From Abroad to the US: Non-Citizens Starting Businesses

 OMG, like after analyzing the data, it's clear that these migrant farm workers in Scotland are totally lacking in cultural clout. The analyses of the data sources around their experiences not only in employment but also how they experience the process of social and cultural transitions suggest that the farm migrants experienced employment discrimination, hostility and negative stereotyping and their possession of cultural capital face obstacles in its activation and equal valuation. Equality of cultural capital is, like, hella complex, involving broader issues and instances where claims about cultural capital and equality are like, brought up. For migrant farm workers, such issues are like, hella important in shaping their lives, you know? .


By like, putting this research in the context of migrant farm workers, I was able to peep the kinds of treatments and challenges they went through, not just at work but also when it comes to their social and cultural changes, and then see how it affects equality and cultural clout. In doing so, I flexed how theory of equality (complex equality model under principle of distributive justice) and cultural capital theory have the tea for the study of equality of cultural capital by using interview data to peep the diff between the level of recognition and protection migrant farm workers receive from the state for their cultural capital, and the level of recognition and protection members of the majority receive. The research interview data be causin' mad debates, ya know? It can explain how migrant farm workers be livin' their lives, not just at work but also when they go through all them social and cultural changes. Such arguments that are made in conflicts often between members of the majority and the minority groups call for the attention to be paid to alternative interpretations of equality of cultural capital when approached from the perspective of members of the minority groups such as the migrant farm workers. They also be like, immigration control be straight up undermining the principle of the rule of law, ya know?35 Although higher fees for migrants would lowkey be lit for the country, a UK Border Agency (UKBA) fee increase impact assessment released in September 2010 shows that the increased fees are being slapped on because they expect less immigrants due to the current immigration policy.36

The cost is, like, not something that should be fully or partly paid for by the government out of general taxation or any other means, ya know? 


Those peeps deciding to take British citizenship gotta also contribute and pay the fees that are set to cover the cost of the service, ya know? Anyway, peeps tryna be British citizens should totally be like, where's all this cash goin' and who's gonna pay for the immigration fees? Like, who's gonna handle the costs of migrants choosin' to be British? I wanna flex that citizenship status is, like, a major key for equality. Whether migrant workers are treated with equality and if their cultural capital is like, totally recognized and protected can be tested by, like, checking their membership status in the community, you know? OMG citizenship is all about rights and responsibilities, so like, it means that everyone gets to flex the same lit set of freedoms and rights. This makes me wonder, like, is there, like, a difference in how the state treats the majority culture compared to the minority culture? Like, do they get more recognition and protection or what? Regardless of how one answers this question, like, the vibes for equality from cultural capital can't be actualized if citizenship doesn't include the concepts of respect, recognition and validation, sense of belonging, equal opportunities, personal well-being, participation and involvement. While research participants' experiences defo show why EU migrants should be treated equally with UK citizens, it lowkey makes you wonder if citizenship is still, like, mad undeveloped, you know?

It like, lowkey makes you wonder if migrant workers are actually down to gain citizenship by doing their thing and being responsible, ya know?


To flex cultural clout and become a UK citizen, it's crucial for everyone in society to show off their skills and be down to do those activities, ya feel? The like, total lack of interest from research participants (like, more than two-thirds) to like, engage with people and/or organizations makes you wonder if we should, like, give more importance to social networks and group memberships to, like, transform migrants' social network into other cool stuff and make their right to equality, like, a reality from cultural capital.For service providers, like, when there's, like, a huge wave of migrant workers, it's like hella hard to meet all their needs and it lowkey stresses them out 'cause resources might be mad scarce and stretched thin, you know? For farmers/employers, like, using migrants in low-skilled jobs is, like, a total challenge to the legality of employers' ability to handle the whole farm migrants' thing, you know? It's all about their rights and equality and stuff. For communities, migration raises a question of how the local community vibes, and what will those making the journey from the former communist states seeking work in Scotland be faced with when they arrive, fam

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