we’ll have to start eating the rabbits. So that might help. We grow various berries in our yard. It’s a nice thing to do if you have some space. It might become a necessary thing to do. I think what people don’t understand is that Trump is really about taking us back to the 19th century. Before we had the Fed, there were depressions, crashes, and financial panics all the time. It’s in any US history book. While this is still kind of a fringe idea, some people on the right wing side of the political divide want to get rid of the federal reserve. In the end, the sort of plan (I use that term loosely) is to make the country much poorer for the vast majority. The 20th century will be undone and when we will be back to the 19th century. That means you will be growing potatoes. That means you might have to work a really low wage job. It could get really ugly. Thinking ahead and being flexible is a good idea. It remains to be seen what kind of political resistance there would be if we took some major steps in that direction. It’s simply too soon to tell. But across the industrialized world, it’s clear that average citizens don’t want huge waves of immigration. I might personally disagree, but I’m clearly not in the majority. |
1. do you think people in urban areas (where most people in this country live) can grow their own food? Seriously? Oh, they should move to rural areas and live in communes and grow their own food? 2. If farmers pay a higher wage, you realize that the cost will be passed on to consumers, right? At that point, the only people who will be able to afford eating fresh produce is wealthy people. This is not just about strawberries, which is already kind of expensive. 3. We already import produce from other countries, especially during our winter. Or are you saying that we should all live a substance living, and only eat what we can farm? I don't know about you, but I don't relish living like a third world country where we can't get fresh produce year round. Farmers can't raise wages that much higher without going out of business. There is an inflection point where raising the wages causes food prices to go up so much so that the demand will go down so much so that it will not be viable for a farmer to stay in business. As it is, taxpayers already subsidize farmers. Farmers have, in the past, tried to increase wages to attract American workers. It didn't work because this type of job is back breaking, something most Americans now are not used to. If you are suggesting that Americans should go work on farms, I would suggest you and your children can go first. |
DP. Cheap black market labor subsidizes inequality and stagnates innovation. For example, farming operations are generally pretty unsophisticated in the USA. Parts of Europe and Japan are much more technologically advanced when it comes to farming. But when labor is cheap, why would you modernize? Same thing plays out around housing: by importing cheap labor that suppresses wages, UMC and upper classes afford more while LMC and working class has their wages undercut. wages will rise to meet demand if you close the system, but the answer cannot be import cheap labor that undercuts domestic labor. |
Depends on the job.
You ever get a roof replaced? You couldn’t pay me a million a year to walk around every day potentially to fall and break my back. |
This is a pretty uniformed theory. Less than 2% of Americans are engaged in farming. Other countries have 10% or more engaged as farmers. We have a very robust system where we consistently produce more than we need. On purpose. The idea that we would starve if we didn't have cheap labor is absurd. |
You prefer labor shortages and economic instability…okay? At least you have the gall admit you like a homogeneous society, I guess. |
Yes, we produce more than we need, but the need isn't being met for all Americans, but somehow, you or OP, thinks the answer is to make Americans work the farms. If only farmers would raise wages, but not increase prices to the consumers. That will surely solve the issue of low income people not being able to afford fresh produce. After all, farmers should not be farming for profit, right? I suppose you agree with Trump's Ag chief that medicaid recipients should work the farms instead of foreign workers? You guys live in la la land. Might as well promote living in communes. |
The argument is not and should not be that "Americans won't do these jobs" but that we have inadequate citizen applicants to get the job done when the job is important and needed from generating food to nursing care. |
Stagflation? In Japan? Huh? |
Talk about la la land. The idea that people in aggregate in our country can't subsist for themselves is precisely why we shouldn't vote for Democrats. Furthermore, Democrats don't think they can lead the country down a self-sustaining path -And- they want to import more people to solve the problem is again absurd. I mean if they can't lead a nation of 300 million people what makes you think Democrats can lead a country of 310 million. Isn't that harder than just 300 million. What is special about those last 10 million that make it work. They are impoverished and "willing" to work. Won't they eventually become just like everyone else. Isn't that just a labor Ponzi-scheme. |
From inception, the U.S. was built on free and then underpaid labor. Indentured servants > slaves > sharecroppers/Jim Crow blacks > Irish/Italian/Polish/Chinese immigrants > illegal immigrants from Latin America. Our food and several manufacturing sectors have ALWAYS paid below market-rate wages. |
Are our citizens truly inadequate? If they are, why is that? Is that at static condition, or subject to change? |