The Inevitable New The Inevitable Trump Mocking Thread


Melania-Trump-Naked_thefappening2015_com-14.jpg
 
Hysterical. Undocumented non-citizens earn less than citizens because the employers don't have to pay them the legal wage.

It would also work to simply jail the employers of those without working papers - like Nunes and McCarthy's agro-biz friends. But somehow that doesn't happen...

This is the reality: many, many, many Repubs (and Dems - many employers) want a porous border, but want to crack down on undocumented so the ones here live in fear and don't speak up about the terrible work conditions. Why do you think Trump properties hired so many "illegals?"

If there were a more fair, consistent and easy work-visa process the pay would go up, tax revenue would go up... and agro-biz, meat packing, chicken slaughter profit would go down...

But now they are going to bring in "merit" based immigrants, so the low paying jobs go to American minorities and the good paying jobs to lower-wage immigrants? Like tech, or engineering? Awesome. That's a great idea.
 
Hysterical. Undocumented non-citizens earn less than citizens because the employers don't have to pay them the legal wage.

It would also work to simply jail the employers of those without working papers - like Nunes and McCarthy's agro-biz friends. But somehow that doesn't happen...

This is the reality: many, many, many Repubs (and Dems - many employers) want a porous border, but want to crack down on undocumented so the ones here live in fear and don't speak up about the terrible work conditions. Why do you think Trump properties hired so many "illegals?"

If there were a more fair, consistent and easy work-visa process the pay would go up, tax revenue would go up... and agro-biz, meat packing, chicken slaughter profit would go down...

But now they are going to bring in "merit" based immigrants, so the low paying jobs go to American minorities and the good paying jobs to lower-wage immigrants? Like tech, or engineering? Awesome. That's a great idea.
Meritocracy.....
 
QUOTE="Sheriff Joe, post: 274012, member: 1585"

Oh my.
upload_2019-7-8_20-37-38-jpeg.5053



/QUOTE

And back then under # 42...it was :

01-29-01-15.jpg


" Oh Gag..."
Irony? Melania wants so desperately, and never will have, the love and respect Michelle has, even giving the same speech. The trumps are second rate all around.
 
Immigration
Can a ‘merit-based’ immigration system like Canada's or Australia’s work in the US?

Both countries use points-based selection systems where immigrants get points for criteria such as English language proficiency, employment experience and education levels.

Australia, for example, requires a minimum of 65 points for selection, though the threshold can reach up to 90 points for some industries. Applicants can get 20 points for superior English skills, another 20 points for holding a doctorate (versus 15 points for a Master’s degree), and up to 15 points for experience working overseas — with bonus points if they’ve ever worked in Australia.

Family-based admissions account for roughly one-quarter of immigration to both Canada and Australia, according to their respective immigration agencies.

That contrasts with the United States, where family-based admissions account for 66% of the roughly 1.1 million green cards issued annually, according to Department of Homeland Security figures. Economic-based admissions, or those where an employer may bring in overseas workers with a job offer, account for 12% of US immigration. The diversity visa, which grants legal permanent residency to 50,000 immigrants annually, accounts for 5%.

entire article:
https://www.pri.org/stories/2019-05...on-system-modeled-canada-or-australia-work-us
 
Immigration
Can a ‘merit-based’ immigration system like Canada's or Australia’s work in the US?

Both countries use points-based selection systems where immigrants get points for criteria such as English language proficiency, employment experience and education levels.

Australia, for example, requires a minimum of 65 points for selection, though the threshold can reach up to 90 points for some industries. Applicants can get 20 points for superior English skills, another 20 points for holding a doctorate (versus 15 points for a Master’s degree), and up to 15 points for experience working overseas — with bonus points if they’ve ever worked in Australia.

Family-based admissions account for roughly one-quarter of immigration to both Canada and Australia, according to their respective immigration agencies.

That contrasts with the United States, where family-based admissions account for 66% of the roughly 1.1 million green cards issued annually, according to Department of Homeland Security figures. Economic-based admissions, or those where an employer may bring in overseas workers with a job offer, account for 12% of US immigration. The diversity visa, which grants legal permanent residency to 50,000 immigrants annually, accounts for 5%.

entire article:
https://www.pri.org/stories/2019-05...on-system-modeled-canada-or-australia-work-us

Does "family-based admissions" refer to Melania's parents?
 
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