Hey Mexicans!

For decades, both U.S. political parties have maintained an open or porous U.S.-Mexico border. Republicans supported this due to their big business allies’ preference for cheap labor, which suppressed wages. Democrats assumed, incorrectly, that migrants’ U.S.-born children would reliably vote Democratic. Although illegal immigrants violated the law, enforcement was lax. Now, millions who were implicitly encouraged to enter are abruptly being treated as if they were terrorists who infiltrated the country.

12 Comments. Leave new

  • Re “millions who were implicitly encouraged to enter”: in which “implicitly encouraged” means continuous, murderous meddling in the affairs of the home countries of those millions of Central and South Americans – from horrendous trade “deals” like NAFTA to the frank, brutal regime change in Chile, engineered by Nobel Peace Prize Winner, Henry “the teflon genocidal monster” Kissinger … (a worse pick for that high honor than even Obumma?!?)

  • The same people who want to keep both legal and illegal immigration to an absolute minimum also want us to make more babies because our population isn’t growing fast enough.

  • alex_the_tired
    June 16, 2025 8:09 AM

    I’ve noticed that once someone becomes rich, whether they identify as a Republican who doesn’t want to pay taxes or as a democrat who doesn’t want to pay taxes, they frequently become extremely outraged at any attempt to take money from them. “Ten cents extra for a slice of cheese on my burger? That’s what wrong with this country. Here I am, barely getting by on $160,000 a year, and I have to pay for things that cost more. I should actually be given the cheese for free.”

    The border “crisis” could be solved in 10 minutes if it was actually politically expedient to do so.

    • alex_the_tired
      June 16, 2025 11:45 PM

      Re: The cheese.

      The cheese was a metaphor. (Or perhaps a camembert.) But, seriously, I have lost track of the number of conversations where someone (liberal or conservative) making a very good salary objects bitterly to pittances. The same thing occurs with (usually) women who have been taken care of their whole life by fathers or husbands or their wealth. They aren’t even working for a living, but, oh my, they are cheap. Not when spending on themselves, but whenever reality deviates from their sense that gasoline should be 11 cents a gallon and the lazy clerk at the supermarket is being unreasonable to “demand” $16.50 an hour.

      When I used to wait tables, sometimes, one of the customers — I’m sorry, the guests — would ask “Can I get a dollop of whipped cream on that?” I would explain that because the whipped cream was made by hand — not just sprayed out of a can, but actually poured into a bowl and then whipped to a cream — you couldn’t get just a dollop, you had to get a whole side because there’s a minimum amount of cream needed to make whipped cream and that cost $3, they’d practically recoil. I’d then get a lecture about how unreasonable this was. These were the same people who, almost invariably, tipped 15% or less.

      “Hot breakfast program so that these kids aren’t starving in class and can pay attention? Look, commie, I already pay through my eyes in property taxes. Maybe these kids could find after-school jobs or deliver newspapers before the start of the day. Yeah. That’s it. Get a paper route. Lots of kids have those now. I paid for college by saving my tips from my paper route and had enough for a starter home. You gotta stop with this welfare state. …”

      Are there rich people who stop in, have some pie and a cup of coffee and leave a $20? Sure. But my experience — waiting tables and working in the “real” world where every raise was described by the person/corporation grudgingly giving it as “generous” even though it only occasionally kept up with inflation — is that most people, even those making a lot more than they need to survive, cling to every last single nickel of it, crying poormouth all the day long.

      • Oh the cheese was a metaphor, thanks there Aristotle I hadn’t picked up on that. Sorry about the whipped cream thing, I bet that was a tough situation

  • The top 1% who don’t want to pay for their cheese are barely getting by on about $500,000 per year (or more).

  • OK, look, we are really too focused on cheese here. Also, I haven’t made 500k in a year, though I did come close for a few years. Close enough to make it useful to say that I was completely unbothered if I had to pay ten cents for a slice of cheese

    Happy I can provide this outside perspective to the beatnik regulars here at rall.com. Keep hitting those bongos my dudes

  • Oh! And for Alex’s benefit, I definitely DO make north of 160k / year .. that’s been the case for years. Still never been bothered by cheese

  • I get so down about the world reading Ted Rall and these comments. It’s like nothing has ever been good and it can’t ever be good unless the whole of society is torn apart.

    • Reality can be depressing. But the truth is essential if we really want to escape this reality.

      • It’s all depressing and hopeless. There isn’t anything good and never can be. Giving up completely is the only solution. If you’re right then someone else is wrong if they’re right you’re wrong. No one is good, everyone good has terrible back secrets and the truth seems to be that unless we spend our days tearing everything down and admitting that nothing is or will ever be good we are worthless.

    • Now you’re getting it! But seriously, one thing you have to remember is that Ted Rall is a deeply sad misanthrope. Your instincts are correct: his only solution is to burn it all down. I’d recommend reading some other comics to balance it out. Pearls Before Swine is good

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