While admirable, their efforts won't amount to much. Companies will still throw away the applications from (White) Americans. They'll delete them. They'll still claim "no one here wants to work these jobs", and they won't get punished for it because the government is corrupt and antithetical toward the needs and good of the people. Until the government corruption is rooted out, the people responsible punished, and their evil plans stopped, nothing will change.
All of these surface level "solutions" will inevitably fail, and only act as outlets for anger and effort for good people, time sinks which don't produce fruit, and delaying tactics for the inevitable necessary collapse of the system, and the people's necessary response and only effective solution. It's stuff like this that can make midwit good people think and say "I'm doing something to fix this" and "we're fixing this", not realizing their efforts are wasted, because they don't fully realize how systemic the problem is and how painful the solution is. Sometimes, though, people need to try these surface level false solutions to fully realize the truth, to "walk the path" to get to the inevitable end point. Other times, strong leaders and organizations can pull people toward that uncomfortable truth, kicking and screaming, regardless of the naysayers.
While admirable, their efforts won't amount to much. Companies will still throw away the applications from (White) Americans. They'll delete them. They'll still claim "no one here wants to work these jobs", and they won't get punished for it because the government is corrupt and antithetical toward the needs and good of the people. Until the government corruption is rooted out, the people responsible punished, and their evil plans stopped, nothing will change.
All of these surface level "solutions" will inevitably fail, and only act as outlets for anger and effort for good people, time sinks which don't produce fruit, and delaying tactics for the inevitable necessary collapse of the system, and the people's necessary response and only effective solution. It's stuff like this that can make midwit good people think and say "I'm doing something to fix this" and "we're fixing this", not realizing their efforts are wasted, because they don't fully realize how systemic the problem is and how painful the solution is. Sometimes, though, people need to try these surface level false solutions to fully realize the truth, to "walk the path" to get to the inevitable end point. Other times, strong leaders and organizations can pull people toward that uncomfortable truth, kicking and screaming, regardless of the naysayers.
This is already happening anyway. So we’re sticking it to them.