Lon
Well-known Member
- Location
- Central California
This makes complete sense to me as a way to pay for the wall. Some of that money is Federal Benefit money anyway, it's not all from wages.
This makes complete sense to me as a way to pay for the wall. Some of that money is Federal Benefit money anyway, it's not all from wages.
Robusta and Lon,
I have a question for you both. What about the legal immigrants who enter the country legally and pay thousands of dollars to immigration to obtain their green card and citizenship?
what about the ones who worked all their lives and sold their homes and assets back home in their country so as to make a life with their new american husbands and or wives? just like the Americans who move and migrate overseas and marry oversease?
Lon, lets take you for eg, should new zealand have charged you 20 percent on the sale of your house over there because you took the money out of new zealand? don't be a hypocrite if it's ok for you and you've done it then why is it not ok for others? like i said before for corporate business sure i don't have a problem but for the avarage person then no.
Well, there are education and healthcare benefits. And, of course, their children born here are a source of benefit income to the parents.
The "education benefits" you talk about are not dollars and cents. It's sending your kids to a school here. You can't wire that back home.
There are no healthcare benefits, except that the child born here would get what's available to everyone else; can't sent that home, either.
The CHILD, if born here, can apply for food stamps, etc, and whatever else is available, because he is a US citizen if born here. If not, no. The benefits would be for the child. Anyway, food stamp type benefits are a pittance, anyway.
I don't know where everybody gets this idea that illegal immigrants come here and get all this government welfare -- it just isn't so. Now, if we bring in refugees, that's a whole different colored horse -- they would get stipends, housing help and other bennies I'm not sure about.
so you mean to say if a person came from australia and sold their home over there and then moved to the US and brought a home here, then say in 15 or 20 years decided to sell everything and move back home to their country with the money that they originally made over there then it's just bad luck because they brought it into the us and then are wanting to take it back home with them? sorry but in instances such as this i do not agree with you. For large businesses and corporations of course but not the normal everyday person.
No-- I am thinking more of wage income earned here in the US and some of it being sent out to aid family in another country.
I have taken $$$ from sale of properties back and forth from New Zealand to California. In addition to the monetary exchange rate affecting the net proceeds I paid what ever taxes each country required by each country on the sale of property.
I was commenting on benefits not "send home" money. Education costs certainly are dollars and cents. Healthcare benefits - of course they are available. A person can not be asked their status at the ER. Food stamps - pittance or not they are an expense brought about by people illegally in the country.
In my area the ag interests use itinerate labor almost year round. Usually crews of 15 or so folks. They are housed by the farmers in while not luxurious perfectly adequate quarters. Mostly single men with one or two married couples. They spend almost nothing in the community. They bring in most of their provisions from one of the warehouse stores. The local economy sells a tank of gas, and possibly a few incidentals from the Dollar store.
Our 7 county area has a Board Of Cooperative Education,,that runs a school and transportation system just for their children. We need an additional county nurse to attend to their health needs and housing inspections. There are probably 30 farmers that are benefitting from the rest of us subsidizing their labor.
14% of my county is below poverty level. the median income is under 50,000.
While certainly not getting rich,these laborers make well over minimum wage. Almost none of this money lingers past payday when there is a line at the store wire window. all of it heading south. This money is gone, they may spend a few dollars in the local economy,but in no way outweighing their cost.
We are an impoverished area, and frankly could do without the burden.
I am talking about the thousands of people in the US,some legal and some not, that are working and send some of their earnings to family living abroad. I would like to see those funds taxed. Difference in currency exchange rates will impact the net proceeds received.
So you don't believe that a man has the right to do what he wants with wages he earns legally, and which have already been taxed by income tax? I bought a foreign car -- should that be counted as sending income overseas?? If someone wants to send money to their aging mother in Scotland or somewhere, would that be illegal? What about birthday and Christmas presents??
As to the illegal immigrants, it's illegal for them to work here anyway, so the employers of those persons should be prosecuted.