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by piketty_fan
2931 days ago
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The parent comment is wrong for the reasons you're pointing out, but both of you are missing two things: Firstly that in a country where immigration laws are or will soon be mostly dictated by corporate lobbyists, any immigration restrictions will also be used to manipulate labor costs in favor of capital (see for example how tech companies use the H1B program). Secondly that historically in periods in which the US lacked a de-jure subaltern class of underpaid laborers, it created de-facto subaltern classes it could exploit for underpaid labor, because it's way easier to drum up racism or gut worker protections than to get rid of the demand for that labor. Any solution to fixing labor prices that just restricts workers' movements instead of placing restrictions on capital does nothing to address either of those issues. The sane way forward should not be immigration restriction, but restrictions on capital flight combined with the establishment of international labor standards, strengthening the foundations of the wage floor in a way that helps workers in both countries instead of destroying peoples' lives just for being rational actors in a broken system. |
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Also, in response to your other reply, I don't see how removing illegal immigrants and dissuading them from coming here is "culling the poor". I illustrated how allowing illegal immigrants to pervade the US actually harms those at the bottom of the income scale, including those immigrants. We should be working to help poorer countries so that they don't need to resort to illegal immigration, but that doesn't mean we should ignore our immigration laws. Either officially endorse open borders for everyone and equalize society, or enforce and/or fix the laws we have now, but the gray area where we look the other way on the illegals that make it through the hoops alive only helps the rich.
Hence my comment that people that endorse letting illegal immigrants stay are being emotional (e.g. father having to leave his kids, kids going back to country they didn't go up in, etc), because in the larger picture, it's just reinforcing the incentives that are causing them to be exploited.