March 29, 2004
Mexico Sends A Message Even Big Business Can
Understand
By Sam Francis
After decades of hiring illegal aliens and lobbying
against any and all restrictions on immigration, Big
Business is about to find out the
real costs of the Open Borders it has
subsidized.
In California, the Washington Times reported
last week, thousands of Mexicans who have worked for
some of the state's and the nation's largest supermarket
chains are joining in a class action suit against their
employers.
They also have the aid of the Mexican government. [Mexico
urges immigrants to join class-action suit,
By Jerry Seper, March 22, 2004]
The grounds of the
suit, brought by the Mexican-American Legal Defense
and Education Fund (MALDEF), one of the
most radical Open Borders lobby groups, are that the
supermarkets have discriminated against the workers
"because they were employed as independent contractors."
The claim is that the supermarket chains since 1994
or so have fraudulently hired workers—mainly for menial
jobs like cleaning floors—as
independent contractors and thereby "reaped
millions of dollars in annual
labor costs savings" by paying less than minimum
wages, avoiding
paying benefits costs and forcing workers to work
seven days a week.
Well, what else would you expect? What, after all, is
the point of hiring illegal aliens if you can't exploit
them in ways that you can't exploit Americans?
Whether the companies are guilty or not is not really
of much interest. What's interesting is first of all El
Grande Pollo that is finally coming home to roost on the
hefty bank accounts of the supermarkets.
The suit's plaintiffs—700 so far—are seeking what
attorneys say is "millions of dollars" in
compensation for back wages, overtime and benefits for
the nine-year period covered by the claims as well as
forfeiture of "all profits acquired by means of any
unfair business practices."
Of course, if the suit succeeds, it will set a
precedent for similar court actions against
meat packers, food processors,
agribusiness, the hotel and
restaurant industry,
construction firms and any other businesses that for
years have wallowed in the cheap labor that Americans
supposedly won't do.
The other point of interest in the case is the
involvement of the Mexican government—in a lawsuit
brought in American courts on behalf of all those
"new Americans" of whom the Open Borders gang is so
fond, as long as they shut up,
get to work and don't bring lawsuits.
The "new Americans," of course, are not
necessarily Americans at all, and many—probably most—are
illegal aliens. The judge in the case has ruled that the
workers' immigration status at the time of their
employment is not relevant to whether they were fairly
compensated. Hence, millions may be eligible to join.
The
Mexican consulate in San Diego, the Times reports,
held a news conference last week to
urge workers to join the suit. "This lawsuit is
important," pronounced Mexican Consul General Luis
Cabrera Cuaron [Email
the consulate] at
the news conference, "because it involves large
numbers of our nationals and because it insists that
their rights be respected, regardless of their legal
status."
It's also important because through its open
involvement in the case the Mexican government is
officially siding with the workers against
American businesses.
And what the
Mexican government is thereby announcing is that the
Mexicans involved in the suit don't need to look to the
American government for help. The U.S. government is not
their
real government any more than the United States is
their real country.
Mexico is their real country, regardless of whether
they're here legally or not. And the government in
Mexico City is their
real government.
The message is in part to the thousands of Mexicans
who are or might become part of the suit, but it's also
in part a message to the U.S. government that the
"new Americans"—over whom
President Bush, most
Republicans, all
Democrats, Big Business and the heavy-lifters in the
Open Borders Literary and Cogitation Society have long
gushed—are not Americans at all.
The message tells us what critics of mass immigration
have tried to explain for years, that when you have
millions of people coming from one country to another,
you do not have an addition to the receiving country.
You have an
invasion by the sending country.
For decades the Mexican government has
encouraged massive emigration, using its own
population and our weakness and greed to conquer a
good part of our country, and has firmly denounced
and resisted any effort by us to control immigration.
Americans, including the president, may not yet get
this message, though some signs suggest that many are
starting to.
But after the Mexican government sends it a few more
times and helps bankrupt the businesses that have served
as the
best allies of Mexico's re-conquest of their own
nation, the message will be received and understood.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
[Sam Francis [email
him] is a nationally syndicated columnist. A selection
of his columns,
America Extinguished: Mass Immigration And The
Disintegration Of American Culture, is now available
from
Americans For Immigration Control.
Click here
for Sam Francis' website. Click
here to order his monograph,
Ethnopolitics: Immigration, Race, and the American
Political Future and
here for
Glynn Custred's review.]