My wife is Hispanic and often engages in conversation with other Hispanics. She was having a garage sale this week, and she was talking with some illegals from Mexico that showed up. They are complaining that illegals El Salvador and other central America countries keep coming and coming and coming. One said she has been working in USA for 15 years and used to be able to work 7 days a week at Wendy's, but due to the new arrivals, she can only work a few hours two or three days a week.
Today, some new arrivals from El Salvador arrived at my wife's garage sale. They arrived to USA with nothing but the shirts off their backs and were hoping for some free clothing or whatever.
In any case, this doesn't seem like it is going to end well for anyone in this country in the end.
They’d be replaced with a new crop of them in a few months after the attentions died down.
That’s how an extremely large amount of high-staff turnover Businesses function. Especially closer to the border.
Shit wages. And in the case of factory/meat packing work. Unrealistic demands and quotas. Shit hours. And in the case of some of the particularly cheap outfits. Outdated and or jury-rigged equipment. Usually see American employees burned out and looking for other work in short order. So they turn to people far easier to control.
Symptomatic of larger developing problems with American Corporate and Business Culture. I call it “Linegoupitis”. Essentially prioritizing making really good looking short term growth. The steeper the incline the better. As quickly as possible. Even at the cost of the Company’s long term health.
That’s why so many Companies of late that have lasted Decades if not a century or more. Have been running into financial issues. Or folding like Wetnapkins.
We tend to attribute it entirely to ‘Woke’. But most of them were making poor business decisions for years. Long before ‘Woke’ set in. The ‘Woke’ is just another nail in coffins that were progressively built over years of over-expansion and poor decision making. Now we’re seeing a convergence of factors play out that have been building for years.
Yes, the businesses are always chasing the bottom line - every management transformation since the mid-eighties have been budget focused. Each new crop of managers has that measurable objective. Note that true wellbeing initiatives are subjective in nature - they are very hard to measure, so the management theory tends to find things that can make graphs on software (linegoupitis - as you so eloquently put it.)
The main idea, however, is if you can count it, then make it a goal. So, counting race is a great way to 'balance' the workforce as an extension of this disease. The 'woke' ESGs are just a way to justify having more color in the workforce, ok we are not racist, but we still do race-based headcounts, that IMO hides the illegals nicely.
The advantage of taking on illegals is you can pay them anything you want (eyes light up - budget cuts). They will take any scraps of pay, don't need holiday pay no workee - no money. Furthermore, the poor souls are outside the system, so one doesn't have to pay tax or social security or health and safety payments to the government - and all that jazz. Furthermore, a lack of a need to comply, causes a blind spot for safety equipment or functioning machinery, that is required by law. (More handy budget cuts for the sheistery shiny new managers!). Do this at scale, as a corporate policy, taking into account any fines that will come up when they are busted. The fines are less than the taxes and holiday/sick leave payments.
And here we are again at the door of the dark satanic mills that started management literature that actually recognized working conditions. Remember that early labor unions actually wanted better safety practices and a living wage that could support mama and babies (future workers) before the unions became labeled as commie hot-beds or ruled by the mob. But labor unions would be outraged by the treatment of the illegals, and they would stop it. Why do you think their teeth were pulled during the nineties?
There is a balance in here somewhere.
Yep, so true.