California likes to strut around, claiming to be a global economic powerhouse. But underneath its shiny facade lies a dark secret: It’s built on the backs of illegal labor. Yes, we’re talking about those staring out at us through construction sites and fields—not with legal work permits but with fear in their eyes, knowing they don’t belong. It’s not an economic miracle. It’s a sham propped up by accepting, even promoting, illegal activity.
The reality is clear. While liberal California boasts a $4 trillion economy, it conveniently turns a blind eye to the estimated two million illegal aliens working for pittance wages. Meanwhile, it sheds crocodile tears about how enforcing immigration laws could damage key sectors like agriculture, construction, and hospitality. But maybe if leaders focused on employing their own citizens rather than exploiting cheap, illegal labor, they wouldn’t have millions of unemployed Californians veiled behind these statistics.
A must read about Newsom’s Failed California…
CA Compared to other States, California has:
* The highest Unemployment Rate
* The highest % of Homelessness
* The highest Poverty Rate after adjusting for Cost Of Living (COL)
* The highest adult Illiteracy Rate
* The highest… pic.twitter.com/TfVeacaKeP— Wayne Dunlap (@wdunlap) August 30, 2025
We hear constant whining about how losing these illegal workers would shut down businesses. But maybe, just maybe, if California didn’t pile on overregulations and suffocate companies with taxes, good, law-abiding workers wouldn’t be priced out of the job market. It’s a known fact: government policies have inflated the cost of living and doing business, making it impossible for honest citizens to compete against illegal labor.
California appears to value illegal workers more than its own citizens, all while claiming the jobs are only ones illegal aliens would do. It’s a laughable notion. When companies stop hiring illegally, legal employment rises. It’s a basic cause-and-effect that liberals in California, with their love for illegal rhetoric, conveniently ignore.
Here’s the question California should ponder—a state that prides itself on a trillion-dollar economy: If your wealth depends on exploiting illegals, is it really wealth, or is it a charade? Maybe it’s time for California to reflect and figure out if its success is actual economic prowess or something far more sinister.