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Springfield is Emblematic of America's Immigration Death ...
Let's be clear about what's going on here: Corporations are maximizing their profits while the government is socializing the costs at the taxpayers' expense.

The city's residents needed someone to believe in them. Between 1970 and the early 2000s, Springfield's population had declined by over 30,000. The Greater Springfield area had suffered a 27 percent drop in median income. For a city and region devastated by manufacturing jobs offshored to Mexico and Asia, this was exciting news.
But today, a new threat is endangering the livelihood of Springfield's citizens: Employers are actively displacing the domestic workforce by hiring newly-arrived immigrants from Haiti. All this at a time when 7 million American men between the ages of 25 and 55 are unemployed, and almost three quarters of the U.S.'s employment growth has come from immigrants since 2019.
And not everyone is embarrassed to admit it.
"I wish I had 30 more [he currently employs 30 Haitian workers," CEO Jamie McGregor of Springfield-based McGregor Metal, explained it this way during his PBS News Hour interview. "Our Haitian associates come to work every day. They don't have a drug problem. They'll stay at their machine; they'll achieve their numbers. They're here to work. And so, in general, that's a stark difference from what we're used to in our community."
How did Springfield get here? Simple: Mass immigration and chain migration during the Biden administration, as a direct result of Biden's immigration policy.
What's particularly vexing is the U.S. government is funneling taxpayer money to non-governmental organizations (NGOs) who help resettle these immigrants and assist them in applying for welfare in the form of food stamps, Medicaid, and housing.
Coming from a country where the hourly wage is around 60 cents, any Haitian would be ecstatic about working in Ohio and earning a minimum wage of $10.45 an hour. Sadly, American workers can't compete for the jobs they're taking at those wages or survive at the resulting lower standards of living.
Samuel Gompers, father of the American labor movement and founder of what's known today as the AFL-CIO Union understood all too well the conundrum of a "rapidly revolving labor supply at low wages to a regular supply of American wage earners at fair wages." Companies like McGregor's are thriving on "labor supply at low wages," knowing full well the Haitians they've hired won't ever complain about their pay nor attempt to unionize.
Let's be clear about what's going on here: Corporations are maximizing their profits while the government is socializing the costs at the taxpayers' expense.