Happy that Osama bin Laden is dead? Well, remember that the raid that killed him “was possible only because America and NATO are engaged in Afghanistan,” writes Bruce Riedel of the Daily Beast . “Simply put, we can’t put pressure on al-Qaeda without Afghanistan forward operating bases, and we clearly can’t…
Continue reading …WASHINGTON – Miguel Bravo’s year-and-a-half-long stint working at a Chipotle in Washington, D.C., came to an abrupt end on March 9. That day, he says, he and his co-workers learned that their manager had just been let go in the midst of an audit of the burrito chain by U.S. immigration officials. As Bravo tells it, when the workers went to the back of the restaurant to talk with a Chipotle representative, they were replaced with a new crew out front. Suddenly without a job, Bravo started stretching his dollars, looking for work, and speaking out about what he considered an unfair parting with Chipotle. What the 28-year-old immigrant didn’t do was pack his bags and return to El Salvador. After all, it would have made little economic sense to do so. A worker in El Salvador is lucky to earn a few dollars a day, if he can find work at all. Papers or no, Bravo was staying in America. Not surprisingly, the American fast-food industry still had a place for him. Within two months, Bravo found another job in Washington with a major restaurant chain that he declined to name. “It’s easier, and there’s less pressure,” he says of the new gig. Though he earns just $8 an hour now — one dollar less than he’d been pulling in at Chipotle, he says — Bravo hopes to continue sending $500 a month back home to the wife and two children who he hasn’t seen since coming to America eight years ago. Bravo’s decision says a lot about the challenges facing U.S. officials as Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) goes after companies with undocumented workers on its payrolls. The Obama administration has generally adopted an “enforcement-only” policy on immigration, stepping up the auditing of companies while so far declining to push a specific plan for comprehensive immigration reform. (The President’s highly anticipated speech this week on the matter was quickly panned as vague and lacking substance.) As Reuters has been reporting, Chipotle is perhaps the most visible company now in ICE’s crosshairs, with a close look at its books forcing the company to shed hundreds of workers in Minnesota, Virginia, and Washington. According to the Wall Street Journal, the Chipotle probe has widened to Atlanta and Los Angeles as well. But advocates of comprehensive reform like to point out that few, if any, of the fired Chipotle workers seem to be giving up on the idea of U.S. employment. The workers simply move to other jobs, perhaps elsewhere in the fast food industry, like Bravo, or elsewhere, moving off the books entirely to work for smaller and less conspicuous employers than Chipotle. No number of audits, these advocates point out, can change global economics. “They’re not going anywhere,” Sarahi Uribe, an organizer with the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, says of the D.C. workers. Uribe was walking outside the Chipotle on March 9 when she saw Bravo’s crew standing outside. Since then, she’s advocated on their behalf. Rather than leave, several of the workers have grown quite vocal. They are demanding back pay for unused vacation, severance pay, and a public apology from Chipotle. Yet in a statement to The Huffington Post, Chipotle spokesperson Chris Arnold disputed the workers’ version, saying that many of the former Washington employees had provided fraudulent work papers and that “most of them simply walked away from their jobs, others were let go,” when the company addressed the situation. He also said Chipotle had paid “everyone everything they were owed.” “Some of these workers have worked at Chipotle for six years, and they’ve lived in the District of Columbia for even longer,” says Uribe. “They have U.S. citizen children. Some of them are pregnant. They’re part of this community.” Politicians often talk about the need to bring undocumented workers “out of the shadows,” but in many ways the Chipotle workers were already halfway out, working “on the front lines, facing the public,” says Audrey Singer, a demographer with the Brookings Institution. Even immigration hardliners would have to agree that’s a better arrangement than having them working under the table, for sub-minimum wages and under dangerous conditions, in the tobacco fields of North Carolina or the tomato fields of Florida. Considering the unlikelihood that the fired Chipotle workers will simply leave, “the question is whether they will be driven further underground,” says Singer. The question also remains whether those vacant slots at