Who's gonna milk them cows?

In another devastating blow to the U.S.'s agricultural sector, the mass deportation of cheap labor are leaving farmers with no one to work their farms.
DUH!
And once again we're talking about mostly red state voters. Voters who voted against their own interests (obviously) without thinking it all through to the final conclusion.
Hopefully they'll be ready to make better choices the next time they go to vote.

According to the United States Department of Agriculture, “In 2020–22, 32 percent of crop farmworkers were U.S. born, 7 percent were immigrants who had obtained U.S. citizenship, 19 percent were other authorized immigrants (primarily permanent residents or green-card holders), and the remaining 42 percent held no work authorization.” Any farm owner who voted for Trump’s mass deportation regime was voting against their own business interests (to say nothing of putting their now plummeting and critical soybean sales to China in the middle of his trade war), and if they didn’t know that, then my cold-hearted finance brain has little sympathy for people who have proven to not understand the business they have been trusted to manage. I took a whole class in school about what happens to managers like this.

"People don’t understand that if we don’t get more labor, our cows don’t get milked and our crops don’t get picked,” said Tim Wood, a dairy farmer and a member of the Pennsylvania Farm Bureau board of directors. Yes, and a lot of those people who oversee that labor voted to expel it from the country, and are now upset that they have to deal with the repercussions of their actions. I have long been told what is happening now is the fairness of the market punishing inefficient operations. In fact, I was told that it’s a good thing to get new managers into these operations so they can be run more efficiently and create more economic growth for the rest of us.


Politico notes that “The U.S. agricultural workforce fell by 155,000 — about 7 percent — between March and July, according to an analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data.” There are countless stories about immigrants being terrified and not showing up to work across the country because of Trump and ICE’s vast kidnapping operation, and the BLS data and recent Dallas Fed Surveys backs up what logic tells us. If people who owned businesses wholly dependent on undocumented labor supported a man telling them he will deport every undocumented person in the United States, what else should they expect for their businesses other than the mounting desperation that is unfolding right now?


Farmers can hire as many people as they need to harvest their produce

But they will have to pay them more than slave wages under the table
 
Yep. Start paying workers fairly. Competitive labor wages need to not be considered. Milk prices need to tise.
I assume there's tax connected to wages. Lefties cry that not enough tax is being paid and national debt is going up. Then they cry that illegals are being deported. But farmers pay crap wages to avoid/reduce the tax burden by employing illegals 🤔
 
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They need a bunch of illegals to do that?

GTFO
Argue with the farmers because they are the ones stating that the loss of all their labor is a problem.
Do you think they are just making this up?
 
Argue with the farmers because they are the ones stating that the loss of all their labor is a problem.
Do you think they are just making this up?
Can you tell me who exactly is complaining?

Greg
 
15th post
Piss off troll! Try reading something next time before you try to discuss it.
Try educating yourself before you opine on something you know nothing about!
Dumbass!
 
Try educating yourself before you opine on something you know nothing about!
Dumbass!
"People don’t understand that if we don’t get more labor, our cows don’t get milked and our crops don’t get picked,” said Tim Wood, a dairy farmer and a member of the Pennsylvania Farm Bureau board of directors.
 
In another devastating blow to the U.S.'s agricultural sector, the mass deportation of cheap labor are leaving farmers with no one to work their farms.
DUH!
And once again we're talking about mostly red state voters. Voters who voted against their own interests (obviously) without thinking it all through to the final conclusion.
Hopefully they'll be ready to make better choices the next time they go to vote.

According to the United States Department of Agriculture, “In 2020–22, 32 percent of crop farmworkers were U.S. born, 7 percent were immigrants who had obtained U.S. citizenship, 19 percent were other authorized immigrants (primarily permanent residents or green-card holders), and the remaining 42 percent held no work authorization.” Any farm owner who voted for Trump’s mass deportation regime was voting against their own business interests (to say nothing of putting their now plummeting and critical soybean sales to China in the middle of his trade war), and if they didn’t know that, then my cold-hearted finance brain has little sympathy for people who have proven to not understand the business they have been trusted to manage. I took a whole class in school about what happens to managers like this.

"People don’t understand that if we don’t get more labor, our cows don’t get milked and our crops don’t get picked,” said Tim Wood, a dairy farmer and a member of the Pennsylvania Farm Bureau board of directors. Yes, and a lot of those people who oversee that labor voted to expel it from the country, and are now upset that they have to deal with the repercussions of their actions. I have long been told what is happening now is the fairness of the market punishing inefficient operations. In fact, I was told that it’s a good thing to get new managers into these operations so they can be run more efficiently and create more economic growth for the rest of us.


Politico notes that “The U.S. agricultural workforce fell by 155,000 — about 7 percent — between March and July, according to an analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data.” There are countless stories about immigrants being terrified and not showing up to work across the country because of Trump and ICE’s vast kidnapping operation, and the BLS data and recent Dallas Fed Surveys backs up what logic tells us. If people who owned businesses wholly dependent on undocumented labor supported a man telling them he will deport every undocumented person in the United States, what else should they expect for their businesses other than the mounting desperation that is unfolding right now?


It’s not overly complicated, just hire locals pay them a decent wage.
 
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