• ICE Blocks Freeway... Deports 'Entire Convoy' of Invaders

    From D Brandon@21:1/5 to All on Mon Sep 1 17:35:25 2025
    XPost: alt.politics.immigration, alt.survival, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: misc.survivalism

    Border Patrol and Texas DPS chase smugglers on the highways and byways
    near the border. In this video we compare various police chases
    involving illegal immigrant smugglers, and contrast those with the
    tactics used by professional car thieves to evade law enforcement.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=505AED7cBCc


    --
    First we will destroy your identity. Then we will teach you your past
    was evil. You will conclude yourself that your inheritance, your
    homeland, your ancestors and your people are underserving of it all.
    Then we will complete your dispossession and dissolve you into the final
    phase of the Kalergi Plan.

    https://www.globalgulag.us

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Greggor@21:1/5 to All on Tue Sep 2 00:36:43 2025
    XPost: alt.politics.immigration, alt.survival, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
    XPost: misc.survivalism

    So old white conservative men will be forced to work in the fields for
    pennies now that deporting the labor force. Time to bring back the
    bullwhips. Makes them put in a better effort.


    Trump's never lifted a finger in his life. He's a fairy.



    How Deportations Are Triggering Strike Staffing Challenges Across Key U.S. Industries deportation and company staffing
    RSS Staffing Inc.

    A Tectonic Shift in the American Labor Force

    The American labor market is facing a multifaceted crisis. At the
    intersection of aggressive deportation policies and a spike in labor
    strikes across critical industries lies a troubling trend: a growing
    inability to adequately staff operations during disruptions. As
    immigration enforcement actions escalate and key immigrant labor
    populations diminish, employers—especially those already grappling with union-led strikes—are being pushed to the brink.

    The consequences extend well beyond agriculture and construction,
    traditionally known for heavy immigrant participation. Today, healthcare, hospitality, logistics, and even emergency services are experiencing
    severe disruptions due to the shrinking labor supply. The result is a
    labor crisis with implications not just for economic growth, but for
    national productivity, supply chain stability, and public safety. How Immigration Crackdowns Have Historically Disrupted Labor Markets

    The relationship between immigration enforcement and labor market
    volatility is not new. Historical evidence offers a clear warning.

    In December 2006, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) conducted coordinated raids across six Swift & Company meatpacking plants in the
    Midwest. Over 1,300 undocumented workers were detained, many of whom were long-term employees. The aftermath was immediate and severe. Production
    dropped sharply, staffing agencies struggled to find replacements, and
    wages were temporarily increased to lure workers back into physically
    demanding roles few Americans wanted.

    More recently, in 2019, Mississippi saw one of the largest single-state immigration raids in U.S. history. Nearly 700 workers were arrested across multiple poultry plants. This operation decimated entire shifts overnight, causing production delays and prompting legal and operational chaos.

    Such crackdowns typically yield short-term media headlines but long-term
    labor scars. Industries become reluctant to hire even legal immigrants,
    fearing scrutiny. Workers themselves retreat from the labor market due to
    fear of detection. The “chilling effect” extends far beyond those directly impacted, depressing labor force participation and undercutting entire
    regional economies. Deportation Surge Meets Labor Shortages in 2025

    In 2025, a resurgence in deportation-focused policy has reignited
    workforce anxieties, particularly among industries already weakened by COVID-era attrition, aging demographics, and a tight labor market.

    New policies have not only increased physical deportations but also
    sharply curtailed Temporary Protected Status (TPS) and asylum access. The revocation of TPS for hundreds of thousands of workers from countries like Venezuela, Haiti, and Nicaragua has pulled critical labor resources out of
    the economy. These individuals were concentrated in high-strike industries
    such as agriculture, construction, hospitality, and home healthcare.

    Unlike previous years where administrative discretion slowed deportation actions, current enforcement efforts include workplace audits, E-Verify mandates, and state-level partnerships with federal immigration agencies.
    As a result, undocumented and TPS-holding workers are exiting the labor
    force either through forced removal or voluntary withdrawal due to fear.

    This has created a unique problem: when organized labor movements go on
    strike, employers can no longer rely on the historical “reserve army” of immigrant labor to step in and keep operations moving. Impact on Key
    Sectors Facing Strike-Driven Labor Volatility Agriculture

    No sector has been hit harder than agriculture, particularly in fruit and vegetable farming. Many farms depend heavily on H-2A visa holders and undocumented workers, especially in peak harvest seasons. With raids
    increasing and a 30% drop in new visa approvals since late 2024, strike
    actions among domestic workers are colliding with a lack of available replacements.

