Sunday, January 21, 2024

Socializing Costs to Maximize Private Profit (In the Name of Compassion, Of Course)

UK news media has observed outrage over Democrat-run Maine town's luxury digs for migrants, which is more than most of our domestic news media have done. The key quotes, from my main point of interest:
Maine State Housing Authority budgeted nearly $3.5 million to cover the rents of 60 migrant families in five buildings in Brunswick for two years. 
They are expected to eventually get permission to work and start earning to pay their own way. 
The state is also allocating $100,000 to help dozens of Brunswick migrants process their asylum applications and secure work permits. 
A bus service is in the works to help the migrants get into town.
In other words, the Maine State Housing Authority and other official bodies are providing a bald-faced example of government picking up the social costs of that cheap labor some businesses love so much, especially those in the construction, agriculture, retail, and hospitality industries. 

California has gone a giant step further and, starting last week, will enroll all undocumented immigrants in Medi-Cal, California's version of the federal Medicaid program for people with low incomes. Even states that haven't taken that step are nevertheless facing financial collapse due to their own mandates to provide emergency room treatment, primary care, dental care, and childbirth to illegal migrants. 

Some state hospital systems, such as Denver's, are now asking for federal government bailouts to rescue them from their own decisions. Or, phrasing it more generously, to share their compassion with taxpayers in all 50 states.  

I suspect that the 22,000 illegal migrants whom Denver reports used its hospital system without charge in the past year just might be employed somewhere or other. Perhaps we might ask those employers to share a bit of that compassion before passing the bill along to the rest of us? 

Say, wasn't there once a great ruckus raised by the populist left over businesses that dumped the social costs of low-wage jobs on to the taxpayer? I believe there was. Socializing costs to maximize private profit was once an issue. For example, this:
“When big companies use the Walmart loophole to force workers on to Medi-Cal, taxpayers pick up the tab,” said California Labor Federation head Art Pulaski. Medi-Cal is the state’s health care program for the poor, elderly and disabled. 
“Today we are putting legislators on notice that it’s time to hold big corporations accountable to pay their fair share for health care like the rest of us.”
That fine statement was issued back in 2013. You could say the same thing today only now the problem is coming from our elected officials instead of Wal-Mart.
 

14 comments:

James said...

A blogger I really liked passed away suddenly yesterday.

TSB said...

I'm very sorry to hear that.

James said...

You're still here, which I am very glad.

James said...

Exiting like that is very bad manners!

TSB said...

I'm sorry for your loss. One of my own friends and a Foreign Service blogger (Consul-at-Arms) died suddenly and far too young. It shocks despite the inevitability. Momento Mori, and as they say in Israel, may his memory be a blessing.

Anonymous said...

You're suspicions about employment are well founded. It always comes down to the money, who pays for it, etc

Anonymous said...

I'm from Texas, we'll see if Abbott has got the stuff.

TSB said...

That border confrontation is going his way so far, but it's still early.

Anonymous said...

The powers that be are not handling the ME very well.

TSB said...

The ME is still "A World of Trouble" to cite a good book from over 20 years ago: https://www.amazon.com/World-Trouble-Middle-East-Terror/dp/0374532001

Biden's White House will have to figure out a level of retaliation commensurate with the loss of U.S. lives today. It being an election year, and his poll numbers being down in Jimmy Carter territory, I'd expect more payback rather than less.

James said...

Has there been any news about the reconstruction of Notre Dame in Paris?

TSB said...

I hadn't been following that, but this is from their website: "Since the fire of April 15, 2019, Notre-Dame de Paris Cathedral and its immediate surroundings have been closed to the public to allow for major security and stabilization work, before restoration."

https://www.notredamedeparis.fr/

I'm surprised the cathedral is still in the process of being restored. They're on A (le twitter) @notredameparis so you can monitor the status of the restoration.

TSB said...

They're on X, of course, not "A."

James said...

Thanks