Rynar wrote:
Quote:
No, people we want to work are not people we necessarily want here in the quantities that want to come. We want some of the people that want to work, at a managable rate, and we want them here legally. That way they aren't artificially driving wages down.
Heh, the funny part about this post is that it is the border security you demand in order to protect wages that is artificial, certainly not the natural flow of labor into labor markets.
Only in the sense of the global labor market. That is made up of a bunch of national labor markets. In this case, the unhealthiness of the Mexican labor market and the ready availability of another to go to is both A) artificially draining labor from the Mexican market, allowing Mexico to avoid solving the problem of its labor surplus and driving wages for those remaining artificially up and B) creating an artificial labor surplus here and artificially driving wages down.
So yes, it may be artificial in relation to an idealized perfectly free global labor market, but having an idealized free global labor market for its own sake isn't really a goal, especially since the labor market isn't an entity in a vaccuum. The goal is to have healthy national economies; a global system made up of healthy national economies will itself be healthy, but an overall healthy global system will not necessarily have all of its parts be healthy.
So the goal is to have as much of a free labor market as reasonably possible
in this country, not one that has labor artificially shifted here by failure to innovate or make progress in some other market, because that's good for the economy of this country; not because we want a free labor market for its own sake. We want that because markets that are as free as is reasonably feasible generally do the best job of producing economic prosperity, which is, after all, the goal of an economy in the first place.
If Mexico didn't have a massive labor surplus and an inability to find its *** with both hands in regard to what to do with them, I'd have no problem with some labor coming here, which is why I have no problem with legal immigration. Illegal immigration, however, is symptomatic of Mexico simply shoving its problems elsewhere, and it affects a lot more than just the labor market here. Since the goal is not ot have a free global labor market for the sake of a free global labor market, I have no problem restricting that labor flow in order to keep the national labor market more free and deal with the other problems illegal immigration causes.