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Omdahl: Mexicans helped build North Dakota

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Omdahl: Mexicans helped build North Dakota


With rural antagonism against immigration from Mexico prevalent in North Dakota, it is time to recount the days when the sugar beet industry relied on Mexican labor to exist as an alternate crop for farmers.

As sugar beet farms grew through the ‘30s and ‘40s, domestic labor could not keep up with the demand and it took thousands of Mexican immigrants to come to North Dakota to do the job.

Whole families – including the children – worked long hours in the heat to bring in enough money to survive. Many of the living quarters consisted of one room shacks with outhouses and no water supply until the federal government required decent living conditions.

But we forget what these immigrants did for the North Dakota economy when it was staggering through the 1930s. Now that sugar beet growing has been totally mechanized and “RoundUp Ready” is dealing with the weeds, the attitude about Mexican immigrants has turned sour.

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Many in North Dakota support building a wall at the border to keep them from getting what we have got. We are silent when the governor of Texas strings razor wire through the Rio Grande to cut up any Mexicans trying to swim to the United States.

According to a poll by the Washington Post, rural residents are nearly three times as likely (42%) as people in the cities (16%) to say that immigrants are a burden on the country.

CATO, a conservative think tank, says that is not true.

Writing for CATO, researcher Alex Nowrasteh discovered the following: immigrants do not take American jobs or lower wages; immigrants make large net contributions to Medicare and Social Security.

Immigrants assimilate into American society just as our grandparents did; immigrants create less crime than resident Americans (verified by other sources); only one radicalized terrorist entered the United States for every 29,000,000 visa or status approvals, and our immigration restrictions are tougher than a number of other countries.

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Space does not permit us to recount how our nation bullied Mexico into an unjust war after which we commandeered almost half of the country. The 525,000 square miles became Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico and parts of a couple other states.

And the policymakers of the day claimed that God ordained the theft as “Manifest Destiny.”

Many Christians today still believe in “Manifest Destiny” even though the U.S. was created by secular national and local ratifying conventions.

The consequences of our treatment of Mexico are still with us today and as a nation we have a responsibility to do penance for our sins. The least we could do is give qualified Mexican immigrants in controlled numbers preference in our immigration laws.

Right now our penance has been to build walls and cut desperate people with razor wire in the Rio Grande. Maybe the time has come to repeal “one nation under God” and “in God we trust” because neither one is true.

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Omdahl is a former N.D. lieutenant governor and retired University of North Dakota political science teacher. Email

ndmatters@midco.net

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Forum’s editorial board nor Forum ownership.





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North Dakota

North Dakota Fossil Site Reveals When Asteroid Killed Dinosaurs

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North Dakota Fossil Site Reveals When Asteroid Killed Dinosaurs


Spring is a time for budding flowers, tender green leaves and baby animals. But 66 million years ago, that gentle season instead brought mass death and carnage from Earth’s catastrophic impact with a massive space rock. Scientists recently pinpointed the season of the disaster and linked it to springtime in the Northern Hemisphere, after analyzing fossilized animals that died minutes after the impact at a site called Tanis, where a river once flowed through what is now North Dakota.



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North Dakota Polynesian Club celebrates culture at PAC Fest

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North Dakota Polynesian Club celebrates culture at PAC Fest


BISMARCK, N.D. (KFYR) – A fairly new group, the North Dakota Polynesian Cultural Club, hosted its first Pacific Island, Asian, Arts and Culture Festival, or PAC Fest for short.

The North Dakota Polynesian Club invited the public to come eat cultural food, watch performances of cultural dances and listen to special speakers at Lord of Life Lutheran Church.

Event organizer, DJ Lamyuen, says he hopes to bring attention to his community.

“The goal and the mission is to bring awareness to our Pacific Islander and Asian heritage,” said Lamyuen.

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The performances featured included the Bismarck YMCA belly dancers and traditional Indian dances, celebrating the different ways of life that make the Pacific Islands and Asia diverse. But, the group welcomed everyone from any background to join the celebration.

“That’s all that matters, that we can enjoy each other and different cultures by food, by music, by dance, and that’s all that matters in today’s society,” said Moses Timaly, member of the North Dakota Polynesian Club.

