But it is the marginalized/rural poor that vote Republican.
Illegal labor is cheaper specifically because it is illegal - it's an exploitative arrangement that harms both the alien and the worker that has to compete with him. If that labor was properly reported and subject to the same taxation, regulations and oversight that legal labor is, there'd be less of an issue. Make no mistake - the big donors, and therefore the party leadership, of the republican party love illegal immigration and want it to continue unabated, despite whatever lip service they pay to the rank and file constituency.That poem is a large part of why I am proud to be an American. Our current attitude on immigration is embarrassing and sourced from weak willed who see protectionism as the only way to win.
This is what bothers me. How can the party who talks about eliminating the minimum wage or welfare because "people earn what they are worth" and "competition creates strenght" support protectionism?
Look, here's a hard truth. If you lost your job to an illegal immigrant it's because your skills are not very valuable. As someone born with all the advantages of an American, if you can't bring skills to the table better than unskilled migrant labourers...well then maybe you SHOULD lose your job. Maybe you should have learned something of value.
At least, that's whT conservative philosophy should logically lead to, yet somehow it's this pussy protectionism.[DOUBLEPOST=1403044352,1403044086][/DOUBLEPOST]To me, protectionism lacks self respect and pride. It's a shameful display, to put it in Shogun terms.
It is decidedly no longer to our economic advantage to enact fully universal open immigration. That was one thing in 1849, when your favorite poem was written, and we still had an untamed frontier (and our government was still small enough to not even have a federal income tax, how about that for a mindblow), but our population has grown by approximately a factor of 20 since then. We're not "the new world" any more. And even when we were, we still had an official method of handling immigrants other than just "run on across the river in the dead of night."I agree that illegal immigration is exploitative. Which is why you should make it legal.
HAR! Also kinda "Ew."Dick Cheney thought he'd be welcomed as a liberator by Megyn Kelly.
Everyone knew the whole PAC and SuperPAC thing was a shell game being personally run by candidates themselves. This operated AS DESIGNED.
Free speech has no guarantee of privacy. If it can't protect someone when they expose corruption, it certainly doesn't get to do it to prevent the exposure of corruption.The two unknown people had tried to intervene, arguing that making the documents public could reveal their identities and invade their privacy, essentially infringing on their free speech rights.
Thank god science isn't done by committee.This video gets interesting around 1:20 -
Senator Jeff Sessions:
"The President on November 14th 2012 said, 'The temperature around the globe is increasing faster than was predicted, even ten years ago.' And then on May 29th last year he also said - quote - 'We also know that the climate is warming faster than anybody anticipated five or ten years ago.' Close quote. So I would ask each of our [eight] former Administrators [of the EPA] if any of you agree that that's an accurate statement on the climate. So if you do, raise your hand...
... Thank you. The record will reflect no one raised their hands."
Or consensus?Thank god science isn't done by committee.
Let me rephrase. I hear the term "97%" bandied about as the supposed percentage of scientists in the world who attribute global warming to anthropogenic causes. Does that, in your mind, mean the science is "settled?"The problem with that clip is that he lead by saying CO2 is "plant food" and not a problem, then asked a very cagey question that seemed to have a similar connotation and gave weight to that assertion but really didn't really ask that question. I would be tempted to keep my hand down as well, because I'm not certain that global warming is happening faster than previous models allowed for.
But that doesn't mean that global warming isn't real and isn't a serious issue. It was a bullshit question played to the cameras and it got a bullshit answer.
It's settled until it's proven otherwise. NOTHING in science is settled.Let me rephrase. I hear the term "97%" bandied about as the supposed percentage of scientists in the world who attribute global warming to anthropogenic causes. Does that, in your mind, mean the science is "settled?"
What percentage of scientists have to disagree to constitute "proven otherwise?"It's settled until it's proven otherwise. NOTHING in science is settled.
It's a start. Patents may have their place (they may not), but the stupidity in the computer world with them is almost beyond belief. I think IBM, Microsoft, and the others with "patent portfolios" might want to take a good hard long look at how much money they could SAVE if they didn't need an army of lawyers to even draft up the things and could just work off of whatever.SCOTUS says (in a 9-0 decision!), "Merely saying, 'This existing process, but now on a computer,' is not sufficiently original to warrant being patented."
It's a start?
--Patrick
And it's obvious stuff. My brother actually worked for Motorola in their division surrounding this stuff (I work in a different industry). What they're extorting on is obvious, both by my view, and according to him.Recent estimates of its Android licensing business suggest Microsoft is earning somewhere between $1 billion and $2 billion from Android device makers paying royalties.
That's all I was driving at really, the rest was window dressing for a debate we've had around here a hundred times, and is unlikely to be, to borrow a term from you - fruitful.To be honest that is actually a REALLY complex question. I have a 1000 page or so anthology on the philosophy of science that tries, and fails, to answer that. Consensus, or ad populum, doesn't really work, even straight empiricism has logical flaws.
The prosecutors paint a pretty damning picture... so why have no charges even been filed and the investigation stopped by both a state and federal judge?
Declaratory?It sounds like there was a summary judgment or whatever it's called, where the case gets killed before it even goes to trial due to crap evidence.
It's spelled K-O-C-H.The prosecutors paint a pretty damning picture... so why have no charges even been filed and the investigation stopped by both a state and federal judge?
So it's starting to sound like the prosecutors have a political axe to grind and, having been unable to get their way in a court of law, are attempting to achieve it in the court of public opinion.[DOUBLEPOST=1403299421,1403299366][/DOUBLEPOST]It sounds like there was a summary judgment or whatever it's called, where the case gets killed before it even goes to trial due to crap evidence.
Ah yes, Koch, the new Halliburton.It's spelled K-O-C-H.
That sounds about right. I'm generally inclined to side with Federal Judges on pretty much any ruling.So it's starting to sound like the prosecutors have a political axe to grind and, having been unable to get their way in a court of law, are attempting to achieve it in the court of public opinion.
Fucking disgusting.http://www.desertsun.com/story/news/nation/2014/06/20/california-female-inmates-sterilized/11034317/
California illegally sterilizing female inmates.
If they're going to take that stance, why stop at inmates? Let's just turn the U.S. into New China, get those family planning laws in place, all the stuff Naiwen loves so much.Heinrich previously told CIR that the money spent sterilizing inmates was minimal "compared to what you save in welfare paying for these unwanted children — as they procreated more."