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Hatfield
ParticipantBoric acid powder works wonders for roaches. Non-toxic to mammals, but highly toxic to insects. You can get it at Home Despot.
Hatfield
ParticipantBoric acid powder works wonders for roaches. Non-toxic to mammals, but highly toxic to insects. You can get it at Home Despot.
Hatfield
ParticipantPersonally, I think we need a system like Jozef’s for Jose. As it is, the reality is that industries that employ Jose (hospitality, agriculture, construction) enjoy an unfair subsidy that the rest of us pay in a a completely off-the-books manner.
Another reality is that Jose is doing a lot of jobs that only Jose is willing to do. Seriously, picking lettuce, harvesting citrus, washing dishes, that is some nasty-ass back-breaking work which I doubt very many Joes are willing to do. On the other hand, there probably are a lot of “Jose” jobs that Joes *are* willing to do.
So just as there’s an H1-B visa program for Jozef, we need to have some sort of an unskilled H1-B program for all the Joses. Rather than this ridiculous wink-and-a-nod situation we have now where we pretend to care about illegal immigration (but really we don’t) it seems like it would make a lot more sense to create a legal framework for guest workers like Jose. Get all this stuff on the books, with really Draconion sanctions for employers who don’t follow the rules.
If we did that 1) we’d actually know who was here, and 2) we could actually make determinations about who, after X number of years of working and paying taxes, gets a green card and eventually citizenship.
Hatfield
ParticipantPersonally, I think we need a system like Jozef’s for Jose. As it is, the reality is that industries that employ Jose (hospitality, agriculture, construction) enjoy an unfair subsidy that the rest of us pay in a a completely off-the-books manner.
Another reality is that Jose is doing a lot of jobs that only Jose is willing to do. Seriously, picking lettuce, harvesting citrus, washing dishes, that is some nasty-ass back-breaking work which I doubt very many Joes are willing to do. On the other hand, there probably are a lot of “Jose” jobs that Joes *are* willing to do.
So just as there’s an H1-B visa program for Jozef, we need to have some sort of an unskilled H1-B program for all the Joses. Rather than this ridiculous wink-and-a-nod situation we have now where we pretend to care about illegal immigration (but really we don’t) it seems like it would make a lot more sense to create a legal framework for guest workers like Jose. Get all this stuff on the books, with really Draconion sanctions for employers who don’t follow the rules.
If we did that 1) we’d actually know who was here, and 2) we could actually make determinations about who, after X number of years of working and paying taxes, gets a green card and eventually citizenship.
Hatfield
ParticipantPersonally, I think we need a system like Jozef’s for Jose. As it is, the reality is that industries that employ Jose (hospitality, agriculture, construction) enjoy an unfair subsidy that the rest of us pay in a a completely off-the-books manner.
Another reality is that Jose is doing a lot of jobs that only Jose is willing to do. Seriously, picking lettuce, harvesting citrus, washing dishes, that is some nasty-ass back-breaking work which I doubt very many Joes are willing to do. On the other hand, there probably are a lot of “Jose” jobs that Joes *are* willing to do.
So just as there’s an H1-B visa program for Jozef, we need to have some sort of an unskilled H1-B program for all the Joses. Rather than this ridiculous wink-and-a-nod situation we have now where we pretend to care about illegal immigration (but really we don’t) it seems like it would make a lot more sense to create a legal framework for guest workers like Jose. Get all this stuff on the books, with really Draconion sanctions for employers who don’t follow the rules.
If we did that 1) we’d actually know who was here, and 2) we could actually make determinations about who, after X number of years of working and paying taxes, gets a green card and eventually citizenship.
Hatfield
ParticipantPersonally, I think we need a system like Jozef’s for Jose. As it is, the reality is that industries that employ Jose (hospitality, agriculture, construction) enjoy an unfair subsidy that the rest of us pay in a a completely off-the-books manner.
Another reality is that Jose is doing a lot of jobs that only Jose is willing to do. Seriously, picking lettuce, harvesting citrus, washing dishes, that is some nasty-ass back-breaking work which I doubt very many Joes are willing to do. On the other hand, there probably are a lot of “Jose” jobs that Joes *are* willing to do.
So just as there’s an H1-B visa program for Jozef, we need to have some sort of an unskilled H1-B program for all the Joses. Rather than this ridiculous wink-and-a-nod situation we have now where we pretend to care about illegal immigration (but really we don’t) it seems like it would make a lot more sense to create a legal framework for guest workers like Jose. Get all this stuff on the books, with really Draconion sanctions for employers who don’t follow the rules.
If we did that 1) we’d actually know who was here, and 2) we could actually make determinations about who, after X number of years of working and paying taxes, gets a green card and eventually citizenship.
Hatfield
ParticipantPersonally, I think we need a system like Jozef’s for Jose. As it is, the reality is that industries that employ Jose (hospitality, agriculture, construction) enjoy an unfair subsidy that the rest of us pay in a a completely off-the-books manner.
Another reality is that Jose is doing a lot of jobs that only Jose is willing to do. Seriously, picking lettuce, harvesting citrus, washing dishes, that is some nasty-ass back-breaking work which I doubt very many Joes are willing to do. On the other hand, there probably are a lot of “Jose” jobs that Joes *are* willing to do.
So just as there’s an H1-B visa program for Jozef, we need to have some sort of an unskilled H1-B program for all the Joses. Rather than this ridiculous wink-and-a-nod situation we have now where we pretend to care about illegal immigration (but really we don’t) it seems like it would make a lot more sense to create a legal framework for guest workers like Jose. Get all this stuff on the books, with really Draconion sanctions for employers who don’t follow the rules.
If we did that 1) we’d actually know who was here, and 2) we could actually make determinations about who, after X number of years of working and paying taxes, gets a green card and eventually citizenship.
Hatfield
Participanthahahaha… maybe they thought the upgraded electical panel was the house’s best feature?
Hatfield
Participanthahahaha… maybe they thought the upgraded electical panel was the house’s best feature?
Hatfield
Participanthahahaha… maybe they thought the upgraded electical panel was the house’s best feature?
Hatfield
Participanthahahaha… maybe they thought the upgraded electical panel was the house’s best feature?
Hatfield
Participanthahahaha… maybe they thought the upgraded electical panel was the house’s best feature?
January 6, 2010 at 6:22 PM in reply to: More land, lowering costs, where would you move here in the West? #500186Hatfield
ParticipantI love that Denver-Boulder corridor. Despite the 9 degree temps, where the hell is all your snow? 🙂 Looking at my ski widget, it’s showing a 25 inch base at A-Basin and 37 at copper. Next big dump, I’m going to go to Mammoth for a few days.
One other place worth considering: the Marble Falls area outside Austin. I actually have not been there (yet) but some friends just retired there two years ago and love it – close enough to Austin, but far enough away to feel remote. This last summer was freaky weather wise, though – a long string of 100+ degree days. Apparently there’s a whole bunch of nice little towns like that outside Austin.
January 6, 2010 at 6:22 PM in reply to: More land, lowering costs, where would you move here in the West? #500279Hatfield
ParticipantI love that Denver-Boulder corridor. Despite the 9 degree temps, where the hell is all your snow? 🙂 Looking at my ski widget, it’s showing a 25 inch base at A-Basin and 37 at copper. Next big dump, I’m going to go to Mammoth for a few days.
One other place worth considering: the Marble Falls area outside Austin. I actually have not been there (yet) but some friends just retired there two years ago and love it – close enough to Austin, but far enough away to feel remote. This last summer was freaky weather wise, though – a long string of 100+ degree days. Apparently there’s a whole bunch of nice little towns like that outside Austin.
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