hedge wrote:I think they should let it fly. Let anybody ban anybody they want. The market will weed those places out...
I personally believe that too.
I guess they are scared of a place like that thriving in the market.
Moderators: eCat, hedge, Cletus
hedge wrote:I think they should let it fly. Let anybody ban anybody they want. The market will weed those places out...
I love looking at data. And the data on Australia and New Zeland is in: you want to immigrate there, you better have a STEM degree and a willingness to use it. Otherwise, you are a financial sink and you are not welcome. That is how they can afford such high minimum wages.Ann Coulter wrote:Democrats show how much they love the poor by importing a million more of them to America each year. But then they prevent the last batch of poor immigrants from getting decent, well-paying jobs by bringing in another million poor people the next year.
You want a higher minimum wage? Turn off the spigot of low-wage workers pouring in to the U.S. and it will rise on its own through the iron law of supply and demand.
In response to the Democrats' minimum wage proposal, Republicans should introduce a bill ending both legal and illegal immigration until the minimum wage rises naturally to $14 an hour.
Australia has a $15 minimum wage for adults -- more than twice the U.S. minimum wage. Meanwhile, their official unemployment rate is lower than ours: 6 percent compared to 6.6 percent in the U.S. -- and that's with a lousy $7.25 minimum wage.
Sound good? Try immigrating there. Australia has some of the most restrictive immigration policies in the world. Their approach to immigration is to admit only people who will be good for Australia. (Weird!) Applicants are evaluated on a point system that gives preference to youth, English proficiency, education and skill level.
Similarly, New Zealand will soon have an official minimum wage of $14.25 for adults. Even our Democrats aren't proposing that! New Zealand's minimum wage hit $10.10 -- the Democrats' current proposal for us -- back in 2006. Their unemployment rate is also 6 percent -- up from several years of 4 percent unemployment a few years ago.
Like Australia, New Zealand's immigration laws are based on helping New Zealand, not on helping other countries get rid of their poor people, which is our policy.
Instead of training the citizenry to look at the government as our paternal benefactor, distributing minimum wage laws and unemployment benefits in important election years, why don't Republicans put an end to the artificial glut of low-wage, low-skilled workers being imposed on the country by our immigration laws?
Republicans could guarantee a $14 minimum wage simply by closing the pipeline of more than 1 million poor immigrants coming in every year.
eCat wrote:I don't know a whole lot about that Arizona law but it goes back to what Space and I were discussing regarding personal property laws. In this case I think they are trying to veil it under the idea of religious beliefs which is probably easier to justify than personal property but still is based on your rights to decide what you do with your property.
It will be interesting to see if it stands or falls and what the federal government will do if it does stand (or passes or whatever)
It's all Civil Rights. That is all this is.Bklyn wrote:It's all good in theory until you are frozen out of the only commercial enterprise in your little podunk town that sells [fill in blank with any particular necessity here].
It's easier to make a decision to deploy your dollars at other places when you have other places to choose from. When you don't have that, then you are at the mercy of the commercial enterprise who holds the keys to that necessity. Competition isn't everywhere, like we would like to pretend it is. You'll really get to understand a correlating feeling when the only ISP in your area starts cherry picking what websites you'll have ease of movement in.
Great.billy bob bocephus wrote:it's tough to get into either Aus. or NZ by climbing a fence, lucky for the U.S. our northern neighbor doesn't have the economic deprivation as do those to our south