Wow
Think about the people that got them to you.
i can't believe the uproar that fox caused when he said that.
He just framed it really stupidly. What he was saying is true, no one wants these jobs. But by saying "even blacks" he was saying that the blacks were the lowest group.
Whatever.
Either way, that work is ing HARD. I remember Summers in California with family members in the fields. I would just wander around looking for animals and eating strawberries while the rest of my family picked away.
I once had one of those horns they sell at parades, and the running joke became that I was in charge of warning them if I saw "La Migra" by blowing it. Never once did have any problems with Border Patrol, though.
At least there it wasn't very hot. I can't imagine doing this work in 100 degree heat and not passing out.
I saw something pretty wild about 25 years ago...the landowner near Carizzo Springs had rootplowed and cleared about 20 acres of brush in the fall...plowed it to catch the winter rains, and then planted cantaloupes in the spring...it was a dry spring and the rats came to raid the cantaloupes and the rattlesnakes followed them...thousands of them...every morning before starting the harvest the pickers wearing rubber boots and carrying machetes would line up and walk the field from end to end killing the rattlesnakes before they started so they could pick...definitely no place for lightweights...
too funny about the horn!
my cousin picked cotton for a couple days.. he came back black and never did it again.
regardless, many lower income americans don't even want the dishwashing jobs, much less these jobs.
The way fox put it was kinda dumb but it was very true... I understand wantign to stop terrorists or convicted criminals from entering our country.. but I hate how hard they crack down on migrant workers and the like.
Man, what if my family had never got here? wher ewould I have been born? or my husbands family for that matter.. they left Mexico as political enemies back in the day, heck if the border gaurd had been able to stop Popo Vlademero from coming over her he would've been shot dead... I wouldn;t have a husband.
But do they get to keep the rattlesnales they kill? That would be a perk!
dude, roasted rattlesnake taste righteous.![]()
They really don't crack down on these guys. But, thats a problem on its own because it leaves open a way for terrorists to get into this country.
I'd rather they find a way to do ent these people and allow them to come over and do what they need to do.
Manny...you shock me sometimes.
That is SUCH a common sense REPUBLICAN solution...Bush was pilloried by the democrats for saying the same thing...
I'm not a democrat, but here is what both sides are doing at the moment:
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/nation/3200259
They both have guest worker programs, but the main difference is that the McCain/Kennedy plan gives them priority when apply for green cards.
The next time I eat a raw onion, I will think of this story and my eyes will water......
It wasn't that long ago that most of Texas:
1.) Didn't have A/C
2.) Labored agriculturally.
Everyone should have a job doing farm labor. I know a lot of people that it lit a fire under. You'd be surprized how motivated a person is to get an education knowing what alternative is in store for them.
And the next time you eat an onion (or any agricultural product) that doesn't cost $2.50 a piece, think of the guys who not only picked it, but also who busted their ass to make the payments on the land and equipment required to grow it. And don't get too far from the roots of Texas, they're part of what makes Texas different from every other state.
good post.
I grew up working on a ranch dawn till dark a lot of weekends...moving irrigation pipe, working cattle, building/repairing fences etc...people that have never done it don't have any idea just how much work it is...
If you put onions in the refrigerator, your eyes won't water as much when you cut an onion.
Stainless steel helps revmove the smell of onion from your hands.
Love,
Heloise
Here Here!!!
I spent many a day picking rocks out of fields.... "walking beans", cleaning out the pig ... the worst was bailing hay though.... that really sucked.
It's funny... I remember my first job. Started working at 14 in this little leaky garage for a convenience store, sorting recycleables. Sort cans and bottles, glass and plastic, by beer or soda company, put them all in separate sacks or boxes, haul them in and out of the garage. Did that until I was 18. Good hard physical work (and stinky and sticky as ). My spoiled brat classmates always said to me, "God, I don't know how you do that," and I always told them, "Hey, be happy you're not a migrant worker!" If only they knew!
My husband bailed hay before and after school and most every weekend till dark.... it definatly motivated him to stay in school and take advantage of the (crappy) oppurtunity's offered.. like the VICA program.. he ended being president for the whole state of Texas.
But man.. that ty farmers tan he picked up is still on him 8years later.
my first real "paycheck" was when I was fourteen...I worked a pigeon shoot out at national gun club...They don't have them anymore because of the animal rights activists...I should have kept that pay stub...144 hours in one week...up at two in the morning wading ankle/knee deep through pigeon in the coops catching pigeons in the dark with a flashlight...stocking the pigeons at the arena...then loading concessions, icing beer etc...then loading skeet ranges and pulling skeet till dark, then cleaning up, picking up trash, picking up fire ant covered dead pigeons, sweeping/cleaning the stands and then crashing in a sleeping bag about midnight...I remember getting that first paycheck and remembering being pissed when I saw how much they held out in taxes...![]()
"Who the is OASDI and why are they taking all my money!"
We irrigated about 200 acres of coastal when I was a kid and got 5-6 cuttings a year...from about 11-12 on I vividly remember working with the hired hands loading the hay on the trailer in the field by hand and then stocking it in the barn...they got a nickel a bale and I didn't get paid...The bales weighed as much as I did (about 85#) and had grassburs in them...I was a real mess by the end of the day...![]()
Definitely hard work! I worked for 3 summers helping my grandparents working in the fields. From 4 am till 9 pm, it was very tough work, but I think it helped me become who I am today. I don't feel sorry for the people who work at McDonalds at all, they have it good, but they just don't know it. I clearly remember one summer of busting my balls and at the end of the summer all I wanted were the new pair of DRobs new shoes (the ones that you could pump on the side by the ankle), but they costed $150. I went ahead and bought them and my dad freaked out!! At the time I was working to buy my school clothes and the rest of the money I would just give to my parents (10-12 grade of highschool). But I clearly remember my dad having a fit about the $150 dollar shoes that I had to have. I was like, look, I busted my ass all summer long from 4 in the morning to 9 at night and all I want is a good pair of shoes, but he still didn't see it my way. I was like it, I deserve these shoes, and they went on to last me for a couple of years, so it was definately a good investment.
Good Stories.
I remember an article by Baxter Black once; it included an "Agricultural Survivability Test". One of the questions was:
I became involved in agriculture because:
A. I inherited a large estate and the joy of being connected to the land from my esteemed grandfather.
B. My daddy chained me to a tractor when I was 10.
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