Not gonna lie, I'm kinda peeved that some employers don't have principles, but I'm absolutely livid about the kids in my cousin's neighborhood being used as drug mules by an MS13 offshoot.
Although i agree with the first part the assimilation part takes time to happen. Typically 1 generation. The parents may never fully assimilate and that's not to say that they dont want too, but rather, because culturally and linguistically they're too far set in there ways but the children growing up here will be much more accustomed to the culture and our main language. It's very hard to take ingrained culture over generations out of someone over 25 as they've become so accustomed to their former way of life.
Article the first: this speaks of immigrants- not illegal or undocumented immigrants. Immigrants as in- people not born here. It’s somewhat telling @guest, that in your mind you see one and conflate the two. Most documented immigrants contribute as much or more than anyone else. What’s more- even if it were “illegal” immigrants- that doesn’t mean they do t pay taxes by default, and they can’t access the full services a citizen would receive so one can’t really say they don’t contribute or that they draw more on the system. As to assimilation I’m mostly with metalman. It takes time and may never be 100% and not for lack of trying. Acclimating to a new culture and a life time of experiences and accumulated knowledge is rough.
I think the common argument isn't that they take more it's that they give little. An illegal immigrant who works and pays rent under the table and never files taxes nor has taxes taken out from their pay checks isn't paying into the system to cover roads or other civil services such as fire and/or police protection. If a legal resident did so they would be jailed and/or fined for tax evasion.
Now I'm not saying that if they get caught they won't be in trouble. What i am saying is that it's harder to track down an illegal immigrant (who has no social security number, nor credit/debit cards, or ebt) than it is to track down an individual who lived in this country and has a social security card and banking information that will track his location any time he uses it.
I hope you read the even and calm tone in my voice of discussion and not one of aggression or attack. I see where that argument comes from the problem is that we can’t really say which or how many “illegals” there are let alone which pay taxes etc because of their nature as undocumented. We do have hard numbers though from the government that undocumented workers pay over $11 billion a year in just state and local taxes and billions more on federal income taxes which they can still and are still expected to file, and the ORS has provisions to allow filing the same as they do for drug dealers.
Can we say that because it’s easier for them to not pay taxes due to their often largely cash pay that they are inherently guilty? If so line up the Waiters/Servers, bartenders, strippers etc who receive a sizable portion of their income in undocumented cash tips and can also easily choose not to file taxes on them. The average American under reports taxes too considering most don’t track or report things like tax owed online purchases, foreign purchases, hell- you’re supposed to report every free meal from work and every dollar you find on the street on your taxes too. While each of these may be small- that’s literally multiple billions of dislikes in combined tax evasion by US citizens a year.
And then factor in that while it’s often “legal” but only through lobbying or manipulation of the letter of the law and spirit- or sometimes outright deception and evasion, those who have the most and who America has given the most are most often the ones who pay the least in taxes. People are outraged that guys making almost nothing aren’t paying their share of that almost nothing, but people making millions and billions are often paying nothing or almost nothing as well.
Then examine the “take vs give.” A guy comes to your fund raiser and pays $5 to get in, then drinks and eats $200 in stuff, another comes in and and pays $1 but only eats or drinks 10 cents worth- who should you be more upset about if you’re worried about money? “Illegals” do not have access to many basic social services, they tend to avoid many they do have access to out of fear of discovery. They produce units of work at a rate generally lower than fair market value, those with pay checks pay into social security they’ll never get, medical and disability they’ll likely never get. They shop at businesses and pay sales and use taxes and put money back into the local economy. They provide vital services at a cost that keeps the prices lower to consumers.
In the equation we end up with a new positive force that actually would seem to do more harm than good. You mention how we don’t know where they are or how to find them. Good points. But we do know where to find the common tax hole loop holes- the tax breaks put in at certain times for obsolete reasons that now exist not to support public good but as shelters for the wealthy. We know where to find the people and companies that make billions but pay almost nothing or literally nothing on taxes...
And if you had two people who owed you money, which sounds like the better bet, chase down the billionaire skirting paying you millions when you have his address, or chase down the guy who owes you less than 1/100th that and will take a lot of time and more money than he owes to find him? And that’s the kicker- where we get had. Getting those with less to fight with others with less while those with the most slink by while we are distracted. A few changes to the tax code to require those who benefit the most and use public systems like roads (How many big rigs does Walmart run across public roads causing wear and tear. How many employees there have made so little they qualify for government benefits and health care, etc..) if we made these entities shoulder a fair tax burden to their gains- we’d see much more tax revenue than if a bunch of undocumented workers paid their $1800 in payroll tax assuming they even make minimum wage-
And oh yes. Credits etc. given that a person making minimum wage will generally qualify for a boat load of credits and rebates, that a person in that income bracket should qualify for renters credit, and that anyone with a child gets a credit....
THIS IS THE PROBABLY MOST IMPORTANT PART AND FINALE... combine those things and then we see a picture where it’s very likely the average undocumented labor worker would actually not only have no tax liability at all- but would receive payments in credits greater than the taxes paid! In other words- the argument that undocumented workers don’t pay taxes is not just on the surface false- some don’t- but if we apply logic and wisdom we can see that what taxes would be paid would likely just be returned making the whole thing moot regardless, or perhaps even counter productive to the idea of increasing tax revenue.
Either the lizards are jew tools or the jews are lizard tools.
For real though, natsoc is about the opposite of jew toolishness. Iran, Syria, North Korea, basically the few remaining non-jew-central-bank countries are also not jew tools, and any idealogy that jews hate that isn't also helping the jews somehow.
Fine or jail employers that keep hiring illegal immigrants. If there is no work for them here, most of the reason for them to try and come here is diminished. Anchor babies and asylum will still be a thing, but employment seems to be the largest motivator.
For real though, natsoc is about the opposite of jew toolishness. Iran, Syria, North Korea, basically the few remaining non-jew-central-bank countries are also not jew tools, and any idealogy that jews hate that isn't also helping the jews somehow.