Thursday, July 10, 2025

America Will Be Better Off, And More Self-Reliant, Without Illegal Immigrant Labor: Not relying on illegal immigrant labor means we have to learn to take care of ourselves, much as Americans have for most of our history; Democratic Rep. Balint Says We Need Migrants to 'wipe our asses'

Carl Tronders/Unsplash
America Will Be Better Off, And More Self-Reliant, Without Illegal Immigrant Labor:
Not relying on illegal immigrant labor means we have to learn to take care of ourselves, much as Americans have for most of our history.
Quite a few Americans are worried about the effect of President Trump’s immigration policy on our nation’s economy. “A significant portion of our industry relies on immigrant labor[.] … When there are sudden crackdowns or raids, it slows timelines, drives up costs, and makes it harder to plan ahead,” a former Democrat congressman and building executive told The Washington Post last week. “[F]ewer immigrants could take a hit to the economy, prompting labor shortages and slowing economic growth,” a USA Today op-ed warned earlier this month.
Whether or not that’s true, it’s obvious that a dramatic decline in illegal immigrant labor — something that as yet has not happened — would affect many Americans’ lives and pocketbooks. But is that necessarily a bad thing? Perhaps becoming less reliant on illegal labor would make Americans more self-reliant, more engaged with their communities, and even happier and more fulfilled.
How Illegal Immigration Affects Middle-Class Suburban Lifestyles
In Northern Virginia, where I live and grew up, there are thousands of illegal immigrants. A 2019 study estimated that statewide, a quarter of a million residents are illegal. As evidenced by their daily lounging around Home Depot, Lowe’s, and various gas stations, many of them seek employment as day laborers for contractors or in construction, though many others work in agriculture, landscaping, restaurant work, or domestic services. Undoubtedly, illegal immigrants influence the price of how much Virginians spend on various home repairs or maintenance, and even food, given that they work for sub-market wages.
Of course, the same can be said in cities and communities across the country. Some estimate more than 18 million illegal immigrants in the United States today, depressing wages for lower-income native-born Americans by as much as 7 percent, and, as a recent Federalist article described, running many American-run businesses into the ground. Yet that is a hidden social and economic cost for urban and suburban elites who’ve come to depend on that labor to support a lifestyle they’ve come to expect as normal, perhaps even their right.
A Typical Weekend in Northern Virginia
This was made abundantly clear to me on a recent Saturday morning in Virginia. After an early breakfast, my oldest son and I got to work on the yard. A good part of an oak tree had come down during a recent storm, so my son dragged branches off the lawn and sawed them into pieces for firewood for the winter. I started mowing, which takes about two and a half hours with a push mower (it’s great exercise). While we worked, neighbors casually walked by in pajamas or yoga pants with their dogs. Others jogged by, wearing the latest athletic wear and hydration packs, presumably training for their next half-marathon.
By the time we finished the yard, it was time for a hurried lunch and then to take my son to baseball practice, where, once again, parents in designer athletic wear lounged on bleachers, sipping coffees and talking about the latest concerts they attended and their summer vacation plans. I, in turn, ran off to the hardware store to purchase what I needed for the next home improvement project. After that was more shuttling of kids to and from weekend activities, directing them to do their chores while my wife cooked dinner, and then getting them to bed. --->READ MORE HERE
Democratic Rep. Balint says we need migrants to 'wipe our asses' in cringey town hall:
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