Kilmoll the Sexy wrote:Here is where you fail. The ones paying the taxes are legal immigrants, many of whom have work visas and pay taxes, follow laws, etc. Illegals cannot have a valid Social Security number or be on file with the IRS because they are not here. If they DO file, then immigration rounds them up, fines the employers, and files charges like you have seen with a few companies of late. I can tell you from experience that there ARE problems here with the ILLEGALS sicne they will break any law they need to break to avoid being caught here. That includes hit and run, which has happened to me personally by illegals and has been a HUGE problem in one of our most populous and affluent suburbs. The police will tell you that up front when they arrive that the odds are against catching them even if you have a license plate number. Soooo....my insurance rates go up if I make a claim thanks to your "economy enhancing" pals from down south.
To reiterate: Legal immigrants = fine
Illegal immigrants = die in a fire
I think you failed to understand my point because I'm not entirely disagreeing with what you say. I do think that things are being overstated a bit, though, particularly with the ongoing effort to confuse exceptional issues (criminal activity, hit and run, 20 people in a 2 br apt, etc.) with what's normal. These things happen, no doubt, and they're not even necessarily uncommon, but that doesn't translate into being true for the majority of situations. I'm especially taking exception with the assertion that undocumented workers don't contribute anything to the tax base or the economy. You're fixating on income taxes and other payroll taxes withheld from paychecks. For people making relatively little money, income taxes make up a fairly small amount of their total tax burden. While many ("many" != "all" since you seemed to miss that the first time) undocumented workers do pay taxes using falsified information, you're correct that many do not pay because they're working off the books. Even so, at their income level, the loss of tax revenue is tiny, and that doesn't invalidate other contributions. Those people are still paying a lot of taxes in the form of property taxes (through their rent payments), sales taxes, fuel taxes, etc.
As I said before, there are plenty of real issues that need to be addressed, and things are by no means "OK" as they stand now. I just disagree - strongly - with the notion that there's no contribution at all on the part of the undocumented. There are a lot of things that need to be shored up with regards to income taxes, payroll taxes and SSA withholdings, and many other rules / regulations. We disagree profoundly, I'm sure on how these things need to be addressed, but again, that's not at all the point that I was making.