Bill McBride,
How you view MY comments, i.e. right-wing, lectures, pointing out the errors of your ways, etc. I assume that you know precisely how you view yours.
Don Hyslop,
Way different times, different circumstances. We were once a large country sparsely populated. We also had a society that was self-reliant and loathe to ask not to say anything about demanding from others.
Having said all this, I can understand the argument for relatively open borders and I am certainly sympathetic for doing what we can constructively to help others become productive, regardless of their national origin. For the most part, I think this country takes no back seat to any other in these regards.
Jim Kennedy,
"The arguments you and Lou are using against bringing pay up to the same standards we enjoyed in the U.S. in the not too distant past are stale and old hat, but they are easy to use. No offense."
No offense taken, but you're mistaken. The position of taking someone else's money on the pretext that it is needed to cure societal problems is by far an easier one. That most income statistics show that there's been real income growth at ALL levels doesn't support the often repeated argument that the working poor are losing ground. Couple that with a lowered if not outright eliminated federal income tax burden and increases in transfer payments, and there are few countries where the poor live better. We don't have some 20 million illegals here, most of them poor, because the U.S. is a hellhole.