US to target more businesses after Hyundai raid

52 DocFeind 109 9/7/2025, 4:49:14 PM reuters.com ↗

Comments (109)

neither_color · 6h ago
One thing missing from the public debate and I havent seen any writers I follow bring up:

When US companies first started outsourcing their factories to Korea, China, and other countries, they were doing the exact same thing. They were just flying engineers over on business and tourist visas to jump start factories and train the workers. Typically only long term workers bothered getting bona fide employee visas abroad.

Open any Steve Jobs biography. "Jobs told me to fly to China tonight and deal with the problem"

You think he got a Chinese work visa in one day?

This is hubris-driven rule by law. As Americans we can't fathom a foreign company knowing something we don't. The shoe is on the other foot now. Foreign conglomerates have knowledge and processes and expertise that we dont have. There's literally no pragmatic way for Hyundai to get 300 employees here on short notice. They moved fast and broke things. They did what they thought they had to do to survive in a kafkaesque system.

pfannkuchen · 5h ago
I don’t really understand this way of thinking. If someone from USA breaks a law at some point, that doesn’t prevent USA from enforcing a similar law in the future. Not everything is universalist - the interests of the parties are at odds here, and restricting oneself to behaving in a universalist fashion (as a nation) when nobody else does that will just put you at a disadvantage.

On the Jobs example - do you expect the US government to enforce Chinese law there? Does Jobs violating Chinese law affect what laws the USA can enforce decades later? This makes no sense.

jltsiren · 5h ago
Most laws are little more than temporary opinions. If a law doesn't give you the outcome you wanted, you can always change it. Or you can choose to not enforce it when it would be against your interests.

I believe the point is that it's often impossible to build a factory without sending your experts on site to supervise it. And sometimes you need to send people on a short notice, if something unexpected happens or if the people assigned to that site are not available. Then the people will go in with whatever visas are available on such a short notice, hoping that it's not in the destination country's interests to stop them.

This is fundamentally not about immigration or laws but whether you want to make your country an attractive place to invest in.

Guvante · 5h ago
There is a difference between enforcing the law (you can't bring workers here on a tourist visa) and raiding a factory putting everyone into jail.

For the purposes of "was it a reasonable action" yes it is important to understand how the US has acted in the past.

crooked-v · 4h ago
In this case for at least some of those people there was no visa and no visa needed. South Koreans can make trips for business purposes to the US without any extra paperwork as long as it's under 90 days.

It's true that what counts as 'business' and not 'work' has always been an ambiguous line, but given that the arrestees include executives who generally haven't been historically subject to this kind of treatment, I'm sure the lawyers could make a very good argument in their favor.

Guvante · 3h ago
I am not trying to defend the actions on legal grounds.

I was merely using a steelman argument to attack the actions taken as inappropriate regardless of legality.

pfannkuchen · 2h ago
I don’t have a strong opinion on the actions taken, I’m commenting specifically on the argument I was replying to. I see that hypocrisy critique in a lot of forms and I just don’t get it.
ivewonyoung · 1h ago
> raiding a factory putting everyone into jail

Source for everyone being put in jail?

kevin_thibedeau · 5h ago
I practice a niche physical activity with <1000 practitioners in North America. It is all volunteer based and nobody makes money off of it. Seminars are distributed across US and Canada with instructor level people routinely crossing the border. If you tell the border guards on either side that you're teaching, you get immediately deported.
deepfriedchokes · 3h ago
What’s the activity?
Zigurd · 5h ago
I have a passport with Chinese visas in it. After standing in line for a few hours to get one myself, I used Visa expediters. A business visa might take a week plus the time and effort to create a letter from the business being visited that explains the purpose of the visit. The visa should be good for several months, at least. The example of Steve Jobs telling someone to get there in a day shows lack of preparedness. It was also a more chaotic, less computerized, and therefore somewhat more lax environment back in the day.
neither_color · 5h ago
It sounds like China facilitates foreign direct investment by making it faster and easier for foreign companies to set up factories and fly in talent to train local workers.

If I were in a Thucidian power struggle and trying to re-shore industry and all the new manufacturing processes developed abroad in the past 40 years I would consider making it easier for allies who want to invest in the US to do the same.

No comments yet

FirmwareBurner · 5h ago
>You think he got a Chinese work visa in one day?