    This was most evident in California’s Central Valley in early 2025, when a coalition of farmworkers staged walkouts to demand higher pay and
    protections from heat exposure. Normally, growers would look to hire replacements quickly. This year, they could not. Crops went unharvested,
    and perishable food losses ran into the millions. Construction

    Construction firms, particularly in Texas, Arizona, and Florida, are experiencing cascading delays. Strikes among heavy equipment operators and cement truck drivers have compounded the effects of immigration raids,
    which have removed thousands of day laborers and subcontractor crews.

    Projects tied to federal infrastructure funding are now under scrutiny for failure to meet timelines. Without a reliable pipeline of replacement
    workers, some firms are beginning to offer signing bonuses and housing
    stipends just to fill basic laborer positions. However, these incentives
    are proving insufficient against the backdrop of fear permeating immigrant communities. Healthcare

    The healthcare industry is facing dual threats: burnout-driven strikes by nurses and caregivers, and a declining pool of foreign-born workers in
    support roles. Many home health aides, hospital janitors, and patient transporters are immigrants, some without permanent legal status. With deportation fears spreading and pathways to legalization narrowing,
    providers are struggling to maintain service levels during labor actions.

    In states like New York and Illinois, where caregivers staged rolling
    strikes over low wages and unsafe working conditions, many facilities
    could not bring in temporary replacements. Staffing agencies reported a
    45% decline in candidate availability for short-term assignments compared
    to 2022. Hospitality and Food Service

    Workers in hotels, restaurants, and food processing facilities have become increasingly active in labor organizing. At the same time, ICE enforcement
    has expanded to include audits of food service companies, particularly
    those involved in institutional catering and event venues.

    In April 2025, a weeklong strike by hotel housekeeping staff in Las Vegas
    left properties scrambling to find replacements. But the usual go-to pool
    of immigrant temp workers was unavailable due to heightened immigration enforcement in Nevada. Some casinos were forced to close blocks of rooms
    and cancel events. Logistics and Warehousing

    As e-commerce continues to surge, warehouse and logistics facilities have become vital nodes in the national economy. Many have been targets of
    labor disputes over grueling shifts and algorithm-based productivity
    quotas.

    Simultaneously, undocumented and migrant workers make up a large share of
    this workforce, particularly in sorting and shipping operations.
    Deportations and increased workplace scrutiny have left warehouses under-resourced. Strike actions at fulfillment centers in New Jersey and California in early 2025 were exacerbated by an absence of strikebreakers—formerly sourced through staffing agencies that now fear liability under new federal enforcement guidelines. Broader Economic and Political Implications Wage Inflation and Supply Chain Risks

    One short-term effect of the dual crisis has been wage inflation. With employers unable to fill critical roles during strikes, some are offering $25–$35 per hour for traditionally low-wage jobs. While this may benefit
    some domestic workers in the short run, it also risks accelerating price increases across consumer goods, services, and housing construction.

    Supply chain stability is also under threat. Without adequate staffing
    during labor actions, backlogs are growing in ports, distribution centers,
    and farm-to-market pipelines. This raises the possibility of product
    shortages and delivery delays—especially for essential goods like food and medicine. Political Fallout and Policy Gridlock

    The labor crisis is fueling political polarization. Business groups are pressuring Congress for immigration reform focused on labor market needs, including expanded guest worker programs and legal status for undocumented workers in critical sectors.

    Meanwhile, labor unions are split. Some see immigrant workers as vital
    allies in the fight for better conditions. Others fear that restoring
    immigrant labor pools without parallel labor protections could weaken
    strike leverage.

    Policymakers remain gridlocked. While enforcement policies tighten, no comprehensive labor-immigration reform has passed in over two decades. The result is a patchwork system that cannot withstand systemic shocks—such as
    a mass deportation wave during peak strike season. Employer Responses and Strategic Shifts Investing in Automation

    Faced with chronic understaffing, some companies are accelerating
    investment in automation. From robotic fruit pickers to autonomous
    warehouse forklifts, employers are attempting to future-proof operations. However, adoption remains uneven and costly, and many jobs—particularly in caregiving—resist automation due to their human-centered nature. Union Negotiation Tactics Are Evolving

    With the labor supply constrained, employers are finding themselves in
    weaker negotiating positions during strikes. This has led to faster
    settlements in some cases, with unions winning wage gains and safety concessions that would have been unlikely just a few years ago.

