American policy makes extremely hard for university educated persons to work in the U.S. in their profession while turning a blind eye to illerate hispanic workers doing manual labor. Yet the federal, state, and local governments all strive to increase the education system so as to promote the competitiveness of the U.S., the state, the city in the global economy. If low skilled, low pay illegal workers are good for the economy, then why should school systems try to decrease drop outs and spend so much money on education?
2006-12-15
08:18:34
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13 answers
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asked by
mazdaseven
2