Have you ever considered even for a second, that maybe just maybe, he had a long term visa valid several months and got to China the next day without breaking the law? Especially for an employee in his position who had to travel to China often as part of his job?

They check your passport and visa on arrival. He most likely had a long term visa on his passport that allowed him to go to China at will. You can't just fly into China without a valid visa same how you can't fly to the US or Europe without a valid visa. I also have a 10 year visa for travel to US on my passport, so yes, I can just travel there on a whim same how Apple's industrialization engineers most likely do for China, Vietnam, India or wherever they need to travel.

What's with this trend on HN of making up fictional strawmen excuses for breaking the law in the US, painting brakers as innocent victims who had no way of doing things legally, and US law enforcement as Nazis who get off on going after innocent people trying to get by? Not only that, hypocritical shit like this also gets upvoted to the top. You can't tell me with a straight face anymore that HN community judges such such cases honestly and objectively and isn't politically charged and ideologically captured despite pretending to be otherwise.

neither_color · 5h ago
Who said anything about excusing crime? At least dozens of valid visa holders were caught in the dragnet, some appear to have been in a gray area as to what they were allowed to do(the "strawman" in question), and some were truly sub-sub contracted illegals. The latter could have been apprehended without all the spectacle, and the grey area could've been dealt with tactfully without offending our ally, like, "hey you're only allowed to attend stakeholder meetings and not actually touch anything. Consider this your warning".

I'm less sympathetic to "the law is the law" because of the historical context of what's happening.

FirmwareBurner · 5h ago
>Who said anything about excusing crime?

The person I was replying to. Did we read the same comment? His argument was that the US is wrong to deport Hyundai workers here without legal visas since in his mind, an Apple worker from the story in the book he read, also didn't have legal visa to travel to China on a whim, even though his argument is 100% bogus since the Apple worker most definitely have a visa for that, and even so, two wrongs don't make a right.

>I'm less sympathetic to "the law is the law" because of the historical context of what's happening.

Careful with such arguments that apply selective enforcement based on the political climate you sympathize with(or not), as others will apply the same judgment to you when you'll get caught and they'll be in power.

Guvante · 5h ago
Please don't pretend that asking to leave the country is the same thing as detaining.

Using deport to reference throwing people in jail is deceptive at best.

ivewonyoung · 4h ago
They're just about to fly home free as we speak.

https://nypost.com/2025/09/07/us-news/south-korea-and-us-rea...

Guvante · 3h ago
Ah yes because we didn't illegally detain them long term my point that detaining people is different then asking them to leave us bogus.

Again I repeat detaining people is not the same thing as asking them to leave and pretending it is helps no one but those who want to be ignorant.

ivewonyoung · 1h ago
Source for the detainment being illegal?
crooked-v · 4h ago
After 'negotiations' by South Korea, which, going by the historical pattern, almost certainly means Trump holding those people hostage while demanding incoherent concessions from the South Korean government.
neither_color · 4h ago
Ok I see where the confusion was. The point of comparison was not somebody with no visa at all going to China.

An early 2000s US employee with a valid multi-entry business visa (i.e type M), flying to China on short notice and doing hands on work that goes beyond simple meetings is what is directly comparable to what happened to some Koreans on B1s in Georgia.

If the goal is to encourage more investment in the US for the purposes of developing industry here, then I believe the way this law was enforced was not tactful and dissuades other investments. If allies feel they are forced to do this(and not just wantonly breaking the law just because) then perhaps it's a sign that we're not doing enough to facilitate these investments.

If they come down too hard on Hyundai it doesnt guarantee this factory will go to 100% Americans, there may not even be a factory!

zzzeek · 5h ago
> [paraphrased] What's with this trend on HN ...painting US law enforcement as Nazis who get off on going after innocent people trying to get by?

it's in the newspaper. A lot of us read it

FirmwareBurner · 4h ago
Can you also process and think critically what you read in the papers?
mcphage · 1h ago
> Can you also process and think critically what you read in the papers?

Can you?

jleyank · 6h ago
If they really want to address illegals they should penalize the companies that use them rather than individual workers. Hell, they might be working with companies to stage deport theatre and then looking away when they restock. Like they argue with drugs, remove the demand and the problem will decrease.
jibe · 6h ago
"US to target more businesses" - they are!
A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 · 6h ago
I think what parent is referring to is the simple fact that the management making the decisions to hire illegal immigrants are rarely ( as in effectively never ) brought on any kind of charges despite it being ostensibly against the law. What we end up with a system, where companies get highly malleable ( and replaceable ) workforce afraid to raise a complaint and zero consequences for people making the actual decisions.

edit: A cynic would argue that the system is in place is working exactly as designed.

