Daniel Costa and Heidi Shierholz, Researchers - Economic Policy Institute
Stephan:
The Republican cult spews out the most egregious crap about immigrants. The facts are that immigrants are not displacing American citizens from jobs. Here are the facts, the information you never hear a Republican say. The truth is without immigrants the cost of your food, for instance, would be much higher.
The immigrant share of the labor force reached a record high of 18.6% in 2023, according to our analysis of Current Population Survey (CPS) data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.1 Anti-immigration advocates have been out in full force, using this as a talking point for deeply misguided commentary and analysis that roughly translates to “immigrants are taking all our jobs.”
The reality is that the economy does not have a fixed number of jobs, and what we see today is a growing economy that is adding jobs for both immigrants and U.S.-born workers. Here are six key facts that show immigrants are not hurting the employment outcomes of U.S.-born workers.
The unemployment rate for U.S.-born workers averaged 3.6% in 2023, the lowest rate on record. Obviously, immigration is not causing high unemployment among U.S.-born workers.
The share of prime-age U.S.-born individuals with a job is at its highest rate in more than two decades. In 2023, the prime-age (ages 25–54) employment-to-population ratio (EPOP) for U.S.-born individuals was 81.4%, up from […]
The Republican cultists who rage on about immigration in Red states all over America are doing everything they can to take the United States back 100 years to when child labor was permitted. This story from Kentucky is one of a dozen such stories I could have picked about child labor, each from a different state. What the Republicans are doing, in my opinion, is disgusting. We have one political party that is utterly lacking in ethics. They are openly working on the dismemberment of the laws protecting children from being employed in slaughterhouses and factories by corporations that are equally devoid of integrity. This lack of integrity is becoming a growing factor in American society.
LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY — Kentucky’s Republican-dominated House of Representatives passed a bill Thursday to remove state restrictions on child labor, allowing 16- and 17-year-olds to work all night and during school hours.
House Bill 255 repeals Kentucky’s state-specific restrictions on employment for 14- to 18-year-olds and removes the power of the state commissioner for workplace standards — part of the governor’s administration — to issue regulations to protect children in the workplace.
Supporters said it will be easier for employers to comply with federal law that applies nationwide concerning child labor rather than Kentucky’s more restrictive policies, and that removing state restrictions will instill valuable work ethic in teenagers.
Rep. Phil Pratt, R-Georgetown, the owner of a landscaping business, said it’s an “economic imperative” to remove “barriers” to teens working because of national “labor crisis.”
“Work has value, and teenagers who want to work or need to work … shouldn’t have the Kentucky government stand in the way,” Pratt, the lead sponsor of the bill, said on the House floor Thursday.
Democrats decried the policy as opening the door to child exploitation for the convenience of fast-food and other low-wage employers […]
One hundred and fifty-one years ago Yellowstone was established as the world’s first national park by an act of Congress and signed into law on March 1, 1872, by President Ulysses S. Grant. Since that time national parks have grown to a system of 400 properties, and this network has become one of the assets that have made the United States a nation admired around the world. If you have ever been to one of the parks it is easy to understand why this is true. Now the greed and lack of ethics of the Republican cult has begun corrupting this legendary asset. Read this report; it will help you understand what is happening.
We had followed the trail for a half mile when it ran headlong into a fence.
Signs nailed to the trees blared messages of unwelcome: “Private Property” and “No Forest Service Access.” They were emphatic: The trail ends here.
Our map — the official map of the Custer Gallatin National Forest — said different: The trail continued for another seven or eight miles, a substantial orange line winding through the foothills of Montana’s Crazy Mountains.
The signs, though, had the desired effect. On the other side of the fence, the trail grew faint.
This trail, known as the Porcupine Lowline, had been marked on U.S. Forest Service maps for nearly a century — the earliest I’ve seen is dated 1925. But, like many trails in the Crazies, it crossed private land to reach the National Forest. And, like many trails here, landowners had taken to putting up “No Trespassing” signs, fences and padlocked gates at those crossing points. The […]
Anna Phillips, National Reporter - The Washington Post
Stephan:
Another report of greed, lack of ethics, and stupidity. America’s builders don’t seem to understand what climate change is going to do to this country. They prefer short-time profit to the long-term wellbeing of the country in which they live. Short-term profit is even more important to them than the wellbeing of their own children. It is amazing.
“Out in the middle of nowhere” in Moore County, N.C., developer Ron Jackson said he is building what America needs — more affordable homes for the nurses, police officers and teachers struggling to find housing they can afford amid a nationwide shortage.
That’s why Jackson and others from North Carolina’s home building industry say they came out in force last year against a state plan to tighten energy efficiency building codes so new homes would waste less energy, reducing their carbon footprints. The builders succeeded in blocking the new standards, helping to maintain the status quo.
“All that energy code was going to do in my price range is make it to where the working man and woman would not be able to buy a home,” Jackson said. He sells homes in the $250,000 range and estimated the changes would have increased his costs by more than $20,000 — afigure that comes from a survey of North Carolina builders conducted by the state branch of the National […]
I have to go in for another surgery Thursday, so there will be no Friday edition of SR. I should be back to work for a Saturday edition. I ask that you hold me in healing intention so that this can all go without problems.