¡Hola, América! How the Minimum-Wage Institutionalized Illegal-Worker Immigration.
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About this ebook
American citizens have been convinced through notions of charity and empathy to unlawfully allow alien trespassers into their country, and also to make the lowest wages in the Private Sector illegal. Inadvertently, it leaves an employment void that continually draws those illegal-worker aliens into an “underground” market of humanity.
As the Minimum Wage is raised, more of the low-paying jobs go Black Market, or disappear. With the illicit-drug cartels operating by our Southern border, and the threat of terrorism, the old system of unlawful frugal labor with its associated open border over land, a system that was mostly peaceful though corrupt, has now become treacherous.
Minimum Wage laws may have advantages, but create an artificial employment void that attracts and is filled by illegal-worker aliens.
John Wesley DeVilbiss, Ph.D.
John Wesley DeVilbiss is fully bilingual (English-Spanish), and bi-cultural. Academically, he is trained as a geologist (B.S. with honors, University of Arizona), a geophysicist (Ph.D., Stanford University), and in database programming – one modern tool of the empirical scientist. He reads & writes on subjects that touch on the Scientific Method and on the easy application of Mathematics to everyday life. By the way, these sciences are grounded on philosophy and are otherwise separate from Metaphysics. If we (all) could learn or remember that, it would make for a more peaceful, more interesting world.Widely read on Philosophy of Science, Art, and cultural topics, Dr. JWD has an interest in contemporary socioeconomic issues trending towards a new balance. All economic issues are social, therefore the use of the label: socioeconomic, rather than the fiscal vs. social issues dichotomy of modern day politics.
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¡Hola, América! How the Minimum-Wage Institutionalized Illegal-Worker Immigration. - John Wesley DeVilbiss, Ph.D.
¡Hola, América!
Felonies & immorality pay,
at least temporarily.
But if institutionalized,
honorable, and wide-ranging they become.
We get to live in that world...
Reading time: 45 minutes to 1 hour
ISBN: 9781311056504
Copyright 2015 John Wesley DeVilbiss
Published by John Wesley DeVilbiss at Smashwords
Smashwords Edition License Notes
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your enjoyment only, then please return to Smashwords.com or your favorite retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
Dispelling a modern myth
(don’t take my word for it)
Most non-economists:
believe that minimum wage laws protect workers from exploitation by employers and reduce poverty.
Most economists:
believe that minimum wage laws cause unnecessary hardship for the very people they are supposed to help.
The reason is simple:
although minimum wage laws can set wages, they cannot guarantee jobs. *
__________________
* Linda Gorman, Minimum Wages
, The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics
http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/MinimumWages.html
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Prologue
Chapter One - Trespassing Aliens & Minimum-Wage Laws
A great conundrum
Jobs in America
Empathy within government
Chapter Two - Don’t blame the charitable U.S.A. citizen
Chapter Three - Poverty levels in the source nations
A matter of degree
Chapter Four - Inalienable rights (for all)
Characteristics of illegal-immigration in the U.S. of A.
Chapter Five - The Minimum-Wage employment void
Minimum Wage laws give a false impression
Chapter Six - Solving the illegal-immigration problem
Strategy, in summary
About John Wesley DeVilbiss
Connect with Dr. DeVilbiss
Acknowledgements
My wife, as women generally are, is very intuitive. She has resisted my writing process. By doing that, it has forced me to be more self-critical, and to be willing to stand alone. Anyone can write, but very few can write what they won’t later regret publishing. I’m sure she could think of other things she would rather like me to be doing. This book is made possible, thanks to her patience.
My mother has provided the moral support for this task. One of the most difficult aspects of writing is to find the proper platform to publish, and with that comes the proper audience. But I was immediately enchanted seeing there are