Immigrants come here because globalization took their jobs back there

January 2008

THE WAILING IN OUR COUNTRY ABOUT the "invasion of immigrants" has been long and loud. As one complainant put it, "Few of their children in the country learn English...The signs in our streets have inscriptions in both languages...Unless the stream of the importation could be turned they will soon so outnumber us that all the advantages we have will not be able to preserve our language, and even our government will become precarious."

Immigrants come here because globalization took their jobs back there

That's not some diatribe from one of today's Republican presidential candidates. It's the anxious cry of none other than Ben Franklin, deploring the wave of Germans pouring into the colony of Pennsylvania in the 1750s. Thus, anti-immigrant eruptions are older than the U.S. itself, and they've flared up periodically throughout our history, targeting the Irish, French, Italians, Chinese, and others. Even George W's current project to wall off our border is not a new bit of nuttiness--around the time of the nation's founding, John Jay, who later became the first chief justice of the Supreme Court, proposed "a wall of brass around the country for the exclusion of Catholics."

Luckily for the development and enrichment of our country, these past public frenzies ultimately failed to exclude the teeming masses, and those uproars now appear through the telescope of time to have been some combination of ridiculous panic, political demagoguery, and xenophobic ugliness. Still, this does not mean that the public's anxiety and simmering anger about today's massive influx of Mexicans coming illegally across our 2,000-mile shared border is illegitimate. However, most of what the politicians and pundits are saying about it is illegitimate. [ read more ]

VIDEO: Gifts for a happier new year

Cowboy hat By Jim Hightower - Wed., 12/19/07
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Wait till you hear about the gifts I gave to some of America's power elites for Christmas. Do you want to put this video on your site or... [read more]

VIDEO: Voting with your dollars

Cowboy hat By Jim Hightower - Mon., 12/17/07
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Here's how you can say "no" to sweatshop labor and help support the American economy this holiday season.

Do you want to put this video on your site or... [read more]

VIDEO: Lobbyists go shopping

Cowboy hat By Jim Hightower - Thu., 12/13/07
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The most determined shoppers of all this season are corporate lobbyists, scurrying from agency to agency in Washington in search of special favors for themselves. Do you want... [read more]

VIDEO: Voting with your dollars

Cowboy hat By Jim Hightower - Tue., 11/27/07
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Here's how you can say "no" to sweatshop labor and help support the American economy this holiday season. Do you want to put this video on your site or blog?... [read more]

MAKING "THE LIST"

Cowboy hat By Jim Hightower - Mon., 10/29/07
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Do we riff-raff know how hard life is for the richyrich--the billionaire class? Its members have got half a dozen luxurious houses around the world, servants galore, private jets and helicopters, their own chef...but what if they don't make "it"?

The... [read more]

RUDY, MITT, AND FRED IN FANTASIA

Cowboy hat By Jim Hightower - Mon., 10/29/07
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(Watch the video of this commentary here!)

Gosh, I want to go to GOPland. What a wonderful place it is: sunny skies every day, bluebirds of happiness everywhere, and an always-booming economy that's spreading wealth to everyone!

At least that's the... [read more]

VIDEO: The wonderland of Rudy, Mitt & Fred

Cowboy hat By Jim Hightower - Tue., 10/23/07
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What world do these Republican candidates live in? Certainly not the one you and I do! Do you want to put this video on your site or blog? You can... [read more]

OUR GAPING ECONOMIC DIVIDE

Cowboy hat By Jim Hightower - Mon., 10/8/07
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According to faireconomy.org, which analyzes CEO pay, perks, and pensions, in 2006 the chieftains of Fortune 500 corporations averaged $10.8 million each in pay--more than 364 times the annual paychecks of the average U.S. worker! On top of this,... [read more]

AN EXCLUSIVE PRIMARY

Cowboy hat By Jim Hightower - Mon., 10/8/07
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The top presidential candidates of both political parties are meeting with voters in a key primary, promising to help them on the issues they care about.

Are they in Iowa? No. New Hampshire? Uh-uh. California? Nowhere near it. So, where?

Wall Street.

While... [read more]

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