Chipotle will in fact morph into better-paying positions for properly documented workers. Indeed, part of Wall Street’s newfound skittishness on once-hot Chipotle stems from the possibility that the company’s labor costs could rise. But any increased costs may have more to do with turnover than with noticeably higher wages. “If we see a systemwide turnover, it could have a dramatic negative effect on the company’s margins,” says Robert Derrington, an analyst with Morgan Keegan. But according to Derrington, Chipotle management has said they anticipated a modest bump of 20 to 30 basis points, or just a fraction of one percent, in their labor costs. We shouldn’t assume that a more scrupulous Chipotle will necessarily translate into higher wages behind the burrito counter, says Daniel Siciliano, a Stanford Law School lecturer who tracks immigration and labor trends. Siciliano believes that many undocumented workers fill gaps in our workforce, rather than simply steal jobs and depress wages. As for mass exoduses like the one at Chipotle, “Does that improve wages for U.S. workers during a difficult recession? Is there a positive economic impact? There’s no evidence of that, unfortunately,” he says. Chipotle’s own statements would seem to confirm that. According to a report from Goldman Sachs, Chipotle executives said in March that the replacement workers in Minnesota actually came cheaper than the fired workers because they had no seniority. And that’s another element of this case that rankles advocates of immigrant rights — the fired Chipotle workers were generally happy with their jobs, and although few people are willing to compliment Chipotle publicly right now, several people interviewed for this story said that the company seems to be one of the more decent players in an industry rife with low wages and sky-high turnover. An audit like the one at Chipotle “just drives people to employers who operate in criminal ways and more paperless ways,” says Emily Tulli, an attorney at the National Immigration Law Center. Bravo, for one, says that the pay at Chipotle was fair and his boss was “a nice guy.” The departed workers seem to have been making more than the minimum wage, and the company is known to offer opportunities for advancement. Take the case of one former Minnesota Chipotle manager, who was recently fired and asked that his name not be used because he’s in the United States illegally. In his time at Chipotle, this young man had risen from crew member to shift manager to assistant manager and finally general manager, a position that at the time of his firing paid $44,000 annually. Considering he might earn just a few bucks a day in his native Mexico, he had attained something like the American Dream, a fact not lost on his area manager. When she broke the news to him that he was to be let go because of his immigration status, she wept. Although this former manager is angry about the manner in which he was fired — he says he had long ago told a superior that he was undocumented — he has a hard time saying anything negative about Chipotle as a company. “I’ve been here [in America] for 11 years,” he said, adding that he’s worked at two other fast-food restaurants and a shoe-store chain. “Chipotle was by far the greatest company I’ve worked for, when it comes to feeling like you worked at something and that you can move up within the company. I think it’s a great company still. And if Chipotle hadn’t been checked by ICE, I can assure you that we would still be there and still be moving up in the company.” The former manager is just the kind of person that politicians talk about clearing a path for. He’s hard-working, he already speaks excellent English, and he’s determined to work in the U.S. one way or another. But despite his talks with lawyers about attaining work permits and residency, he hasn’t gotten anywhere on legalization. “It’s quite difficult,” he says. Though comprehensive reform remains a pipe dream at the moment, the former manager has still managed to find another restaurant job, with a chain that hasn’t scrutinized his status and pays him a $40,000 salary as manager. But many of his former co-workers haven’t been as lucky. The problem, he says, is not that they’re undocumented but that they have Chipotle on their resumes. Given the hooplah surrounding the firings, it seems they’ve been branded troublemakers. “[Because of] the fact that the union was helping us and we did protests and made a big deal, the companies are defensive when it comes to hiring people who worked at Chipotle,” he says. “They never get called back for interviews.” And that problem may reveal the true condition of employment in many restaurants — not that workers provide legitimate documents, but that they suffer any indignities quietly.
