Wednesday, June 20, 2018

Tip of the Iceburg


This has been a more difficult year to maintain our yard. We "contracted" with employees from a small landscape firm in the area in the years past. The company used Mexicans, employed for around six months at 6 days a week and with "some" arrangements for health care. They arrived around May and returned in early November.  They were EXTREMELY talented in that they helped us fix our lawnmower, repaired the garden gate, identified a gas leak which we missed since we did not weedeat that corner of the house, etc.  They were ALWAYS prompt, polite and efficient.

Our "helpers"  were a "band of brothers."  The family had 8 brothers and each year they were able to send at least 4 of them north to the U.S. for employment.  The local U.S. landscape business could not find local folks to do these jobs, clearly.

For the last two years, their arrival became more difficult and they would come later.  This year they were not allowed into the U.S. at all.  My husband called one of the brothers since we have become friends as well because we have paid for their services for almost a decade.  They explained that they could not get work visas, they also tragically lost their older brother to murder from a gang over the winter months.  He was shot outside the front door of his home. They had related various tales of the increase in dangerous crime over the years.  (If you are a tourist in Mexico, the government may feel it is necessary in some areas to give you a police escort.)

My husband was trying to manage the yard on his own through May and early June of this year until we found a young boy who was saving for college and could help.  (Hubby's back has a recent problem.)  Why don't we just hire from another landscaping firm you may ask?  We did that in years past.  The various small firms either quit on us saying the yard was too difficult, or they would not show up on time after rains and grass would get too high to mow before they could reschedule us, or they complained about everything else.  They were totally unreliable and perhaps just wanted enough money for drugs or until another job came their way.  Living in the countryside is not always easy for finding help.  Even after writing this we will research hiring another landscape company next year.

This event in our lives is related to the huge refugee iceberg that is forming across the globe.  Closing borders, wars, climate change resulting in famine, climate change increasing diseases, criminal gangs, and overpopulation are taking their toll forcing people to flee for their lives.  In 2017 68.5 million refugees were displaced from their homes, their cities, their countries.  One person becomes displaced every 2 seconds.  The Central African Republic, Central America, Europe, Iraq, South Sudan, Syria, Rohingya, Ukraine, and Yemen are all impacted by the ongoing refugee crisis.  

Now it is at our back door where we are housing refugee toddlers and teenagers without a budget, plan, or infrastructure.  MAGA

14 comments:

  1. 'now we are housing.' Not quite how I'd put it, but.....

    Sorry that you lost your reliable garden caretakers. I've heard of 'border checks' over 2 hours away from the Canadian border. Do we need to start carrying our passports in our purses? What about the men? Sad times.

    ReplyDelete
  2. The man with a large stick is beating them up. Money is a problem.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thoughtful post showing some of the impact of immigration

    ReplyDelete
  4. Oh how I understand, up until 5 years ago (78) I did almost everything, loved cutting the grass, riding tractor on my path's in the woods - no more and the path's probaby have disappeared or have braches and fallen tree's on them.
    I have a new young man cutting grass, weed eating and he is excellent hope I an keep him. All Mexican workers that have helped me
    in the past were excellent and what is happening is so sad. They are the best workers and since I live in a farming, tabacco
    location - they are the main workers the farmers use - really no one else wants to work in the hot sun all day

    ReplyDelete
  5. Well written Tabor. MAGA indeed!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Thank you Tabor. Our farming community is feeling the pinch for quite awhile. Fruit rotted on the trees from no one to pick them. Reliable crews that had been coming here for years cannot get in. I have three Hispanic grand daughters, none old enough for a license even and worry about them getting picked up because of profiling. And the baby jails, OMG. I'm going to a march and a rally this Saturday about these issues. First time I've done that in decades.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Just a few minutes ago That Man signed an executive order to keep families together. I hope those who have already been separated can be reunited. And all it's doing is making things worse, and worse. Vote November 2018.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Good, thought provoking post. The immigration issues are complex, but stooping to inhumanity is not going to help anyone.
    The current administration seems to believe that acting in a mean spirited way will help to solidify their base. They are counting on the majority of us being racists and misogynists. Hopefully we are proving them wrong.

    ReplyDelete
  9. My wish is that we could help the world make every place safe. It’s not right that people have to flee from their homes. It’s one thing to want to move to another country, it’s quite another to love your home but feel forced to leave because of forces beyong your control.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Trump is destroying this country. Americans scream about lost jobs to latinos but the fact is Americans won't do those jobs. it will be awhile before the full impact hits with Trump's zero tolerance and zero immigration policy. then the screaming will be about no one to clean their houses, do their laundry, maintain their yards, do their childcare, build their houses, dig their ditches, pick their crops (with the resulting rise in food prices), etc. it's not enough for Trump to just refuse them entry or send them back across the border. he is stealing their children and putting the parents in for profit prisons for misdemeanors so that his rich buddies can get richer. and what happens to these kids? sent into foster care which is another kind of hell, babies adopted out? if better people don't get control of Congress in November this country is done, over, finis.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I can only hope you are wrong about the finality of this democracy. I pin my hope on the new millennials, the Latinos/Latinas, and the newly woke folks to vote.

      Delete
  11. It's a worldwide predicament. Population growth hasn't helped, among other things of course.

    ReplyDelete
  12. I wonder what farmers are doing in California’s farm areas for workers they will need? We’ll be hearing more about that come harvest times I expect. We’ve used our regular gardeners for years, ever since my husband was no longer able to do the work himself. I don’t know how long they’ve been in this country. I’m surely grateful they continue to be available and when my husband suddenly died they simply continued so I did not have to add that to matters to be resolved.

    Yes, it’s worse than disgraceful what is occurring to those seeking asylum — its unconscionable how these families have been treated. What’s even scarier to me is that all of our Representatives and Senators aren’t speaking out en masse demanding the removed children be returned to their families immediately. They can argue their differences later. We need protests from everyone— Reunite the children with their families — now!

    ReplyDelete
  13. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete

Take your time...take a deep breath...then hit me with your best shot.