Oh COME ON man. Being conned about what then? If they are not suing about jobs promised, what are they suing for? Being conned on where they were going to wind up when the journey ended?!? The opportunity is the same everywhere! What does it matter where they wind up! And by the way, they are ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS! They have no fucking constitutional rights here! Has the whole world gone fucking crazy?!?
Being conned.Leaving where they were to travel across multiple state lines based on promises De Satan knew were a lie.
I must be missing a piece of the puzzle here, because I heard a blurb on some channel here in the Boston area that legal immigrants, who went through the system, are mad that these "illegals" got into the country without going through the work they did to become legal immigrants/citizens.
I can comment on it, because I live here, and it has been on the news for a week. It is all we're hearing about every damned day. There are nuances you do not know about.
A civil lawsuit is a private matter, the government would not be representing plaintiffs in a civil matter. The lawyers are most likely working on contingency fees and only get paid if they win out of an award but unless there is more info here I dont see how U.S. taxpayers are paying for a private class action filed by private individuals.
Yes,you certainly are. https://www.masslive.com/news/2022/...he-us-this-and-other-questions-explained.html
Small scale family farms could not compete with US subsidized Big Ag. They worked their own land and were forced from generational ancestral land. "In the first decade of NAFTA, U.S. corn exports to Mexico quadrupled while Mexican corn prices fell 66%, according to Tufts University professor Tim A. Wise, a trade expert. The U.S. is the world's number one producer and exporter of corn - and Mexico is its number one export market." https://cronkite.asu.edu/projects/b...-empty-basket-for-farmers-in-southern-mexico/ During the social unrest of the late '60's early 70's, weed was popular and mostly produced in Mexico. Those trade routes eventually shifted to move cocaine during the disco era of the 70's. It had a higher margin, reduced bulk and much much more profitable. It also was the source of violence with organized crime taking over the trade. Recently meth production which was largely controlled through restrictions on ephedra discovered a new route for synthesis. It uses the industrial precursor of MDP2P which is used quite extensively in industry due to it's usefulness in a variety of chemical processes. This is much more difficult to restrict and has been the source of the recent Meth epidemic. The thing about this particular process is that the resulting product can form two different isomers and the resultant "high" has different psychological effects. The metaphor is that it creates zombies; emotionally vacuous shells of what was once a human being. Social workers have reported that it's almost impossible to make a connection to those addicted and thus get them on a better path. Clandestine Meth production is also highly profitable and violent industry. Those willing to give up the only home that they have ever known and make the arduous choice to leave a violent and unstable environment are deserving of compassion not hate and spite. Mexicans as an ethnic group are some of the hardest working, resourceful people I know. While there are those that are criminals and have subscribed to gang life, that's not the overwhelming majority of those seeking asylum.