Guvante · 5h ago
What specific action did the US government take against Hyundai here?

Or did they just gut their workforce and claim that was "enough of a penalty".

Historically the US has implicitly condoned these illegal actions by employers by refusing to ever take action against them.

There has only ever been action taken against employees, who sometimes aren't even meaningfully informed that they are breaking the law. (Certainly they often know but the employer always knows)

ivewonyoung · 4h ago
> What specific action did the US government take against Hyundai here?

There are levels of plausible deniability that need to be pierced for actions to stand up in a court of law. Hyundai has already claimed these workers were not employees and were subcontractors or sub-subcontractors. Just the negative press and pressure from the SK govt may do a lot in the future for Korean carmakers to try and do better checking on workers working in their factories.

Guvante · 3h ago
And how is that different from previous situations?

I responded to someone claiming a difference in action was taken.

You responded with "well that is hard" as if to reclassify action to include previous actions.

ivewonyoung · 1h ago
The previous situation being that such raids didn't happen, at least not on this scale. So Hyundai had zero pressure to change anything, not even bad publicity or interruption to car production via 400 workers being detained.
jandrese · 5h ago
To be clear those business won’t be punished except for having to find more workers.
JKCalhoun · 6h ago
Curious to see what comes home to roost. I mean when, for example, you clear out the agriculture workers of the U.S. without any thought as to how or what you are going to do to replace them, well, expect higher grocery prices I guess?
sugarpimpdorsey · 6h ago
> I mean when, for example, you clear out the agriculture workers of the U.S. without any thought as to how or what you are going to do to replace them, well, expect higher grocery prices I guess

Most ag workers are here on... ag work visas. There are processes in place to facilitate this seasonal work.

"No more strawberries/lettuce/etc when you kick out all the illegals!" has been a rallying cry on lefty social media for the last few years and it... hasn't happened?

Turns out assuming all the brown farm workers are here illegally is not only extremely racist but fundamentally a misunderstanding of how the system works.

It's even more puzzling that people are cheering on the false premise of keeping people here in the shadow of the law as indentured servants so they can save 10 cents on tomatoes at the market.

SR2Z · 6h ago
It hasn't happened because no President has been stupid enough to deport them en-masse. Even the current guy has admitted that he won't focus on agriculture workers because it would be bad for business.

Nobody is hiring illegal workers to save 10¢. They are getting paid significantly less than minimum wage.

Symbiote · 5h ago
> It hasn't happened because no President has been stupid enough to deport them en-masse.

Britain enters the room...

Short-term farm labourers like fruit pickers weren't deported as such after Brexit (I think), and they were earning roughly double the minimum wage, but the jobs were seasonal so many workers spent the winter in their home countries.

After Brexit:

> A shortage of farm workers created by Brexit led to 8,000 tonnes of berries going unpicked last year.

The EU citizens have been replaced by labourers (with the appropriate visas etc) from Asia, but the wages have gone up and the costs of travel.

(I don't know how this affected fruit/vegetable prices. There were other causes of inflation at the same time.)

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/aug/14/why-uk-farms... (NB 2022.)

FirmwareBurner · 5h ago
>They are getting paid significantly less than minimum wage.

Which is bad for everyone except business owners who vacuum up all the profits from exploiting below minimum wage labor, and then socialize the cost of taxless under the table work of illegals to the state and by extension to the taxpayer.

hamdingers · 5h ago
> "No more strawberries/lettuce/etc when you kick out all the illegals!" has been a rallying cry on lefty social media for the last few years and it... hasn't happened?

Why would it have happened? "All the illegals" have not been kicked out, so what are you basing this statement on?

Bad faith framing.

crooked-v · 5h ago
It's already happening, and is part of the reason food prices are going up right now: https://www.newsweek.com/ice-immigration-raids-farms-crops-r...
sugarpimpdorsey · 5h ago
And yet I go to the market every week and the shelves are stocked so full they have to throw out or donate the produce that starts to go bad.

That article puts forth the tired trope that "crops are rotting in the fields". If that was true or so extensive as they portray, the shelves would be empty, not simply more expensive. They're not.

mcphage · 1h ago
> If that was true or so extensive as they portray, the shelves would be empty, not simply more expensive. They're not.