    However, where negotiations break down, the inability to backfill striking positions leaves companies exposed. This is especially true in union-dense regions like the Northeast and West Coast, where labor solidarity remains strong. Workforce Localization and Training Pipelines

    Some employers are shifting strategies to develop local pipelines of
    workers. This includes partnerships with community colleges, trade
    schools, and reentry programs for formerly incarcerated individuals. While promising, these efforts take time to scale and cannot immediately replace
    the scale of the immigrant workforce that has been disrupted.

    Toward a Sustainable Labor and Immigration Framework

    Without urgent policy action, the current dynamic could evolve into a
    prolonged national labor crisis. Deportations show no signs of slowing,
    while labor organizing gains momentum. The result is a workforce stretched thin, with no safety valve.

    To stabilize the system, coordinated strategies are required:

    A reformed guest worker visa system aligned with real-time labor
    market needs. A pathway to legalization for long-time immigrant
    workers in essential roles. Better protections for all
    workers—native-born and immigrant—during labor disputes. Targeted
    investments in workforce development that reduce overreliance on any
    one labor segment.

    Absent these reforms, the U.S. risks permanent staffing volatility across essential sectors, weakened economic growth, and deepening social
    division. Key Takeaways

    Aggressive deportation policies in 2025 are contributing to severe
    labor shortages during strike actions across agriculture, healthcare,
    construction, and logistics. The diminished availability of immigrant
    labor is weakening employers’ ability to maintain operations amid
    rising union activity. Historical parallels show that sudden labor
    force contractions due to immigration enforcement have long-term
    economic consequences. Automation and local hiring initiatives offer
    limited relief but cannot fully replace the scale or skill set of
    displaced workers. A sustainable path forward requires integrated
    immigration and labor reform—not piecemeal enforcement or reactive
    strike mitigation.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Why are deportations causing staffing challenges during strikes?
    Because many industries rely heavily on immigrant workers—both documented
    and undocumented. When these workers are deported or leave due to fear,
    employers cannot find replacements during labor actions.

    What industries are most affected?
    Agriculture, construction, healthcare, hospitality, and logistics are
    among the hardest hit, as they are both labor-intensive and
    immigrant-dependent.

    Can automation solve these problems?
    In some areas, automation helps—but in caregiving, skilled trades, and
    certain food production tasks, human labor remains essential.

    What is the solution?
    A coordinated policy response that includes labor rights protection,
    immigration reform, and workforce investment is needed to address this
    systemic challenge.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Greggor@21:1/5 to All on Tue Sep 2 00:38:21 2025
    XPost: alt.politics.immigration, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.survival
    XPost: misc.survivalism

    So old white conservative men will be forced to work in the fields for
    pennies now that deporting the labor force. Time to bring back the
    bullwhips. Makes them put in a better effort.


    Trump's never lifted a finger in his life. He's a fairy.



    How Deportations Are Triggering Strike Staffing Challenges Across Key U.S. Industries deportation and company staffing
    RSS Staffing Inc.

    A Tectonic Shift in the American Labor Force

    The American labor market is facing a multifaceted crisis. At the
    intersection of aggressive deportation policies and a spike in labor
    strikes across critical industries lies a troubling trend: a growing
    inability to adequately staff operations during disruptions. As
    immigration enforcement actions escalate and key immigrant labor
    populations diminish, employers—especially those already grappling with union-led strikes—are being pushed to the brink.

    The consequences extend well beyond agriculture and construction,
    traditionally known for heavy immigrant participation. Today, healthcare, hospitality, logistics, and even emergency services are experiencing
    severe disruptions due to the shrinking labor supply. The result is a
    labor crisis with implications not just for economic growth, but for
    national productivity, supply chain stability, and public safety. How Immigration Crackdowns Have Historically Disrupted Labor Markets

    The relationship between immigration enforcement and labor market
    volatility is not new. Historical evidence offers a clear warning.

    In December 2006, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) conducted coordinated raids across six Swift & Company meatpacking plants in the
    Midwest. Over 1,300 undocumented workers were detained, many of whom were long-term employees. The aftermath was immediate and severe. Production
    dropped sharply, staffing agencies struggled to find replacements, and
    wages were temporarily increased to lure workers back into physically
    demanding roles few Americans wanted.

