I thought the law was a pretty decent compromise.
Can someone like Ramo answer me this though? Why is favoring skills something the left dislikes? Shouldnt the left be concerned about income distribution here, and helping poor and working class US citizens more than upper middle class US citizens? Doesnt allowing in unskilled folks, and keeping out skilled workers and professionals, hurt the weakest elements in our society? Wouldnt it be more progressive to keep out the unskilled, and therefore attempt to raise unskilled wages, but let in the skilled, esp in those fields in most demand? Mickey Kaus at Slate is the only one I know forcefully making this argument.
Is it that unskilled Americans are less organized/unionized than skilled workers? Is it the netroots folks with their class base among angry techies?
Can someone like Ramo answer me this though? Why is favoring skills something the left dislikes? Shouldnt the left be concerned about income distribution here, and helping poor and working class US citizens more than upper middle class US citizens? Doesnt allowing in unskilled folks, and keeping out skilled workers and professionals, hurt the weakest elements in our society? Wouldnt it be more progressive to keep out the unskilled, and therefore attempt to raise unskilled wages, but let in the skilled, esp in those fields in most demand? Mickey Kaus at Slate is the only one I know forcefully making this argument.
Is it that unskilled Americans are less organized/unionized than skilled workers? Is it the netroots folks with their class base among angry techies?
Comment