American citizens, in their own country, SHOULD NOT have to compete with the entire world for jobs in America... please DOWN VOTE if you disagree and then tell us why.
(media.greatawakening.win)
The Division Of Labor
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (146)
sorted by:
What it asks for and what I proposed are not necessarily at odds.
The suggestion of mine would take away “competition” while still allowing for employment where legitimately needed, and tilting the board in our favor while raising the bar of entry.
The op title is correct. We should not have to compete with foreigners for jobs in our own markets. This has been a tool the cabal has used against many countries for a long time. If India’s cost of living is low, because their overall wealth is low, they can ask for low wages and be happy with them. If those Indians are then put in direct competition with Americans for work, they will run us out of the labor market, because an American who has to pay for a $275,000 house can’t compete with an Indian who has to pay for a $25,000 house. We could lower ourselves to their means of existence, and put 3+ families in one house, which is being done right now in many places in America in order to stay afloat, but how is that good for us overall? Eventually, we ship out all manufacturing work, and only service jobs remain, and the manufacturers will start looking to onshore those services to their country and people.
“How do we put an end to the endless?”
I have noticed (it's very obvious) that a lot of this online wedge issue debate seems keenly focused on Indian migrant workers in specific. It's almost as iff Chinese immigrant's, or other nations migrant workers don't factor into the discussion for some odd reason.
People need to wake up, and learn to see when they are being manipulated. Fortunately, Trump did not fall for the bait.
If we are talking about H1B, rather than migration as a whole, it’s not entirely wrong to do so.
https://files.catbox.moe/7mampg.png
Migration as a whole is a separate issue. You aren’t wrong, of course, but there is also a core focus to the discussion and a valid reason to use that example, as it currently exists.
To your point, there has been a recent shift to other countries, and for the exact same reason listed in my previous post - now that India has made some money, they are having to compete with other countries that haven’t and will charge less. That’s why I noted that what is being/has been done to us has been done to many other countries before.
This system doesn’t work for anybody.