At Least Senator Hagel is with the Right Crowd

January 17, 2007

 Sen. Chuck Hagel, a Republican, joined a group of liberal Democrats in proposing a resolution objecting to President Bush’s change of strategy and tactics in Iraq. Quoted below from Yahoo! News, Mr. Hagel acknowledges that he doesn’t really want the Administration to win in Iraq - not in those words, but he admits that,

I will do everything I can to stop the president’s policy as he outlined it Wednesday night,” said Sen. Chuck Hagel (news, bio, voting record), a Nebraska Republican and potential 2008 presidential candidate, who joined Democrats at a press conference on the resolution

Source: Senators agree on Iraq war resolution - Yahoo! News

That will be something to be proud of later on. “What did you do in the war against the Islamo-fascist terrorists, Grandpa? ” I did everything I could to stop the President’s policies.”

Where’s Organized Labor on the Immigration Issue

See-Dubya, guest posting at Michelle Malkin’s blog, posts about the results of an immigration raid on a factory in Georgia" 

Now here’s a fair and thorough look at the aftermath of a federal immigration raid at a chicken-processing plant in Georgia that sent hundreds illegal workers packing. The plant, Crider, was forced to hire Georgians–many of them black, and many from off the welfare rolls:

…for local African-Americans, the dramatic appearance of federal agents presented an unexpected opportunity. Crider suddenly raised pay at the plant. An advertisement in the weekly Forest-Blade newspaper blared "Increased Wages" at Crider, starting at $7 to $9 an hour — more than a dollar above what the company had paid many immigrant workers. The company began offering free transportation from nearby towns and free rooms in a company-owned dormitory near to the plant. For the first time in years, local officials say, Crider aggressively sought workers from the area’s state-funded employment office — a key avenue for low-skilled workers to find jobs. Of 400 candidates sent to Crider — most of them black — the plant hired about 200.

Interestingly, there was a lot of friction between these new workers and the Crider management. Two sides to the story, I suppose, but it seems to me that Crider was disappointed to work with actual employees who could demand their rights and speak up and who expect an ice pack when they get injured on the job. It’s much easier when your processing plant is staffed by powerless, compliant drones who you can threaten to send back to Mexico and who therefore dare not organize or even gripe.

 You would think that Organized Labor, which has lost membership over the past decades, would be all over this issue from the US workers’ point of view. They should be pushing for stricter control of the borders and stiff penalties against companies that hire illegal aliens. Those companies are taking jobs away from legitimate US citizens who are looking for a job at a decent wage. Why are the Unions so silent?

Come to think of it, why aren’t civil rights organizations howling over the impact of illegal aliens on minority unemployment? That seems like another perfect fit issue. 

 

 

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