Struggling Gen Z and millennial grads should consider turning their back on their degrees and retraining to become hospitality and trade workers, Randstad’s CEO warns.
They already do this with inmates, and ICE centers are a form of incarceration. If it gets easier, it’s not hard to imagine them being used as “unskilled” labor.
With all due respect, which I have no idea what amount that is, this is completely absurd. Most trade work is just not being outsourced because it has to be done locally and that they have a vocational program in a jail somewhere doesn’t prove anything.
It’s fine if you don’t, but you’ll find yourself surprised more than a few times in the next few years with that attitude. The point I was trying to make with the article is they state that there’s a 43% lower odds someone doesn’t return to prison, which means that there’s still high chance that when they return to prison, and now they are now enslaved skilled labor. Do you think that the lost investment of reincarcerated workers by the companies will go unnoticed and unpursued? With automation of the industry, the required skill floor is dropping, meaning it will be even easier to train new labor. I hope I don’t need to explain that slave labor exists through the current prison system.
No, you don’t need hoardes for a payoff, just enough to push a profit.
I’m sorry but the idea that they’re going to use ICE captives to replace your plumber remains ridiculous. I see very few people using such a service if it were even offered, and certainly not enough people would use it to make getting into the trades not worth it.
Inmates aren’t used for individual homeowners. They’re used in corporate farms, public beautification projects, or fire fighting.
Settings where it’s easier to manage groups in one place. Not have them roam around in place where they have unrestricted access to potential victims.
There’s a large amount of trade work to be done for individual homeowners. That’s my point. Of course you can have slaves clean the factory boilers, and in a cruel and unjust enough society it’s practically guaranteed that you will do so (it’s hazardous work after all, and who better to do hazardous work than someone you deem subhuman?). But the idea of replacing residential plumbers with ICE prisoners is ridiculous. It’s much more likely that productive residential plumbers would become ICE prisoners because of cruel, unjust, and bad governance.
Oh it won’t be long till those kept in ICE concentration camps start being used as slave labor
I dunno I don’t really foresee armies of ICE laborers being let out of detention to come fix your HVAC…to arrive more back at the point.
They already do this with inmates, and ICE centers are a form of incarceration. If it gets easier, it’s not hard to imagine them being used as “unskilled” labor.
With all due respect, which I have no idea what amount that is, this is completely absurd. Most trade work is just not being outsourced because it has to be done locally and that they have a vocational program in a jail somewhere doesn’t prove anything.
It’s fine if you don’t, but you’ll find yourself surprised more than a few times in the next few years with that attitude. The point I was trying to make with the article is they state that there’s a 43% lower odds someone doesn’t return to prison, which means that there’s still high chance that when they return to prison, and now they are now enslaved skilled labor. Do you think that the lost investment of reincarcerated workers by the companies will go unnoticed and unpursued? With automation of the industry, the required skill floor is dropping, meaning it will be even easier to train new labor. I hope I don’t need to explain that slave labor exists through the current prison system.
No, you don’t need hoardes for a payoff, just enough to push a profit.
Am I making sense now?
I’m sorry but the idea that they’re going to use ICE captives to replace your plumber remains ridiculous. I see very few people using such a service if it were even offered, and certainly not enough people would use it to make getting into the trades not worth it.
Inmates aren’t used for individual homeowners. They’re used in corporate farms, public beautification projects, or fire fighting. Settings where it’s easier to manage groups in one place. Not have them roam around in place where they have unrestricted access to potential victims.
There’s a large amount of trade work to be done for individual homeowners. That’s my point. Of course you can have slaves clean the factory boilers, and in a cruel and unjust enough society it’s practically guaranteed that you will do so (it’s hazardous work after all, and who better to do hazardous work than someone you deem subhuman?). But the idea of replacing residential plumbers with ICE prisoners is ridiculous. It’s much more likely that productive residential plumbers would become ICE prisoners because of cruel, unjust, and bad governance.
Homeownership is declining.