Continue reading …Kinda cool: You can now use Indian words like “aloo” and “gobi” in Scrabble. Not so cool: You can also use slang words like “thang,” “innit,” and (cringe) “grrl.” All of the above have been added to Collins Official Scrabble Words , a book one world champion says is “like the…
Continue reading …While former Republican Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich says he’s running for president, this year has been highly unusual in that possible Republican candidates are very late in announcing their intentions. (May 11)
Continue reading …From the price of gas to the grocery store, Mississippi River flooding is taking a toll on America’s fragile economy.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Neil Cavuto is terribly upset that the Republicans in the Senate have decided not to support Paul Ryan and the House’s budget plan and dismantle Medicare by turning it into a voucher system. Cavuto opened his segment with American Pie playing in the background and followed with this: CAVUTO: Alright, I don’t want to be melodramatic (too late for that Neil), but let it be known that this is the day America’s financial future died. I want you to write it down, May 10, 2011. The day tea partiers elected to the United States Senate not only caved, they quit. They folded their spending tent and left. And all because some Medicare recipients stomped their feet and roared. And those Republicans ran into their buzz-saw and just bugged out. I am telling you, they didn’t just blink, they bolted. Which is odd because Republican Senators like Pat Toomey and Marco Rubio got to where promising big cuts. Then they ran into this big old wall. They discovered some folks were fine, cutting spending, but in the case of some Medicare recipients, just not their spending. It is a familiar story. Cut, just don’t cut my stuff. So now my friends, we are all stuck. Republicans in the Senate said, because the reality is Democrats control the Senate today, so they’re keeping their powder dry for when they control the Senate some day. Which is why they are putting off things like Medicare until after 2012, as if the stark reality of things we’re facing will be any less after 2012. They won’t. I can understand their political math, but I fear out far more unfriendly math, by then likely one and a half trillion dollars more in debt, not even a game plan as how to hack that debt. They say they’ll focus then, but I fear it will be too late. No wonder all this talk of a third party now. The Grand Old Party has botched it. Time was of the essence and now the time has gone. And now, they’re of the essence and now they’re the ones risking being gone. History will show it started this day, the tenth of May, 2011, when they gave up the fight and they lost the war. This spring day in 2011, they lost something else, their souls. How dare all of those selfish seniors expect that their children and grand children be taken care of in their old age? Sorry Neil, but you just lost yours running this fearmongering segment. We’ve got the biggest income disparity since the Gilded Age in the United States and you want to throw seniors under the bus. Shame on you.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Neil Cavuto is terribly upset that the Republicans in the Senate have decided not to support Paul Ryan and the House’s budget plan and dismantle Medicare by turning it into a voucher system. Cavuto opened his segment with American Pie playing in the background and followed with this: CAVUTO: Alright, I don’t want to be melodramatic (too late for that Neil), but let it be known that this is the day America’s financial future died. I want you to write it down, May 10, 2011. The day tea partiers elected to the United States Senate not only caved, they quit. They folded their spending tent and left. And all because some Medicare recipients stomped their feet and roared. And those Republicans ran into their buzz-saw and just bugged out. I am telling you, they didn’t just blink, they bolted. Which is odd because Republican Senators like Pat Toomey and Marco Rubio got to where promising big cuts. Then they ran into this big old wall. They discovered some folks were fine, cutting spending, but in the case of some Medicare recipients, just not their spending. It is a familiar story. Cut, just don’t cut my stuff. So now my friends, we are all stuck. Republicans in the Senate said, because the reality is Democrats control the Senate today, so they’re keeping their powder dry for when they control the Senate some day. Which is why they are putting off things like Medicare until after 2012, as if the stark reality of things we’re facing will be any less after 2012. They won’t. I can understand their political math, but I fear out far more unfriendly math, by then likely one and a half trillion dollars more in debt, not even a game plan as how to hack that debt. They say they’ll focus then, but I fear it will be too late. No wonder all this talk of a third party now. The Grand Old Party has botched it. Time was of the essence and now the time has gone. And now, they’re of the essence and now they’re the ones risking being gone. History will show it started this day, the tenth of May, 2011, when they gave up the fight and they lost the war. This spring day in 2011, they lost something else, their souls. How dare all of those selfish seniors expect that their children and grand children be taken care of in their old age? Sorry Neil, but you just lost yours running this fearmongering segment. We’ve got the biggest income disparity since the Gilded Age in the United States and you want to throw seniors under the bus. Shame on you.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Neil Cavuto is terribly upset that the Republicans in the Senate have decided not to support Paul Ryan and the House’s budget plan and dismantle Medicare by turning it into a voucher system. Cavuto opened his segment with American Pie playing in the background and followed with this: CAVUTO: Alright, I don’t want to be melodramatic (too late for that Neil), but let it be known that this is the day America’s financial future died. I want you to write it down, May 10, 2011. The day tea partiers elected to the United States Senate not only caved, they quit. They folded their spending tent and left. And all because some Medicare recipients stomped their feet and roared. And those Republicans ran into their buzz-saw and just bugged out. I am telling you, they didn’t just blink, they bolted. Which is odd because Republican Senators like Pat Toomey and Marco Rubio got to where promising big cuts. Then they ran into this big old wall. They discovered some folks were fine, cutting spending, but in the case of some Medicare recipients, just not their spending. It is a familiar story. Cut, just don’t cut my stuff. So now my friends, we are all stuck. Republicans in the Senate said, because the reality is Democrats control the Senate today, so they’re keeping their powder dry for when they control the Senate some day. Which is why they are putting off things like Medicare until after 2012, as if the stark reality of things we’re facing will be any less after 2012. They won’t. I can understand their political math, but I fear out far more unfriendly math, by then likely one and a half trillion dollars more in debt, not even a game plan as how to hack that debt. They say they’ll focus then, but I fear it will be too late. No wonder all this talk of a third party now. The Grand Old Party has botched it. Time was of the essence and now the time has gone. And now, they’re of the essence and now they’re the ones risking being gone. History will show it started this day, the tenth of May, 2011, when they gave up the fight and they lost the war. This spring day in 2011, they lost something else, their souls. How dare all of those selfish seniors expect that their children and grand children be taken care of in their old age? Sorry Neil, but you just lost yours running this fearmongering segment. We’ve got the biggest income disparity since the Gilded Age in the United States and you want to throw seniors under the bus. Shame on you.
