They wouldn't have a choice. You can't produce throwaway food while paying 10-15/hr for it to be picked.heydaralon wrote:Do you really think Americans would pay that much for carrots? Potatoes and corn and wheat are the only things Americans eat, because they can be processed in such that all nutritional content is removed. Immigrants go first, then the fatties get their hoverounds unplugged and left in the woods imo.GrumpyCatFace wrote:I would love to be a yeoman farmer. Hell, if you wiped out the Big Ag labor force, I’d soon be a wealthy man, just selling $20 carrots at the farm market. I mean, I still would be caught up in the whole economic collapse, but produce sales would be amazing.Okeefenokee wrote:
I'm pointing out the nonsense in the assertion that there aren't any Americans who want to be farmers.
You, being the anti-monsanto member, can't suddenly turn around and argue against them at the same time.
Pick one.
I’ve been saying the same as MilSpecs for a long time now - you had better pray that Trump doesn’t find a way to actually follow through on deportation any time soon. If you stretch it out 10-20 years,maybe we find a solution, or the dollar can be resurrected enough for an American to survive at menial labor pay.
Until then, this is a Gordian Knot, and hitting it with a sword would be an incredibly bad idea.
10 illegal alien farm workers arrested in MI
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Re: 10 illegal alien farm workers arrested in MI
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Re: 10 illegal alien farm workers arrested in MI
You're correct. We are side-stepping the morality of it, because the morality of it doesn't matter.Okeefenokee wrote:That's always the sob story from the people who don't want to lose their slaves.
How will we afford it?
Never stopping once to address the morality of their defense. They'll throw moral attacks at you all day for opposing their immoral support for quasi-slave labor, but when they have to defend it, they jump right past the moral arguments, and go straight up utilitarianism.
Because there's no way to defend it morally. The same people who want a 20 dollar minimum wage for burger flippers kick and scream at the thought of having to pay a reasonable price for a head of lettuce.
It's asinine.
You can be noble and starve, or you can maintain the largest food infrastructure in history, because it's more moral to ALLOW people to make your food for a low wage, and not kill millions across the globe.
Any American can go to any farm right now, and get a job for minimum wage, picking food. They won't, they don't, and they can't. The economic distortion is too large. You can live nicely and support a family in Mexico for our minimum wage. You cannot do that in the US.
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Re: 10 illegal alien farm workers arrested in MI
GrumpyCatFace wrote:You're correct. We are side-stepping the morality of it, because the morality of it doesn't matter.Okeefenokee wrote:That's always the sob story from the people who don't want to lose their slaves.
How will we afford it?
Never stopping once to address the morality of their defense. They'll throw moral attacks at you all day for opposing their immoral support for quasi-slave labor, but when they have to defend it, they jump right past the moral arguments, and go straight up utilitarianism.
Because there's no way to defend it morally. The same people who want a 20 dollar minimum wage for burger flippers kick and scream at the thought of having to pay a reasonable price for a head of lettuce.
It's asinine.
You can be noble and starve, or you can maintain the largest food infrastructure in history, because it's more moral to ALLOW people to make your food for a low wage, and not kill millions across the globe.
Any American can go to any farm right now, and get a job for minimum wage, picking food. They won't, they don't, and they can't. The economic distortion is too large. You can live nicely and support a family in Mexico for our minimum wage. You cannot do that in the US.
Now he says we're doing it for everyone else.
This is our message to the world. We must continue slavery, for your sake. We're doing this for you.
this is clown show garbage. just admit you're selfish and cheap, and don't want to pay market value as long as you can exploit people. this ain't about people starving around the world.
GrumpyCatFace wrote:Dumb slut partied too hard and woke up in a weird house. Ran out the door, weeping for her failed life choices, concerned townsfolk notes her appearance and alerted the fuzz.
viewtopic.php?p=60751#p60751
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Re: 10 illegal alien farm workers arrested in MI
Regardless of your ignorance on the economic issue, I'll play in the moral sandbox with you for a minute.Okeefenokee wrote:GrumpyCatFace wrote:You're correct. We are side-stepping the morality of it, because the morality of it doesn't matter.Okeefenokee wrote:That's always the sob story from the people who don't want to lose their slaves.
How will we afford it?