The hope is that this event, and the club, can create a sentiment of unity between the people of Bismarck-Mandan, regardless of where they’re from.

“Not a lot of people out here have resources or friend groups, so this is like an opportunity to kind of get together and know your neighbors and know the community,” said Lamyuen.

A “Best Dressed” Award was also given to whoever wore their cultural regalia or traditional clothing the best.

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The group also enjoys working with a variety of nonprofit organizations, such as Bismarck Global Neighbors.



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Federal Reserve official says he looks to Bakken for insight on economy

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Federal Reserve official says he looks to Bakken for insight on economy


A national banking official said he looks to North Dakota’s oil industry for clues about the health of the region’s economy.

“The Bakken, and North Dakota, is very interesting in giving me insight into what’s happening here and what it means for the broader economy,” Neel Kashkari said Thursday, May 16, while speaking at the Williston Basin Petroleum Conference in Bismarck.

Kashkari is president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, which serves North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, Minnesota, as well as part of Wisconsin and Michigan. The Federal Reserve Banks are independent financial institutions that manage the U.S. economy.

In ordinary circumstances, when the economy is healthy, unemployment is low and the average rate of inflation is about 2%. However, if one of those factors is thrown out of whack, the Federal Reserve may decide to intervene.

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“If the economy is growing too slowly, we will traditionally cut interest rates to try to give it a boost,” Kashkari said. “If the economy is overheating and inflation is too high, like recent experience, we will raise interest rates to try to tap the brakes in the economy to bring inflation back down.”

The Federal Reserve conducts extensive research to help inform those decisions, he said — including looking at employment trends in the Bakken.

“There have been times when the labor market here is incredibly tight, and it’s not been so tight around the U.S. economy, and you’re drawing in workers from all over America to come here — creating opportunity, high wages, and also challenges here in the local economy,” Kashkari said of North Dakota.

Neel Kashkari, president and CEO of the Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank, speaks to event attendees during the Williston Basin Petroleum Conference at the Bismarck Event Center on May 15, 2024.

Michael Achterling / North Dakota Monitor

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Recently, that hasn’t been the case, though. The whole country has had more jobs available than workers to fill them.

“If you have a particularly hot sector, you can’t simply draw workers from the rest of the country, because everyone around the rest of the country also has tight labor markets,” he said.

According to Kashkari, tribal economies are another important part of the Minneapolis Federal Reserve’s research. That’s because even when the U.S. economy is strong, tribes often face barriers that prevent them from accessing that wealth.

Their hope is to identify policies that governments can use to break down those barriers.

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“Tribal economies have a unique set of challenges,” Kashkari said. “The economy may do well, different businesses may do well, and we still have people who are not participating in our economy.”

So where is the U.S. economy right now?

A mix of factors — including COVID-19, supply chain issues, an increased demand for consumer goods and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — caused global inflation to surge in 2021, 2022 and 2023.

These days, however, the economy is doing pretty well, Kashkari said.

Nationwide unemployment is relatively low — it was under 4% as of the end of April, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. And while inflation is still rising more quickly than ideal at around 3.5%, it’s a far cry from its peak of 9% in late 2022.

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Consumer spending is also strong.

“As much gloom as there appears to be when people are surveyed about how they feel about the economy, most people are spending like they feel pretty good about the economy,” he said. “If you go on airplanes, they’re usually full. If you go to restaurants, they’re usually full. If you go to a hotel, they’re usually busy.”

The housing market has been unexpectedly resilient, too, he said. It’s remained competitive even after a series of mortgage hikes by the Federal Reserve in 2022 and 2023.

The average rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage hovered around 3% before 2022, but is about 7.5% today.

“We think that there’s a pent-up demand for housing,” Kashkari said. “There’s been a pent-up shortage of housing across our economy for the last decade.”

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The conference, which has more than 2,200 attendees, continues through Thursday.

This story was originally published on NorthDakotaMonitor.com

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This story was written by one of our partner news agencies. Forum Communications Company uses content from agencies such as Reuters, Kaiser Health News, Tribune News Service and others to provide a wider range of news to our readers. Learn more about the news services FCC uses here.

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