Continue reading …Good Morning America's George Stephanopoulos on Wednesday hypedthe best polling data available for President Obama, ignoring surveys finding much lower numbers. The co-anchor enthused, ” And a new poll out just this morning shows President Obama with his highest approval rating in two years .” “60 percent Of Americans, according to the AP, now think the President is doing a good job.” But, the poll is really an outlier . The May 10 Rasmussen has Obama at 48 percent. Gallup finds 52. However, Stephanopoulos ignored those numbers and focused on the AP data: “And for the first time in that poll, a majority of Americans, 53 percent, say he deserves re-election.” I a follow-up segment, Stephanopoulos reiterated, “And the White House did get that good news this morning, that 60 percent approval rating for the President in that latest poll.” He did allow that the White House knows, with regard to 2012, “this is going to be a close race.” The former Democratic operative turned journalist has a habit of spinning polls on ABC. On August 02, 2010 , he focused on Republican favorability an in ABC News poll. Stephanopoulos skipped the same survey's finding that likely voters wanted the GOP to take control of Congress by a margin of 56 to 41. A transcript of the first segment, which aired at 7:07am EDT on May 11, follows: GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: Now, to politics. And a new poll out just this morning shows President Obama with his highest approval rating in two years. 60 percent Of Americans, according to the AP, now think the President is doing a good job. And for the first time in that poll, a majority of Americans, 53 percent, say he deserves re-election. This comes as one of the highest-profile Republicans is officially entering the race, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. So, let's bring in Jon Karl on that. And, Jon, he's doing it in a brand new way. JON KARL: Yeah, that's right, George. Newt Gingrich will make it official today. I am told he will announce he is running for president, via Twitter. George, we believe
Continue reading …Good Morning America's George Stephanopoulos on Wednesday hypedthe best polling data available for President Obama, ignoring surveys finding much lower numbers. The co-anchor enthused, ” And a new poll out just this morning shows President Obama with his highest approval rating in two years .” “60 percent Of Americans, according to the AP, now think the President is doing a good job.” But, the poll is really an outlier . The May 10 Rasmussen has Obama at 48 percent. Gallup finds 52. However, Stephanopoulos ignored those numbers and focused on the AP data: “And for the first time in that poll, a majority of Americans, 53 percent, say he deserves re-election.” I a follow-up segment, Stephanopoulos reiterated, “And the White House did get that good news this morning, that 60 percent approval rating for the President in that latest poll.” He did allow that the White House knows, with regard to 2012, “this is going to be a close race.” The former Democratic operative turned journalist has a habit of spinning polls on ABC. On August 02, 2010 , he focused on Republican favorability an in ABC News poll. Stephanopoulos skipped the same survey's finding that likely voters wanted the GOP to take control of Congress by a margin of 56 to 41. A transcript of the first segment, which aired at 7:07am EDT on May 11, follows: GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: Now, to politics. And a new poll out just this morning shows President Obama with his highest approval rating in two years. 60 percent Of Americans, according to the AP, now think the President is doing a good job. And for the first time in that poll, a majority of Americans, 53 percent, say he deserves re-election. This comes as one of the highest-profile Republicans is officially entering the race, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. So, let's bring in Jon Karl on that. And, Jon, he's doing it in a brand new way. JON KARL: Yeah, that's right, George. Newt Gingrich will make it official today. I am told he will announce he is running for president, via Twitter. George, we believe
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