A big Nebraska meat packer lost lots of workers after an ICE raid. Guess what happened next.
Remember this story out of Omaha where the feds used E-verify to track down more than 100 illegal aliens using fake IDs? And that those illegals allegedly pulled box cutters on ICE agents?
The mountainous stupidity of the statement "jobs we won't do", as it ignores the entirety of U.S. history where we did those jobs, in majority as recently as 50 years ago, before the Hart-Celler Act began fucking our demographics, and entire economic sectors became infested with nons who drove the wages down (like construction, factory work, farm labor, etc.).
How do these "jobs we won't do" idiots think the American people conquered, built, and maintained the U.S. since the 15th century? How do they think Europeans farmed our own food, took care of our own lawns and property, and worked the menial, laborious, and dangerous jobs, for all of our existence? Apparently we've just been hoarding all of the privilege and magic dirt in all of the universe for ourselves, and we've never ever suffered the universal indignities of life (please ignore all of history to the contrary).
What they really mean when they say “jobs Americans won’t do” is this: I’ve been pampered my whole life and there’s no fucking way you could pay me enough to do a single day of hard labor, it’s a very jewish mentality. The funny thing is, those people tend to be so self involved, that they can’t comprehend how any one else would feel different than they do. On top of that, rather than advocating for American workers getting a decent wage for labor intensive jobs, they advocate for slave labor instead, truly believing that only the educated Americans deserve high wages, not some uneducated manual laborer. They are the same people who advocated for slavery back in the day, nothing has changed.
Agreed. When push came to shove, I've never met a White man unwilling to put in a hard days labor, if it paid the bills and enabled him to support his family. But, due to the constant outsourcing, globalist push, and importation of foreign workers, all of the jobs our people used to do have had their wages degraded severely, such that they no longer provide a livable wage. Construction was one of the first economic sectors hit, and wages in that field were actually higher in the 70s and 80s than they are right now, precisely because of all the Mexicans coming into the U.S.