Never stopping once to address the morality of their defense. They'll throw moral attacks at you all day for opposing their immoral support for quasi-slave labor, but when they have to defend it, they jump right past the moral arguments, and go straight up utilitarianism.
Because there's no way to defend it morally. The same people who want a 20 dollar minimum wage for burger flippers kick and scream at the thought of having to pay a reasonable price for a head of lettuce.
It's asinine.
You can be noble and starve, or you can maintain the largest food infrastructure in history, because it's more moral to ALLOW people to make your food for a low wage, and not kill millions across the globe.
Any American can go to any farm right now, and get a job for minimum wage, picking food. They won't, they don't, and they can't. The economic distortion is too large. You can live nicely and support a family in Mexico for our minimum wage. You cannot do that in the US.
Now he says we're doing it for everyone else.
This is our message to the world. We must continue slavery, for your sake. We're doing this for you.
this is clown show garbage. just admit you're selfish and cheap, and don't want to pay market value as long as you can exploit people. this ain't about people starving around the world.
How, in your learned opinion, is this "slavery"? The migrants are coming across the desert (and often dying) for a chance to take a job that's not filled by Americans. At what point were they forced or coerced to do so?
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Re: 10 illegal alien farm workers arrested in MI
If you stopped wasting food you could afford to pay the real price for it.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nat ... 320035001/
That is perhaps to put it ass backwards. If you had to pay the real price for food you would waste less of it.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nat ... 320035001/
That is perhaps to put it ass backwards. If you had to pay the real price for food you would waste less of it.
An nescis, mi fili, quantilla prudentia mundus regatur? - Axel Oxenstierna
Nie lügen die Menschen so viel wie nach einer Jagd, während eines Krieges oder vor Wahlen. - Otto von Bismarck
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Re: 10 illegal alien farm workers arrested in MI
Valid point. The shock of paying a higher price would certainly change the way we look at food.Hastur wrote:If you stopped wasting food you could afford to pay the real price for it.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nat ... 320035001/
That is perhaps to put it ass backwards. If you had to pay the real price for food you would waste less of it.
Once we're done "freeing the slaves", perhaps we could address the real suffering in this factory system.
:vomit:
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Re: 10 illegal alien farm workers arrested in MI
It's amazing we don't starve in Europe considering we pay a living wage to workers and don't torment animals that way.GrumpyCatFace wrote:Valid point. The shock of paying a higher price would certainly change the way we look at food.Hastur wrote:If you stopped wasting food you could afford to pay the real price for it.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nat ... 320035001/
That is perhaps to put it ass backwards. If you had to pay the real price for food you would waste less of it.
Once we're done "freeing the slaves", perhaps we could address the real suffering in this factory system.
:vomit:
An nescis, mi fili, quantilla prudentia mundus regatur? - Axel Oxenstierna
Nie lügen die Menschen so viel wie nach einer Jagd, während eines Krieges oder vor Wahlen. - Otto von Bismarck
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Re: 10 illegal alien farm workers arrested in MI
People in Europe can survive on sanctimony alone.
Shamedia, Shamdemic, Shamucation, Shamlection, Shamconomy & Shamate Change
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Re: 10 illegal alien farm workers arrested in MI
I doubt it’s any different there. Of course, you do import a lot of our food, so it’s possible.Hastur wrote:It's amazing we don't starve in Europe considering we pay a living wage to workers and don't torment animals that way.GrumpyCatFace wrote:Valid point. The shock of paying a higher price would certainly change the way we look at food.Hastur wrote:If you stopped wasting food you could afford to pay the real price for it.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nat ... 320035001/
That is perhaps to put it ass backwards. If you had to pay the real price for food you would waste less of it.
Once we're done "freeing the slaves", perhaps we could address the real suffering in this factory system.
:vomit:
It’s also possible that your Ag gag laws are even more draconian than ours. I really don’t know.
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Re: 10 illegal alien farm workers arrested in MI
What the fuck are those pigs wearing? Never seen anything like that before.GrumpyCatFace wrote: Valid point. The shock of paying a higher price would certainly change the way we look at food.
Once we're done "freeing the slaves", perhaps we could address the real suffering in this factory system.
:vomit:
For legal reasons, we are not threatening to destroy U.S. government property with our glorious medieval siege engine. But if we wanted to, we could. But we won’t. But we could.