When chickens were being culled because of the bird flu, the supply of eggs dropped significantly. Prices of eggs also rose significantly. As a result, shelves were often full of eggs that were priced so high that they weren’t being bought as often. Production dropped, prices rose, demand dropped, surplus remained fairly constant.

AlecSchueler · 4h ago
> a rallying cry on lefty social media for the last few years

Have you noticed anything different between this year and the last few years?

senordevnyc · 6h ago
According to the USDA, around 40% are undocumented: https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/chart-gallery/chart-d...

That seems like enough to have a measurable impact on food prices if they stop showing up?

To be clear, not arguing for or against enforcement, just pointing out that the data seems to suggest this as a factor to be taken into consideration.

ivan_gammel · 5h ago
If I understand the case with Hyundai correctly, the problem is not that people work without proper visas, but the interpretation of visa terms by ICE, which means that if they are to meet deportation KPIs, this may impact those who are working legally. The only racist angle to that will be if ICE is using racial profiling to pick the targets (for non-American it’s actually quite uncomfortable to see racism popping out of nowhere in many conversations, just like in your comment; we know that the unscientific and harmful concept of race is somehow important to Americans, but why are you always paying so much attention to it?). Why the only? Because ag workers in many countries are foreigners on ag visas, it is common, it is about cheap labor, labor code violations and sometimes human trafficking, and it has nothing to do with race, just with economic situation in workforce donor countries.
kevin_thibedeau · 5h ago
Anna Sorokin abused visa waivers to live and work in the US illegally for years. Somehow she still hasn't been deported despite being a felon and has even been frog marched to the airport where she was bizarrely allowed to refuse deportation. Nobody at ICE is apparently checking for that form of abuse.
exabrial · 6h ago
It's probably not your intention, but I greatly dislike this argument, as it's similar ones were made to justify previous inhumane practices that were legal before the conclusion of the US Civil war.

If manual labor is required for agriculture, let the market absorb the real cost and pay the workers the correct wage instead of exploiting them.

ben_w · 5h ago
Comparative advantage.

Consider this vague hypothetical, because I'm not American and don't care about the specifics:

Country A, average wage X; country B, minimum wage for legal residents 2X. People from A can on average get a pay rise by working in B while undercutting legal residents of B. Citizens of B then get the stuff cheaper than they otherwise would have, but also might not be as easy to employ.

Are current employment stats accurate? As in do they tell the right picture or is this a case of "lies, damn lies, and statistics"? Lots of people say it's the later, and unfortunately I'm not qualified to explore anyone's arguments.

knowitnone2 · 5h ago
no company is telling on themselves saying "We hire illegal immigrants to harvest our crops and paying them below minimum wage"
ben_w · 4h ago
Course not. Even just the first half, "We hire illegal immigrants", isn't that directly a crime itself?
exabrial · 1h ago
This is blatantly untrue unfortunately.
JKCalhoun · 5h ago
I suppose that's fine if that is your solution. It's easy for me to say "things should probably cost more" because I can afford it.

If I'm allowed to fret a bit for my fellow countrymen, I confess I am saddened that they will have to decide between food or rent in the coming months/years. When my single mom raised my sister and I she had to make that same choice at times.

Zigurd · 5h ago
The process can be orderly. I live in a town with a couple of commercial orchardist, and they get their apples picked by workers on temporary work visas every year for decades now. These commercial orchards are apparently economically viable, even though they are smaller than a typical commercial orchard in Washington state, for example.

As with tariffs, I can imagine this situation being less orderly or predictable now. But I've seen both theory and practice work as intended.

MadnessASAP · 5h ago
A countries agricultural base being dependent on undocumented migrant workers is bad and should be corrected. However simply deporting all the migrants overnight with no further action doesn't fix the underlying problem, doesn't help the industry, and doesn't help the consumers.

All things being equal, people will generally choose to follow the law. So figure out why the migrants and their employers are choosing not to follow the law and fix that.

rdm_blackhole · 5h ago
You could do like Australia, offer a working-holiday visa with the possibility to renew it for up to 3 years on the condition that you spend a certain amount of time working on a farm/ in rural area.

