Trump + Mass Deportation
Trump + Mass Deportation = Robot Revolution & U.S. As the 1st Robot Warrior Superpower
Huge food price inflation? Immense food waste caused by crops rotting unharvested? Recession caused by labour shortages? President-Elect Donald Trumpโs promise of mass deportation of illegal immigrants has provoked fears of all three. This article suggests that these problems can be solved and also an attack on the root cause of these problems is made by reducing the demand for human agricultural labour. At its most basic, illegal immigration is driven by demand for low-cost labor that is not met by those lawfully residing in the United States (the same is true in all developed nations). Unless and until that condition is addressed, illegal immigrants will continue to flood into the United States no matter how strictly border crossings are controlled or HB2-A visas are limited. As seen in the results of the 2024 general election in the United States, concerns over the United States loss of control of immigrant inflows is a political question that elected officials will have to address or face the electoral consequences. In short, the root cause of illegal immigration is the demand for low-cost workers in the United States. Until this situation is addressed, the related political and economic issues cannot be solved. In addition, in the near term, this technology is likely adaptable to defending the United States and its allies.
While there is no absolute certainty concerning the number of illegal immigrants presently in the United States, estimates range from a high of 25-30 million, by Senator Marco Rubio, to a low of approximately 10 million. In March 2022, the Center for Immigration Studies believed that there are 46.7 million non-native born people living in the United States (an all-time high in terms of numbers and percentage of the total population). Since Joe Bidenโs January 2021 inauguration, both numbers have grown dramatically. The vast majority donโt speak English (42%) or donโt speak English well (34%) and are poorly educated with 73% of illegal agricultural workers lacking even a high school diploma. A Profile of Undocumented Agricultural Workers in the United States – The Center for Migration Studies of New York (CMS) Many commentators have urged use of agricultural HB2-A visas to โsolveโ the problem of the shortage of agricultural workers. See Center for Immigration Studies, A Profile of Undocumented Agricultural Workers in the United States, Raquel Rosenbloom, August 30, 2022. Accepting the 46.7 million non-native U.S. population for the purposes of argument, the non-native population of the United States is approximately 14% of the total United States population, i.e., the same level at the time of the Immigration Act of 1924 (also known as the Japanese Exclusion Act). Similarly, about the same level of non-native population was a major contributing factor in Britainโs decision to exit the European Union. Historically, it appears that levels above 10-12% of non-native population are politically unacceptable to the existing native population. How can these two politically unsustainable situations be fixed without causing huge food price inflation, immense food waste or a recession? As usual, the answer lies in technology.
Currently, there are multiple companies that provide fruit and vegetable harvesting and de-leafing tasks. For example, Floating Roboticsโ robots currently pick and box strawberries, green peppers, cucumbers, grapes and chilis that are grown in a greenhouse. Floating Robotics, a Swiss company, asserts that its robots can harvest during the day and โautonomously carries out de-leafing operations without [human] supervision at night.โ Floating Robotics โ Robots Running Greenhouses Similarly, Agrobotโs robots harvest field grown crops and also de-bug these plants by aspirating them, i.e., suctioning them off the plants! Remarkably, Agrobotโs robots suction bugs from plants without using pesticides. Bug Vacuum | Agrobot: Agricultural Robots Agrobotโs robots are also sufficiently sophisticated that they are able to harvest strawberries without damaging the strawberriesโ flesh. Agrobot was founded in Spain and currently ships agricultural robots throughout the world and harvests, weeds, and prunes both in greenhouses and open fields.
Put simply, the technology exists to replace virtually all, or at least a very high percentage, of the illegal workers entering the United States for agricultural work. This will simultaneously mitigate the political risks of creating a permanent non-English speaking, ill-educated underclass whose descendants (who will be U.S. citizens after being born in the United States) will likely never fully assimilate into American culture as well as provide the tools to increase American productivity. Put simply, failure to adopt this technology creates the risk that mass deportations (no matter how politically desirable) will damage the American economy. Congress and the executive should act to ensure that these products enter the United States on an expediated basis and without tariffs.
But what are the other implications of this technology? If a robot can seamlessly and efficiently harvest the delicate flesh of a strawberry, it can fire a grenade or a machine gun. If a robot can โautonomously de-leaf without human supervision,โ why canโt the same robot autonomously hunt Russian or North Korean soldiers in Ukraine or Chinese submarines in the Formosa Straight or pursue those unlawfully entering the United States? The technology is essentially developed, if only it is put to the proper use, it can enhance the United States ability (and by extension that of the Western Worldโs) to defend its vital interests.
Viva the [Robot] Revolution!
Malcolm E. Whittaker is a former candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives. Malcolm is an engineer and patent attorney in Houston, Texas.
This article was originally published by RealClearDefense and made available via RealClearWire.