swampthing wrote:if the bird is being chased by a flying coyote (I'm sad to say that even as a Biology major I can honestly not think of what a typical bird's predator is . . . ) he may be forced to leave.
Obviously that Florida education is paying off
I kid, I kid.
Jana wrote:This would severely hamper our consumer driven economy and if we are realistic, we know the economy would contract without low wage workers. There are some costs related to having them here, specific to the schools and the hospital bills.
The United States economy needs immigrants to function. Period.
In a capitalist system such as that of the United States, production depends on the exploitation of low-cost labor in order to maximize profits, as the intensity of competition suppresses prices. The reforms of the early 20th century (especially the New Deal) gave the American worker an unprecedented amount of protection through the ability to unionize and negotiate on a level playing field with business owners. As a result of this and a demographic shift towards declining fertility, the US would suffer a severe shortage of low-wage workers without immigration, which would lead to an inflationary cycle as increased wages pushed prices up.