Dodge City Of 1860
Dodge City Of 2009
Dodge City's Main Industry
Dodge City Before The Meat
Packers
|
Meatpacking Plants Hit The Rural West
Here is a look at three towns, (Fort Morgan, Dodge City, and
Postville) where Zionist meatpackers have taken over the small towns.
They bring in Mexican labor, and the multiculturalism eventually
corrodes the towns.
|
|
|
|
The Old Dodge City
Back in 1860 it was cowboys, shootouts, saloons, Doc Holiday, and
Wyatt Earp.
|
|
|
Today, Dodge City Is Called 'Little Mexico'
Today, a city of 25,176 has a downtown of Mexican restaurants and
stores resembling Tijuana more than Main Street Kansas.
Signs advertising "Envios a Mexico" — retail outlets where workers
send hard-earned wages back home to Mexico and other countries —
hang outside many Dodge City stores.
|
|
|
|
|
Fort Morgan, Colo
Today, iconic farm towns struggle with a new economic model, one
that requires a workforce that is poor and overwhelmingly Hispanic.
|
|
|
Today's Fort Morgan
With the influx of Zionist's packing plants comes the Zionist's
$6.50 an hour Mexican labor. And each worker brings his family with
an average of five kids winding up in the schools.
|
|
|
|
|
The Old Days Are Gone
Just as the arrival of the Santa Fe Railroad here in 1872 brought
white settlers to populate the dusty towns and farms of a fledging
country, the relocation and consolidation of the meatpacking
industry has transformed these icons of the American West. Today
pick up trucks arrive with anxious South American immigrants.
|
|
|
It All Started In The 1960s
The Zionists took their plants from unionized states to
right-to-work states like Kansas. The first big slaughterhouse came
to Emporia in the 1960s, followed by plants near Garden City and in
Dodge City in the 1980s.
Eventually, mom-and-pop meatpackers were swallowed up by giants like
Tyson Foods Inc., Cargill Meat Solutions Corp., Swift & Co. and
National Beef Packing Co.
|
|
|
|
|
Twenty Mexicans To A Trailer
Arturo Ponce lives in a dilapidated trailer, just down the street
from the Cargill plant in Dodge City. The trailer is filled with 13
other people, four families, into three bedrooms.
They sleep in shifts, one comes home to the trailer after each shift
drenched in sweat from trying to keep up with the production line.
He and his brother-in-law each lost 25 pounds those first three
months on the job.
|
|
|
The Decline Of Fort Morgan
Ft Morgan's population is 11,000, and approximately 50% are
Mexicans, working mainly at the Cargill slaughter house. The town
was settled by Germans, with its neat lawns decorated with gnomes,
would be altered beyond recognition.
Every morning at 5:00 the German ladies would be out sweeping
sidewalks. Now you have Mexicans who never cut the lawn, and park
eight cars on their lawns.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Only The Zionists Win
The $50,000 a yr union meat cutter is replaced by a $6.50 an hr
Mexican. The prices stay the same, just like Nike, but the profit goes
to a select group. These little towns see their schools, and lifestyles
devastated, and then get threatened by the ADL with Hate Laws, if they
complain.
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment