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"Mike Coslo" wrote in message
. .. Kim W5TIT wrote: "Mike Coslo" wrote in message ... Dwight Stewart wrote: "N2EY" wrote: OK fine. You wanna do migrant farm labor? If I could still physically do it, I'd be thrilled to do so, Jim. My grandmother owned a huge farm in North Carolina and I truly enjoyed going there every summer during my teenage years to work. I worked side-by-side with the hired laborers and did every single job they did. However, because of the low wages for most of those jobs today, I certainly wouldn't do some those jobs today (even if I could physically do so). However, a few farmers in the area still pay well and they have no problems finding labor. If I could do it, I wouldn't mind doing one of those jobs one summer just for the fun of it. Here lies the rub, Dwight! Although I disagree with a lot of your views on race, you are spot on on this thread sub-subject. No, the damned rub is in how much our products would cost if the jobs migrant and transient workers do were paid at much higher pay scales!!!!!!!!!!!!! Not that I want to see anyone suffering... But where do we stop? As I noted to Jim, there are new jobs "going away" from America, like those in some IT fields. Don't expect it to stop there. The companies can pay much less for the help in India, and I guess we are to be happy that our software may cost less. I'd pay a little more for tech help I can understand. Anymore, it is getting really hard to make out what the tech help is telling me. - Mike KB3EIA - Well, the fact that jobs are moving away from this country is not new--it's been going on since I was in High School. And, while I don't like it, I'm not going to get all bent out of shape over it--because there's not a damned thing that's ever been done about and there will never be. The only way to stop it from happening is to have the "rest of the world's" standard of living raised. Or, ours lowered. It seems to me that as jobs have moved out of this country (industries, we should say); they are slowly replaced by others. That is to say that it seems almost a natural transition that has been happening for at least two generations now. Sure, there are great numbers of people displaced by the practice--but the economy and job markets have recovered in every instance. Personally, I could never figure out why the computer industry was as it was in this country. When one considers that the technology of computers and its resulting industry can literally be transported over phone lines, how in the world is it that there was such a glut of computer, and telecom for that matter, in this country? Some tech support person from across the ocean can access my computer and help me fix it. Consider this. I've been toying with the idea over the last few years that it will the "menial" (as was put by someone else--I don't agree with the term) jobs that will gradually grow to the higher paid jobs in this country...because there will be less and less people who *will* do them. The "services" of a migrant worker or a fast food person, or a municipal worker or construction worker will become so highly needed, that they will be able to demand a pretty penny for their work. Everyone will want the sit-down-in-the-AC jobs and no one will want to work outside--where the meat of our lives comes from. Kim W5TIT |
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