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Easier to go to a safe place at the orangedouchebag's rallys and blame the beaners.
Real Americans Rushing Away From Construction Jobs. Too Lazy.
What a load of bullshit. The construction industry goes through the same boom and bust cycle time after time. The industry crashes and people bail out. Then when the upturn happens there is a shortage of people. That's what the article says.
The exact same thing happens in the oil patch and other cyclical fields.
These Liberals are first class retards. There's no White guys doing construction because most can't afford to raise a family from "The Back" of the truck.
And they aren't driving the truck to the jobsite managing their own jobs. Liberals have placed enough regulations on everything so that the only people who can afford the cost of the business are the Oligarchs who have the monopoly contracts in your town. You ride in the back of his trucks in his fleet.
Less you've got $10 grand for the EPA license, and $20 Grand to get bonded, and a city councilman on the take for all new bids.
It's all part of what is sexy when a guy like Trump says Make America again.
It's a dog whistle for us, we know damned well what Trump is talking about.
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The brown horde is taking all your jobs and robbing you of your cultural superiority. Taco trucks on every corner.

http://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/construction-worker-shortage-weighs-on-hot-us-housing-market/ar-AAixWgL?li=BBnbfcN
"GUARANTEED WORK, FEW TAKERS
Colorado alone will need 30,000 more workers in the construction field in the next six years, a number that does not account for those who will retire, according to a study by the Association of General Contractors.
The association estimates that there are approximately 200,000 unfilled construction jobs in the U.S. - a jump of 81 percent in the last two years. Private companies say that they are having a hard time attracting workers, and they are often forced to give employees on-the-spot raises to prevent them from going to competitors. Carpenters and electricians are often listed as the most in-demand specialties.
"The labor shortage is getting worse as demand is getting stronger," said John Courson, chief executive of the Home Builders Institute, a national nonprofit that trains workers in the construction field.
Small, the Denver builder, estimates that he could construct at least 10 percent more homes this year if he had enough workers. But he remains short-staffed, despite raising pay to levels above what he paid during the housing bubble a decade ago."
#abolishthe13thamendment