Loads of people do it in Australia and it helps tremendously. It's not perfect for sure, but it's something.

estimator7292 · 6h ago
Ah, but you see the thing is here in the land of the free, we consider this type of thinking to be "Communism" and must be purged without any further thought.
shrubble · 6h ago
This argument (which I’ve heard many times before) is easily refuted by looking at YouTube videos for “commercial xxx harvesting” where xxx is the vegetable or fruit in question.

For instance the carrot harvester that can harvest tons of carrots each hour: you could pay the driver $126k per year and the carrot price per pound would not even move 2 pennies at retail.

crooked-v · 5h ago
There's plenty of food that can't be harvested by machine yet, and probably won't be anytime in the near future.
sugarpimpdorsey · 5h ago
All the big brains in Silicon Valley can invent a bl*wj*b machine that is sync'd to a cloud-connected VR headset but can't build a machine to pick apples or tomatoes efficiently?

Perhaps our priorities as a society are misplaced.

JKCalhoun · 5h ago
Add strawberries and beans.
knowitnone2 · 5h ago
you make it sound so easy - why haven't you built it?
mcphage · 1h ago
> Perhaps our priorities as a society are misplaced.

It’s also a lot harder. Blowjobs are comparatively simple, even with cloud-connected VR headsets.

busterarm · 5h ago
Not everything can be harvested with big machines. Pretty much all tree fruits, asparagus, peppers, etc are harvested by hand. If you want blueberries or strawberries that look nice enough to be sold to consumers whole, those are hand-harvested every time.
shrubble · 5h ago
There are some things that are harvested by hand; even in those cases, you can watch a typical process and determine the small labor component.

Asparagus for example is harvested in less than 20 seconds per bunch. Even at $50/hour that is a cost of less than 30 cents per bunch; which sells for how much in the store?

1000s of workers harvest over 9 billion pounds of apples every year-again the labor component is smaller than you’d think.

busterarm · 5h ago
Oh I agree with you. I'm not saying the labor component is necessarily expensive, I'm just stating the obvious that for many crops they are still human labor intensive.

Asparagus harvesting may be fast, but you have to do it every day. You have to keep people employed throughout the entire season. There isn't just a few-week harvesting period.

You can't just mechanize everything.

allannienhuis · 5h ago
That last statement isn’t true. I know people with a blueberry farm that machine processes (with extra human qa step) blueberries packaged for retail sale.
busterarm · 5h ago
You can do some casual searching and find that I'm right about this in most cases. If your prices are high enough you can tolerate a lot of waste, but for most farms the economics favor hand harvesting. We're talking about at least 20% waste when you're machine-harvesting and even then a significant amount of what ships to retail has internal bruising.

Maybe that farm is selling in an area where consumers are less choosey? I certainly prefer hand-harvested blueberries (and can tell the difference)...

Certainly machine harvesting is an increasing share of the market, but it is still predominantly hand-harvested.

hilsdev · 6h ago
The labor cost of food is near the bottom of the price factors.
AngryData · 5h ago
Yeah but you still need people to do it and paying a bit better is not going to get an immediate response of many tens of thousands of workers to quit their jobs to do seasonal and migratory work across multiple states living out of vans and campers with no insurance and increased workload and injury rate. Many crops are just going to rot, output will be lower, and prices will still rise. At some point years down the line sure things might improve and settle out and more US people can fill a larger number of those roles, but it will not happen quickly, especially not for token wage increases, and will likely never gain the workforce numbers that migratory farm workers offer who travel not just across the US but also throughout Central and South America. A US citizen is never going to work in Mexico or Brazil during off seasons for US crops because it basically represents a net-zero or negative wage converting it back into US currency to come live back here.

Ive done farm and trade work my whole life, physical work is not a problem, but even if you doubled the pay for picking tomatoes and other fruits and lettuces, I would not consider for a second joining that workforce even if I was otherwise homeless. Im not even sure being a row crop farmer that doesn't even need extra labor is worth the effort. Farms are getting the least and smallest margins by far for food production out of anybody in the food logistics supply line and there is no potential windfall for workers and no career path to work up from picking fruits.

Would I like people picking fruit to earn more money and have stables lives and not have to migrate across the country living in vans? Of course, 100%. But without a huge overhaul of our economic priorities and policies towards worker rights and wages, which is the exact opposite direction from where we have been heading the last 60+ years, none of that is going to change regardless of what prices people are willing to pay for food. The base of the agricultural market of farms and the workers directly harvesting food is and has been running on thinner margins than pretty much any other industry in existence. A 2% return on a farmer's seed and fuel and fertilizer inputs is considered a great success.

hilsdev · 3h ago
We can quadruple the farm worker day rate and it would not significantly impact consumer prices. The floor price of unskilled labor is mostly a function of its market value. Increasing the labor pool via immigration decreases the value of the labor.

