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50 deported beaners
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STFU, Spic. :321GFY I rest my case. |
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I'm sorry if you don't believe me look at the stats there's only what 1.600 people living there in 2003, you and I both know there wasn't that many people there back then. |
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One of the problems that you guys face, is not knowing the difference between the mexicans that are crossing is simply this. The ones that you speak of as hard working, are usually from the middle or southern regions of Mexico. They are NOT NORMALLY from the border states of Mexico.
They have had nothing all their lives, but have heard that a hard worker in the US can make good money. So they cross. The people that live in the border states, have jobs in mexico, they just dont want them, and dont want to work, |
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odds are the mex hookers would out perform the us hookers anyways. |
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Walk into any american business, and watch the americans hard at work. more than 60% of thier time is spent bullshitting in some way or another |
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But seriously if you have to pay a worker who picks 200 apples an hour $5 more thats $0.025 an apple. I think we can swing it. Additionally if the illegal worker subsidy handed out to farmers was removed they would start looking toward technology to lower costs. That's good for equipment companies like John Deer who aren't able to compete with sub minimum wage salary work forces. |
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I lived down the street from a guy who owned 300k acres of farming property. He gre 200 acres of watermelon, and hired mexicans to pick it. They paid them 3 cents per pound. They were then able to sell the watermelon to the stores for 14 cents per pound. giving him an 11 cent profit. Once he paid for the diesel fuel for the water sprinklers, and then fencing that had to be installed, and the gas for the bus that moved the watermelon, and the bug sprays over the season, he had a clear 2.24 cent profit per pound. Now tell me how he will make it paying them 5$ per hour, especially whent he US government is planning to raise that to 7.50$ per hour,. |
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Thats funny, because I see them standing at the fence all the time. Wondering, and wiating, and I have seen some cross the fence. There are a ton of jobs available in Tijuana, and Rosarito, but there are 10 times the number that dont work. Interesting huh? |
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There's a labor shortage in Baja Norte? What kind of jobs aren't being filled? |
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Walk down any street, pick up any newspaper, there are jobs. Walk through rio plaza and you will see at least 10 signs looking for workers. I know that they dont make the money they would on the other side, but money is money. The sad thing is, that we have hired 4 people to work for us. Paying US salary, and the first two did one days work, and never returned, and the other two were unable to show up on time on the first day. |
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Not really sure, but each water mellon I would guess weighs about 4 to 8 pounds |
how many beans could a beaner pick if a beaner could pick beans
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So 25 watermelons at 6 pounds is 150 total pounds. At $0.03 a pound that's $4.50 for the hour. If he has to be paid $5.50 an hour that's an extra $1 in cost for every 25 watermelons. Making the cost of each watermelon $0.04 more (assuming they all weigh the same). He can eat the cost or pass it on to the consumer. If he can't do it then he should change crops and grow something profitable. That's how economies work. |
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