    More recently, in 2019, Mississippi saw one of the largest single-state immigration raids in U.S. history. Nearly 700 workers were arrested across multiple poultry plants. This operation decimated entire shifts overnight, causing production delays and prompting legal and operational chaos.

    Such crackdowns typically yield short-term media headlines but long-term
    labor scars. Industries become reluctant to hire even legal immigrants,
    fearing scrutiny. Workers themselves retreat from the labor market due to
    fear of detection. The “chilling effect” extends far beyond those directly impacted, depressing labor force participation and undercutting entire
    regional economies. Deportation Surge Meets Labor Shortages in 2025

    In 2025, a resurgence in deportation-focused policy has reignited
    workforce anxieties, particularly among industries already weakened by COVID-era attrition, aging demographics, and a tight labor market.

    New policies have not only increased physical deportations but also
    sharply curtailed Temporary Protected Status (TPS) and asylum access. The revocation of TPS for hundreds of thousands of workers from countries like Venezuela, Haiti, and Nicaragua has pulled critical labor resources out of
    the economy. These individuals were concentrated in high-strike industries
    such as agriculture, construction, hospitality, and home healthcare.

    Unlike previous years where administrative discretion slowed deportation actions, current enforcement efforts include workplace audits, E-Verify mandates, and state-level partnerships with federal immigration agencies.
    As a result, undocumented and TPS-holding workers are exiting the labor
    force either through forced removal or voluntary withdrawal due to fear.

    This has created a unique problem: when organized labor movements go on
    strike, employers can no longer rely on the historical “reserve army” of immigrant labor to step in and keep operations moving. Impact on Key
    Sectors Facing Strike-Driven Labor Volatility Agriculture

    No sector has been hit harder than agriculture, particularly in fruit and vegetable farming. Many farms depend heavily on H-2A visa holders and undocumented workers, especially in peak harvest seasons. With raids
    increasing and a 30% drop in new visa approvals since late 2024, strike
    actions among domestic workers are colliding with a lack of available replacements.

    This was most evident in California’s Central Valley in early 2025, when a coalition of farmworkers staged walkouts to demand higher pay and
    protections from heat exposure. Normally, growers would look to hire replacements quickly. This year, they could not. Crops went unharvested,
    and perishable food losses ran into the millions. Construction

    Construction firms, particularly in Texas, Arizona, and Florida, are experiencing cascading delays. Strikes among heavy equipment operators and cement truck drivers have compounded the effects of immigration raids,
    which have removed thousands of day laborers and subcontractor crews.

    Projects tied to federal infrastructure funding are now under scrutiny for failure to meet timelines. Without a reliable pipeline of replacement
    workers, some firms are beginning to offer signing bonuses and housing
    stipends just to fill basic laborer positions. However, these incentives
    are proving insufficient against the backdrop of fear permeating immigrant communities. Healthcare

    The healthcare industry is facing dual threats: burnout-driven strikes by nurses and caregivers, and a declining pool of foreign-born workers in
    support roles. Many home health aides, hospital janitors, and patient transporters are immigrants, some without permanent legal status. With deportation fears spreading and pathways to legalization narrowing,
    providers are struggling to maintain service levels during labor actions.

    In states like New York and Illinois, where caregivers staged rolling
    strikes over low wages and unsafe working conditions, many facilities
    could not bring in temporary replacements. Staffing agencies reported a
    45% decline in candidate availability for short-term assignments compared
    to 2022. Hospitality and Food Service

    Workers in hotels, restaurants, and food processing facilities have become increasingly active in labor organizing. At the same time, ICE enforcement
    has expanded to include audits of food service companies, particularly
    those involved in institutional catering and event venues.

    In April 2025, a weeklong strike by hotel housekeeping staff in Las Vegas
    left properties scrambling to find replacements. But the usual go-to pool
    of immigrant temp workers was unavailable due to heightened immigration enforcement in Nevada. Some casinos were forced to close blocks of rooms
    and cancel events. Logistics and Warehousing

    As e-commerce continues to surge, warehouse and logistics facilities have become vital nodes in the national economy. Many have been targets of
    labor disputes over grueling shifts and algorithm-based productivity
    quotas.

