Xequecal wrote:
You're completely ignoring the fact that the employer also has to apply for H-2As to provide to workers. In this process they must first try to find American workers to take those jobs, then prove to the INS that they did so. Quite frankly, if my personal experience with the INS is any indication, they will find any excuse possible to deny an application that give a job that could potentially be filled by an American to an immigrant, or to get rid of that immigrant once they are here. INS employees do not like the people who are "stealing our jobs" and seize on any opportunity to rectify this "wrong." We lived in constant fear of this when we were here on an H-1B visa. I saw someone deported for being at-fault in an auto accident, when I say any excuse, I really mean it. You have a very high chance of being automatically deported simply for being arrested on suspicion of committing a felony. Not even a grand jury indictment, let alone a conviction, simply an arrest. They don't even let you post bond, they just hand you over to the INS for immediate deportation. This makes nonimmigrant workers, especially low-wage workers that have a propensity for getting into trouble, very unreliable because they can be randomly deported at any time.
I'm not "ignoring" that at all. It's supposed to be that way. However, first of all, INS is gone; it's Immigration and Customs Services, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and Customs and Border Protection now, depending on which aspect you mean, and since it's been that way since 2003 and you evidently don't know this, I doubt your experience is that extensive.
Second, once you have a visa, H-1B, H-2A, or for that matter any other class, no immigration service can just look for an excuse of "taking jobs" to toss you out. It does not work that way. You cannot be deported for being in an auto accident; it does not work like that. Auto accidents are not a deportable condition. You cannot be deported just for "suspicion" of a felony. You can be refused admission in the first place for certain felonies, or suspicion of them, but once you are admitted, deportation requires a higher standard fo proof, generally conviction. I can get my textbooks out and specify for different offenses, but the bottom line is that you simply do not know what you are talking about.
If this is what your parents were worried about then they didn't **** understand either. Furthermore, you can definitely get deported for being here without any visa at all, so even if this bullshit you were spewing were true it still wouldn't explain the unwillingness of illegals to go through the proper process.
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Also, you are implying that there is a huge surplus of H-2A jobs available, but that Mexicans would prefer to put their lives at risk hauling drugs or selling themselves to loan sharks rather than wait a few weeks to process an H-2A application. This is utterly ridiculous.
No, it's not utterly ridiculous. If there weren't a huge surplus of jobs,we wouldn't have a flood of illegal immigrants working them. What agricultural jobs do you think we're talking about?
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Employers are generally not going to bother with H-2As. Not only are there all the pitfalls I just listed, but the whole point of hiring illegal immigrants in the first place is to skirt U.S. wage laws. H-2A workers must be paid minimum wage and overtime pay, the same as American workers. The company also must provide food and shelter to the workers. They're not going to apply for H-2As, it's simply not profitable. If they have jobs that are profitable for H-2As to do, they'll just pay a few bucks more an hour and hire Americans. That's why there's only 30,000 of them.
Employer misconduct is a problem, but that does not change the fact that an H-2A could still be hired for a fairly token increase in expense. Minimum wage would be a raise for them, and the other costs are all pretty minor. Transporation, room, and board? Not exactly bank-breakers; we are not talking about college dorms or Army barracks, much less anything fancier.
More importantly, this illustrates exactly how short-sighted most illegals are. They could have a much better deal with an H-2A, and no debt to a
coyote or loan shark. But they don't give a **** because they just don't get the concept of following a legal process. It seems easier to just cross the river, and it satisfies the sense of immidiate gratification that is part and parcel of being poor and ignorant.
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The whole farm industry as currently structured simply does not function without low-paying cheap labor. Is it impossible for the farm work to be done with Americans? Of course not, but it would require a major restructuring of the entire industry.
Bullshit. You're just pulling **** out of your ***. The bottom line is that you're a **** LAPR who thinks he's entitled to live here and views everything through the fairly typical sense of entitlement to American resources that the rest of the world seems to have.
Even if it did, so what? If the entire industry is designed around reliance on cheap labor that's come into this country illegally, then it needs to be restructured. I seem to recall that there was a period in which another major agricultural industry in this country relied on cheap labor...