southernhybrid
Contributor
Anyone with at least an average IQ realized that deporting or substantially limiting new immigrants into the US would eventually have a negative impact on our economy, but the evidence is starting to become apparent. I will "gift" an article that goes into a lot of detail regarding this problem and hope others will find more sources regarding this issue.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/09/...e_code=1.2k4.7YJ8.dAbiyLZnNAHO&smid=url-share
An estimated 20 percent of the U.S. labor force is foreign born, and millions of immigrant workers lack legal immigration status.Hundreds of thousands more have been shielded from deportation and have work permits under a program called temporary protected status, offered to nationals of countries in upheaval, which has enabled corporate giants like Amazon and large commercial builders to hire them. But Mr. Trump has already announced that he will phase out the program, starting with Venezuelan and Haitian beneficiaries.
There is a lot more in the article and I suggest you read all of it, as it's full of good information, as well as the price we will all pay if the felon continues to deport and scare hard working immigrants. Our immigration system needs to be improved, but this isn't the way to do it. Almost all of come from immigrant ancestors and the hatred and xenophobia is dangerous. Maybe the country needs to suffer greatly before more people will appreciate the contributions of poor immigrants. Right now, I doubt many want to come here as Trump is making the country a potentially dangerous autocracy. We are on a speeding train heading for a wreck, so hold on tight! And the fucking conservative Christians who were supposed to "love they neighbor as thyself" are largely to blame for this fucked up mess too. Hypocrites!
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/09/...e_code=1.2k4.7YJ8.dAbiyLZnNAHO&smid=url-share
Fearing roundups, many immigrants are staying home. Construction, agriculture, senior care and hospitality employers say labor shortages will worsen.
The railroad tracks that slice through downtown Freehold, N.J., used to be lined by dozens of men, waiting for work. Each morning, the men — day laborers, almost all from Latin America and undocumented — would be scooped up by local contractors in pickup trucks for jobs painting, landscaping, removing debris.
In recent weeks, the tracks have been desolate. On a gray February morning, a laborer named Mario, who came from Mexico two decades ago, said it was the quietest he could remember.
“Because of the president, we have a fear,” said Mario, 55, who agreed to be interviewed on the condition that only his first name would be used because he is undocumented. His two sons are also in the United States illegally; one works in paving, the other in home construction. “We are in difficult times,” he said.
This scene has been playing out on the streets of Freehold, on the farms of California’s Central Valley, in nursing homes in Arizona, in Georgia poultry plants and in Chicago restaurants.
Fear has gripped America’s undocumented workers. Many are staying home.
The impact is being felt not only in immigrant homes and communities, but also in the industries that rely on immigrants as a source of willing and inexpensive labor, including residential construction, agriculture, senior care and hospitality. American consumers will soon feel the pain.
“Businesses across industries know what comes next when their work force disappears — restaurants, coffee shops and grocery stores struggling to stay open, food prices soaring, and everyday Americans demanding action,” said Rebecca Shi, chief executive of the American Business Immigration Coalition.
An estimated 20 percent of the U.S. labor force is foreign born, and millions of immigrant workers lack legal immigration status.Hundreds of thousands more have been shielded from deportation and have work permits under a program called temporary protected status, offered to nationals of countries in upheaval, which has enabled corporate giants like Amazon and large commercial builders to hire them. But Mr. Trump has already announced that he will phase out the program, starting with Venezuelan and Haitian beneficiaries.
Refugees from around the globe, who have settled in the United States after fleeing persecution, have supplied a steady pipeline of low-skilled labor for poultry plants, warehouses and manufacturing. But that pipeline could dry up since Mr. Trump shut down the U.S. refugee program. Last month, a federal judge restored it temporarily while a lawsuit is pending, but the program remains at a standstill and no refugees are arriving.
The White House did not respond to questions about the strategy of deportations and how the Trump administration envisions filling the gaps left behind by the immigrant work force.
Leaders of industries that are the most exposed warn that the impact will be widespread, with far-reaching consequences for consumers and employers.
Kezia Scales, vice president at PHI, a national research and advocacy organization focused on long-term care for older adults and people with disabilities, said her industry was already facing a “recruitment crisis.”
“If immigrants are prevented from entering this work force or are forced to leave the country by restrictive immigration policies and rhetoric,” she said, “we will face systems collapse and catastrophic consequences for millions of people who rely on these workers.”
There is a lot more in the article and I suggest you read all of it, as it's full of good information, as well as the price we will all pay if the felon continues to deport and scare hard working immigrants. Our immigration system needs to be improved, but this isn't the way to do it. Almost all of come from immigrant ancestors and the hatred and xenophobia is dangerous. Maybe the country needs to suffer greatly before more people will appreciate the contributions of poor immigrants. Right now, I doubt many want to come here as Trump is making the country a potentially dangerous autocracy. We are on a speeding train heading for a wreck, so hold on tight! And the fucking conservative Christians who were supposed to "love they neighbor as thyself" are largely to blame for this fucked up mess too. Hypocrites!