Hola y como estan (Hi and how are you). It's a new year and already it's been far too cold in the Midwest. It makes me yearn to use my stock Spanish phrase in Mexico City, Acapulco, Belize-anywhere south of the border, close to the equator.
Hola y como estan (Hi and how are you). It's a new year and already it's been far too cold in the Midwest. It makes me yearn to use my stock Spanish phrase in Mexico City, Acapulco, Belize-anywhere south of the border, close to the equator. Many of your workers hail from Central America and couldn't be more happy to be up here, away from the heat, hanging board and finishing in the northern hemisphere. And making much more cash than they could back home.
Across America, there is great debate on the immigration work force. Many resent the ease those from other countries have in finding work-particularly in the trades-feeling that foreigners dip into the U.S. labor pool. It's a valid concern, as in several states there are reports that immigrant workers are undercutting jobs for Americans and upsetting the economic balance. Here in Michigan, Congresswoman Candice Miller is claiming that state seats are being lost because of the discrepancy between the last census vs. the actual head count, with many immigrants not being accounted for. As a result, the state has lost representatives who have been redistributed to other states. Her major point being: Why do illegal immigrants have the same rights as U.S. citizens?