I've got some bad news for the OP and Gateway Pundit. This has been going on for decades with Tyson. Literally decades.
I grew up in a rural town 20+ years ago and there was a Tyson "farm" about 45 minutes away. Knew a kid who got expelled from school after a senior prank. He got a job at the Tyson "farm" and I picked him up his 2nd or 3rd day and there was not a single white person there when I picked him up. Not one. Everyone I saw was latino and some extra dark brazilians maybe.
There wasn't even a business office or anything, unless it was on the backside of the big building I peeked into. Just steel barns and a big commercial building with a bunch of loading docks. I went back to my car and just waited and smoked a cigarette with my windows up trying to get rid of the smell. And I was a country boy with horses and cattle at home but the smell there was unbearable.
Anyway, he got stabbed from behind at work his 2nd week while at his station, and he didn't know why but he was called puta and gringo and stuff in spanish right after but he didn't speak it so had no clue wtf had happened that caused it. No argument or anything. One of them just stabbed him and walked away yapping in spanish.
He quit, no worker's comp or anything, he just never went back. He said he told a cop at the doctor's office he was taken to and they never even filed a police report, idk if that's true but I wouldn't be at all surprised if it was.
Anyway the white kid went back to school for a semester the next year and graduated a year late. Better than working with no HS diploma surrounded by illegal aliens.
And the small town that was closest to the plant is basically gone. The houses are still lived in but all the small local businesses that were on main street 20-25 years ago are boarded. I think the county sheriff's office has to patrol it now, there weren't enough tax payers left to pay for the fire department and police station anymore. There are a couple gas stations and all the old houses and that's it. 10 years ago it looked like an entire town in decay. When the plant eventually closes it'll be a ghost town.
And this is right smack in the middle of middle America, and that farm or plant or whatever wasn't a freshly built farm or plant back in the 00's, it was probably all or mostly illegals working there all the way back in the 80's, for sure in the 90's. This has been an issue with Tyson for at least 3-4 decades, possibly longer.
I've got some bad news for the OP and Gateway Pundit. This has been going on for decades with Tyson. Literally decades.
I grew up in a rural town 20+ years ago and there was a Tyson "farm" about 45 minutes away. Knew a kid who got expelled from school after a senior prank. He got a job at the Tyson "farm" and I picked him up his 2nd or 3rd day and there was not a single white person there when I picked him up. Not one. Everyone I saw was latino and some extra dark brazilians maybe.
There wasn't even a business office or anything, unless it was on the backside of the big building I peeked into. Just steel barns and a big commercial building with a bunch of loading docks. I went back to my car and just waited and smoked a cigarette with my windows up trying to get rid of the smell. And I was a country boy with horses and cattle at home but the smell there was unbearable.
Anyway, he got stabbed from behind at work his 2nd week while at his station, and he didn't know why but he was called puta and gringo and stuff in spanish right after but he didn't speak it so had no clue wtf had happened that caused it. No argument or anything. One of them just stabbed him and walked away yapping in spanish.
He quit, no worker's comp or anything, he just never went back. He said he told a cop at the doctor's office he was taken to and they never even filed a police report, idk if that's true but I wouldn't be at all surprised if it was.
Anyway the white kid went back to school for a semester the next year and graduated a year late. Better than working with no HS diploma surrounded by illegal aliens.
And the small town that was closest to the plant is basically gone. The houses are still lived in but all the small local businesses that were on main street 20-25 years ago are boarded. I think the county sheriff's office has to patrol it now, there weren't enough tax payers left to pay for the fire department and police station anymore. There are a couple gas stations and all the old houses and that's it. 10 years ago it looked like an entire town in decay. When the plant eventually closes it'll be a ghost town.
And this is right smack in the middle of middle America, and that farm or plant or whatever wasn't a freshly built farm or plant back in the 00's, it was probably all or mostly illegals working there all the way back in the 80's, for sure in the 90's. This has been an issue with Tyson for at least 3-4 decades, possibly longer.