I live in an area that has lots of illegal worker activity who do just about all manual labor. Every morning the local gas station is flooded with work trucks and vehicles of all kinds so they can buy their water and snacks for the day. I see them stuffed in vans and pickup trucks, bristling with ladders and tools. Painters, Roofers, Landscapers, Laborers. I actually feel a little sorry for those guys knowing that they are going to be doing hard labor under the sun all day. I don't see how they do it, but they do it somehow. I would pass out in a couple of hours if I tried to do what they do every day all day long.
@240B It was different in the 1970s: Bob was leading seismic crews in the 1970s in the south, think Texas, California, New Mexico, Arizona and illegals would work on the crews. Company lists of the illegals were given to Border Control. Border Control buses would come get them at the weekend and let them out at the border to go back to Mexico. The illegals would get across the line again on late Sunday or early Monday morning, swimming the Rio Grand or sneaking across land to show up to work again. They would repeat that, work all week, border control would send the buses to take them back on the weekend.
In the 1980s, Border Control was still getting the lists from that oil company, but the buses stopped coming to get them. The illegals still went back to Mexico on the weekend to their families. They didn't want to live here because it was cheaper living in Mexico and their families had roots there. They wanted the money for their families.
Sometime in the 1980s, I went to a good Mexican restaurant for lunch. The front of the restaurant had police of some kind standing outside. Then, a number of Mexicans were lead out of the restaurant and put in cop cars. Those were illegals. Not long after that, the restaurant closed. During that time period in general, I didn't see/hear in the news about illegals being rounded up.