I too would like to see farm laborers have more comfortable lives

AngryData · 1h ago
I believe it will effect prices far more than you think it would, or likely should, because all the middlemen between farm and the person actually eating it are not going to just accept lower margins themselves if prices rise, and they some might even demand higher margins on food because they know it is in short supply and there won't be enough available for new competitors to jump in and try to undercut them. The redistributor, the processor, the packager, and the retailer side are not going to accept flat profits with lower margin percentages when they have a supply during an overall shortage of those same goods.

If farm laborer wages just went up and nothing else changed, it would probably be fine. If wages could stay the same but there was a small decrease in productivity from less experienced workers filling in, it would probably be fine too. But if the lack of workers is what is causing both production shortages and sharp labor cost increases at the same time, the only people with any power to wield in this situation are the large corporate middlemen who hold tons of supply contracts with legally binding guarantees for product and an entire logistical network developed over decades to transport and sell these goods that can't just be spun up in a few weeks by other people.

bostik · 6h ago
If UK's experience is anything to go by: the fraction of produce left in the fields to rot, unpicked, will go WAY up.

Labour cost is one thing, total useful production volume is another.

margalabargala · 6h ago
Directly yes but there are knock on effects. What you say is true only when labor is not scarce.

The consequences of having insufficient labor is a large price factor. If you can only harvest 30% of your crop and the rest rots in the field because there's no one to pick it, that is outsized.

hilsdev · 3h ago
If you paid a lot more there would be more people to pick it
margalabargala · 2h ago
True!

And then the labor cost of food would no longer be near the bottom of the price factors.

sillywalk · 5h ago
The US Secretary of Agriculture suggested Medicaid recipients and automation. I doubt that'll work.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jul/09/trump-agricu...

crooked-v · 5h ago
Don't forget RFK wanting to round up addicts for 'wellness farms'.
ben_w · 6h ago
My undersanding is that Biden's admin estimated 10-11 million undocumented migrants in the USA, and that these migrants represent a critical percentage of some agricultural roles.

It wouldn't simply be higher prices, it would be shortages.

I think there's about 50m or so documented migrants, but as many of the targets at Hyundai were documented but apparently wrong somehow, the USA may find its economy and workforce suffering catastrophic reductions in this term of office, even just from people asking "should I leave on my own terms or risk being thrown out?"

No comments yet

bill_joy_fanboy · 5h ago
I told this exact argument to a supporter of deportation policies, and they responded with this:

"I don't care about higher grocery prices. I don't care about economic efficiency. I just want them gone."

I don't believe you understand their value system.

EDIT: In particular, an appeal to economic prosperity will not win an argument with someone who isn't basing their decisions on economics.

busterarm · 5h ago
Not picking any particular dog in this fight, but the western labor market also has become very adversarial.

I knew a guy whose family had a tree nursery in Texas and they stopped hiring citizens and eventually white people outside of blood relatives completely. They tried for quite a long time, including raising prices, long training periods and safety equipment purchases, etc.

Eventually after several dozen people "accidentally" shear off a tiny piece of their pinky to seek a Workers Compensation claim only weeks into the job trying to claim permanent disability, you either stop putting yourself at risk or you go out of business.

They even won most of the cases, largely because they would usually catch these dummies on camera doing it intentionally, but the legal defense itself is still quite expensive and draining...

kevin_thibedeau · 5h ago
The citizenry has to plan for a future in their home economy. That make labor intensive minimum wage jobs a bad option if you need to hold two jobs to get ahead. Migrants can tough it out for a few annual trips and return with more savings than they could generate at home.
busterarm · 4h ago
I'm confused. Is this an attempt at justifying scamming employers for a long-term no-work payday?

Like, because the economy is so fucked it's okay to fuck over anyone who has the nerve to have a business that generates employment opportunities?

Maybe it's more accurate that labor and the value of labor are a product of culture.

rdm_blackhole · 5h ago
So you are saying that you are ok with people smugglers making a buck while encouraging foreign citizens to break the law just so we don't have to find solutions for this sort of problem?

It's the same story everywhere in Europe. When people say they want less migrants or illegal people in their country, the-pro immigration parties come out and ask the same sort of questions: who is going to care for the elderly, clean the toilets, take care of the kids, pick up the rubbish and so on?

As if, the only purpose of these migrants was to to do all the shit jobs nobody else wants to do. If it wasn't so vile and despicable, it would be laughable.

Here is a tip, if you want more people to do bad/hard jobs then the solution is not to encourage illegal immigration so that these people can be exploited, it is to raise the wage of these jobs so that people would actually consider doing them in the first place.

iammjm · 6h ago
targeting integrated, working and tax-paying citizens, truly a big brain MAGA move
hilsdev · 6h ago
If an American citizen had gotten the same job, they would be paying the same taxes
whatshisface · 6h ago
No, they would be paying lower net taxes. US citizens are eligible for government services.
hilsdev · 5h ago
Where I live, even the undeniably "illegal" are eligible for government services
knowitnone2 · 5h ago
where I live, illegals get government services whether they pay taxes or not. Welcome to socialism
knivets · 4h ago
Somehow this article is no longer on the first page[0] (or even second) of hn even though it has more upvotes (and is newer) than other articles with less upvotes (or older ones). Is HN hiding politically controversial articles?

[0] https://imgur.com/a/e7EplV6

Bender · 4h ago
They fall off the main page when people start flagging. If enough people flag it will instead be [flagged]. For a period of time it can get vouched if [flagged] and then [flagged][dead].
zaktoo2 · 6h ago
Literally Idiocracy
techpineapple · 6h ago
I would say this is good to see on principle, but I assume which businesses they target will be decided through corruption and not data.
crooked-v · 5h ago
The South Korean nationals that ICE arrested were already allowed to enter the country without a visa (for trips under 90 days) and perform business activities (such as overseeing construction and factory layout planning). That's not even targeting based on corruption, it's just trying to fill quotas without giving a shit about the rest of the country.
tootie · 6h ago
That presumes that this kind of enforcement is a net positive and I'm pretty convinced it isn't. The distinction between legal and illegal immigration is essentially arbitrary. Illegal immigration is not a crime of morality, it's basically one of economics. The legal framework theoretically is designed to produce an optimal outcome for the health and wealth of the nation and presently it is not doing that at all. We can and should welcome far more people than we do. Deporting people who are not violent and contributing to the economy because they have incorrect paperwork isn't a win for anyone but politicians and racists.
A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 · 5h ago
<< The distinction between legal and illegal immigration is essentially arbitrary.

Most lines are. It is a line we agreed on as a society. Just for a quick comparison, 21 is a legal drinking age in US ( going after less incendiary example just to prove a point ). But, and here is my subtle point, either those are real lines or there are not. If they are real, they should be enforced and if they are not, they should be nulled.

<< We can and should welcome far more people than we do.

Before I offer a reflexive response, I think it is worth to task a simple question:

why?

<< Deporting people who are not violent and contributing to the economy because they have incorrect paperwork isn't a win for anyone but politicians and racists.

That is amusingly neat way oh framing it, but if it only it was that simple. I want to argue against this framework, but not before you give me an idea about how you justify the why in previous section. I struggle to understand this particular perspective.

crooked-v · 5h ago
> why?

Because without immigration, the population of the US will objectively shrink over time, and that's bad for both the country in the abstract and the personal welfare of the average middle class person as they reach old age.

A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 · 5h ago
Interesting, you do think the local populace is not capable of breeding? If so, can you point to the why? I might be leading you a little, but I promise only a little.
crooked-v · 4h ago
The US has a fertility rate of 1.6 (https://apnews.com/article/fertility-rate-us-low-cdc-replace...), i.e., 1.6 kids per 2 parents. Better social services and social safety nets would likely increase this some, but it would still probably be under 2, since that's the general trend for wealthy countries.
A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 · 4h ago
Interesting way to sidestep the answer, because I did not ask you what the current rate is. I asked you why you think the existing population cannot breed.

If it is social services and social safety net, then why the same does not apply to the immigrant population ( legal or illegal )? Again, I know what I am thinking, but you have to give me a little more so that I model your world perspective a little more clearly.

crooked-v · 4h ago
I'm not going to bother with dealing with the leading questions crap. The factual argument is already laid out; engage with it or go away.
A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 · 3h ago
Hmm. No. The questions seem leading to you, because your framework is faulty and built on shifting sands. You are unable and/or unwilling to discuss it as it would expose either lack of consideration of other points of view, inability or -- worse -- unwillingness to engage in basic thought experiment. I don't really care which, but if either of the above is true, I am not the one who does not belong on this forum. So either engage in good faith, or you go away.

edit: swear to god, kids these days and their 'no u'

tootie · 3h ago
Most crimes are not arbitrary. Anything that causes or risks injury or loss of property make up that vast majority of crimes. Drinking age or driving age are proxies for public safety. Those lines are already fuzzy and breaching them is not a major offense.

We haven't had a serious discussion about actual immigration policy for a while and a lot of agreed upon rules are being tossed out. Trump's enforcement includes summary dissolution of refugee status, summary revocation of visas and green cards, arrests at court houses and a general disregard for due process. There is a big headline strategic objective of fighting crime and the current enforcement is not even pretending that this is a serious goal.

A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 · 3h ago
Thank you for being a voice of reason. Zero disagreement on the need to have that discussion. I am certainly not, lets say ecstatic, about how the current environment shapes up. Unfortunately for me, I don't have the capacity to influence it in any serious way. I am basically a spectator.
pessimizer · 6h ago
> Illegal immigration is not a crime of morality, it's basically one of economics.

Then why do you immediately shift into questions of moral judgement, and your moral judgement of how "welcoming" people should be? This politics is garbled.

New immigrants lower the leverage of domestic workers, and the leverage of previous immigrants, by intention. The myth that they move on to become mandarins that are too good for those jobs comes from people who never had to work those jobs. Black people didn't move anywhere except to even worse, less secure work.

I watched a South filled with black servants serving everyone's food and doing all the hard work, turned into a South filled with black people who have $0 worth outside of the equity in their cars, and all of that (horrible shit-)work being completely closed to them because they didn't speak a foreign language.

At the same time, especially in the north, I watched tons of terrible jobs filled by the barely English speaking Indian "relatives" of the people who opened franchises, and who kick back half of their checks to these "uncles", another quarter of that check goes back in remittances, and they get to live like kefala Emerati slaves.

It is dystopic to consider this the compassionate choice. It's purely a matter of trend following when the people who profit from this stuff also do the media work to set the trends. The "left" were against all of this in the 90s as a central principle.

Cesar Chavez gave speeches about the "wetbacks" being brought in to undercut striking workers. As a Black person born in Chicago, I was part of the Great Migration that was brought in to undercut European immigrants who were fighting for their labor rights. It doesn't make me "bad," or my family "bad." The accusation that people who object to it are demonizing immigrants is an intentional distortion and a marketing strategy for consistent hypercapitalist laissez-faire politics.

I miss when "liberals" didn't have Reagan's policies. But they're a natural consequence of their having become extraordinarily wealthy from them.

tootie · 2h ago
You're reading way too much into the word "welcome". I don't mean we should be more polite, just more intentional.

Data says immigration is generally good for the economy but certainly within some parameters. I don't think any data says immigrants hurt black Americans but please cite something besides your personal observation. It does seem pretty specious to blame the least powerful people in society for the downfall of the next least powerful and not the massive wealth concentration at the top. The fact that immigration is being demonized by the same crew who want to ban discussion of racism or diversity is not a coincidence.

1oooqooq · 5h ago
can't wait for them to hit some oil drilling sites. /s
exabrial · 6h ago
Whats [additionally] infuriating for me is all of this is funded by my tax bill. Both Hyundai taking massive federal incentives, and the subsequent arrests.

I just think of the money wasn't collected/handed out to them in the first place we wouldn't be in this situation.

jondwillis · 6h ago
Yeah if only we didn’t have taxes, surely we would all be driving our Cybertruck 2s on beautiful, well-maintained privately owned roads by now.
A4ET8a8uTh0_v2 · 6h ago
There are real benefits to power staying with the people and not faceless ( or in this case, as it were, facefull ) government. I get that people discuss this in extremes, but surely there is some middle ground between NJ level craziness and, say, taxless utopia.
knowitnone2 · 5h ago
you fail to understand basic economics. states AND countries provide tax breaks to lure in businesses with certain agreements. In the long term, this provides jobs, training, benefits local economy, income taxes, raises property values, increases property taxes, etc.

And your tax contribution to would be %.0001. There are MANY things about the government to be infuriated at but this isn't one of them.