    Simultaneously, undocumented and migrant workers make up a large share of
    this workforce, particularly in sorting and shipping operations.
    Deportations and increased workplace scrutiny have left warehouses under-resourced. Strike actions at fulfillment centers in New Jersey and California in early 2025 were exacerbated by an absence of strikebreakers—formerly sourced through staffing agencies that now fear liability under new federal enforcement guidelines. Broader Economic and Political Implications Wage Inflation and Supply Chain Risks

    One short-term effect of the dual crisis has been wage inflation. With employers unable to fill critical roles during strikes, some are offering $25–$35 per hour for traditionally low-wage jobs. While this may benefit
    some domestic workers in the short run, it also risks accelerating price increases across consumer goods, services, and housing construction.

    Supply chain stability is also under threat. Without adequate staffing
    during labor actions, backlogs are growing in ports, distribution centers,
    and farm-to-market pipelines. This raises the possibility of product
    shortages and delivery delays—especially for essential goods like food and medicine. Political Fallout and Policy Gridlock

    The labor crisis is fueling political polarization. Business groups are pressuring Congress for immigration reform focused on labor market needs, including expanded guest worker programs and legal status for undocumented workers in critical sectors.

    Meanwhile, labor unions are split. Some see immigrant workers as vital
    allies in the fight for better conditions. Others fear that restoring
    immigrant labor pools without parallel labor protections could weaken
    strike leverage.

    Policymakers remain gridlocked. While enforcement policies tighten, no comprehensive labor-immigration reform has passed in over two decades. The result is a patchwork system that cannot withstand systemic shocks—such as
    a mass deportation wave during peak strike season. Employer Responses and Strategic Shifts Investing in Automation

    Faced with chronic understaffing, some companies are accelerating
    investment in automation. From robotic fruit pickers to autonomous
    warehouse forklifts, employers are attempting to future-proof operations. However, adoption remains uneven and costly, and many jobs—particularly in caregiving—resist automation due to their human-centered nature. Union Negotiation Tactics Are Evolving

    With the labor supply constrained, employers are finding themselves in
    weaker negotiating positions during strikes. This has led to faster
    settlements in some cases, with unions winning wage gains and safety concessions that would have been unlikely just a few years ago.

    However, where negotiations break down, the inability to backfill striking positions leaves companies exposed. This is especially true in union-dense regions like the Northeast and West Coast, where labor solidarity remains strong. Workforce Localization and Training Pipelines

    Some employers are shifting strategies to develop local pipelines of
    workers. This includes partnerships with community colleges, trade
    schools, and reentry programs for formerly incarcerated individuals. While promising, these efforts take time to scale and cannot immediately replace
    the scale of the immigrant workforce that has been disrupted.

    Toward a Sustainable Labor and Immigration Framework

    Without urgent policy action, the current dynamic could evolve into a
    prolonged national labor crisis. Deportations show no signs of slowing,
    while labor organizing gains momentum. The result is a workforce stretched thin, with no safety valve.

    To stabilize the system, coordinated strategies are required:

    A reformed guest worker visa system aligned with real-time labor
    market needs. A pathway to legalization for long-time immigrant
    workers in essential roles. Better protections for all
    workers—native-born and immigrant—during labor disputes. Targeted
    investments in workforce development that reduce overreliance on any
    one labor segment.

    Absent these reforms, the U.S. risks permanent staffing volatility across essential sectors, weakened economic growth, and deepening social
    division. Key Takeaways

    Aggressive deportation policies in 2025 are contributing to severe
    labor shortages during strike actions across agriculture, healthcare,
    construction, and logistics. The diminished availability of immigrant
    labor is weakening employers’ ability to maintain operations amid
    rising union activity. Historical parallels show that sudden labor
    force contractions due to immigration enforcement have long-term
    economic consequences. Automation and local hiring initiatives offer
    limited relief but cannot fully replace the scale or skill set of
    displaced workers. A sustainable path forward requires integrated
    immigration and labor reform—not piecemeal enforcement or reactive
    strike mitigation.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Why are deportations causing staffing challenges during strikes?
    Because many industries rely heavily on immigrant workers—both documented
    and undocumented. When these workers are deported or leave due to fear,
    employers cannot find replacements during labor actions.

    What industries are most affected?
    Agriculture, construction, healthcare, hospitality, and logistics are
    among the hardest hit, as they are both labor-intensive and
    immigrant-dependent.

    Can automation solve these problems?
    In some areas, automation helps—but in caregiving, skilled trades, and
    certain food production tasks, human labor remains essential.

    What is the solution?
    A coordinated policy response that includes labor rights protection,
    immigration reform, and workforce investment is needed to address this
    systemic challenge.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)