BDKJMU wrote:SDHornet wrote:
This is a good idea and I have no problem with this.
My question is who will fill the labor void left when the cheap labor is deported? Business owners stand to lose tons of money when they find that their workforce has been deported and not many people will be willing to do the work.
I guess an extremely bright group of people can come up with some exemptions regarding who can stay?

I've said it on here before. Of course if Americans can stay on unemployment for up to 3 years and welfare for up to 3 years they're not going to do those jobs that the illegals do. Deport the illegals, take away the extended unemployment and welfare and you'd be able to find plenty of Americans to do those jobs in agriculture, construction, landscaping, hotels, restaurants, factories, etc, etc. They would have 2 choices: Be willing to do those jobs, or starve.
I agree and have no problem with ending entitlements/welfare and essentially “forcing” people into doing these less desirable, low skill jobs. Disagree about ANY natural born US citizen who will be willing to work dawn to dusk for a few dollars an hour plus the few dollars per box/bushel/bucket of whatever crop they are harvesting. Add in the fact that many of these agricultural workers migrate hundreds of miles working to various farms during the harvest seasons and what you will find is that the farmers/landowners will be hard pressed to find people fresh off the welfare willing to do this labor.
There is a reason this illegal immigration “debate” has been ignored by politicians for so long. Our agribusiness economy had been dependant on cheap and mostly illegal labor for over a century, it ain’t changin’ anytime soon. As I pointed out in another post, if immediate deportation is going to happen, the businesses dependant on said labor will need replacements the very next day and that just won’t happen voluntarily.