H1b visas. Anyone else work in technology and see the issues with this program and outsourcing?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:People like you OP do not hire for jobs like I do. You could not be more run in terms of skills. I hope and want and wish to fill my jobs with American talent from a culture and language/comms perspective. However I have Russian, Indian, Chinese and ever more frequently Nigerian talent in engineering and software development to choose. You think Americans are studying and getting skilled in engineering and you are wrong. So. Totally. Wrong. Culturally, Americans do best in finance, sales, business, law. They do not do math and tech. Go to high schools and you'll see all the kids playing sports are Americans and all those playing an instrument are either American who have a strong tradition culturally in academic all around excellence or they are typically those with a foreign last name. There's a tradition of studying math, science and STEM that's rooted in tradition v cultural oh I think that might be cool but maybe I'll go where the money is and it's easier attitude among most Americans. Quite honestly the truth is Americans are rockstar sales people. They are not rock star geeks



Americans created the microchip, integrated circuits, the internet,, and the personal computer.


Using foreign talent. It has been our secret sauce. Always.


Wrong. All of those were created by people born in America, who went through the American education system.


previous poster was being sarcastic.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of qualified American tech workers struggling to find work right now.

H1-B and offshoring has been massively abused by US tech companies to undercut and screw over our own homegrown talent.

It needs to end.


follow @chrisbrunet on Twitter. Great examples of how H1B is used to replace US citizens.

Especially how ...
- US universities claim they can't find "skilled" labor
- US universities train our children for "skilled" labor but apparently fail.
- Democrats sue to keep US universities ability to replace US citizens and continue to "fail" at producing skilled labor.

It would be comical if it was not so damaging. and somehow liberals believe this nonsense.

Texas A&M University just hired an H-1B "Operations Research and Reporting Analyst"

Salary: $57,262

The TAMU employee in charge of facilitating this hire was Sahar Zubairy, Senior Immigration Coordinator

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of qualified American tech workers struggling to find work right now.

H1-B and offshoring has been massively abused by US tech companies to undercut and screw over our own homegrown talent.

It needs to end.


follow @chrisbrunet on Twitter. Great examples of how H1B is used to replace US citizens.

Especially how ...
- US universities claim they can't find "skilled" labor
- US universities train our children for "skilled" labor but apparently fail.
- Democrats sue to keep US universities ability to replace US citizens and continue to "fail" at producing skilled labor.

It would be comical if it was not so damaging. and somehow liberals believe this nonsense.

Texas A&M University just hired an H-1B "Operations Research and Reporting Analyst"

Salary: $57,262

The TAMU employee in charge of facilitating this hire was Sahar Zubairy, Senior Immigration Coordinator



You see, H-1B is for "skilled" labor that US universities are unable to produce ...

The University of Denver (@UofDenver) just posted notices of intent to hire two H-1B workers

Assistant Director of Student Affairs - salary: $59,386
IT Network Analyst - salary: $62,941

link -> https://www.du.edu/human-resources/jobs-at-du/internal-notice-filing-labor-condition-application

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The Trump administration is crippling the HB1 visa program by requiring employers to pay a $100,000 fee—most won’t do it. Isn’t that what you want? Fewer HB1 visas to go to foreigners?

H2B visas are another matter…

We want H2 visas. We want them and our economy would die without them. Last summer, farmers and agriculture threw away thousands of tons of produce. Maybe they learned something in the government from that crap show.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of qualified American tech workers struggling to find work right now.

H1-B and offshoring has been massively abused by US tech companies to undercut and screw over our own homegrown talent.

It needs to end.


follow @chrisbrunet on Twitter. Great examples of how H1B is used to replace US citizens.

Especially how ...
- US universities claim they can't find "skilled" labor
- US universities train our children for "skilled" labor but apparently fail.
- Democrats sue to keep US universities ability to replace US citizens and continue to "fail" at producing skilled labor.

It would be comical if it was not so damaging. and somehow liberals believe this nonsense.

Texas A&M University just hired an H-1B "Operations Research and Reporting Analyst"

Salary: $57,262

The TAMU employee in charge of facilitating this hire was Sahar Zubairy, Senior Immigration Coordinator



You see, H-1B is for "skilled" labor that US universities are unable to produce ...

The University of Denver (@UofDenver) just posted notices of intent to hire two H-1B workers

Assistant Director of Student Affairs - salary: $59,386
IT Network Analyst - salary: $62,941

link -> https://www.du.edu/human-resources/jobs-at-du/internal-notice-filing-labor-condition-application


This is a scam way they get around paying 100k. They have a student that is foreign and in that job. They change status while in the US. Then they avoid the fee.
Anonymous
If you don't understand the scope of H1B overtaking the U.S. high tech landscape? Take a drive to the Broadlands neighborhood in Ashburn, VA. It is heavily Indian. They are buying new $1M+ houses with all the bells and whistles.

Do you think these H1B immigrants who are buying these homes are underpaid and overworked? Man, do I have a bridge to sell ya.

There are other previous threads that carefully spell out the scam pipeline involving bribery, South Asians responsible for the hiring process, etc. I urge everyone to read them.

This scam pipeline is hurting American workers. I live in Loudoun County and see the surging population of H1B immigrants. My friends and neighbors, brilliant and profoundly qualified, are losing their jobs to these people.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:If you don't understand the scope of H1B overtaking the U.S. high tech landscape? Take a drive to the Broadlands neighborhood in Ashburn, VA. It is heavily Indian. They are buying new $1M+ houses with all the bells and whistles.

Do you think these H1B immigrants who are buying these homes are underpaid and overworked? Man, do I have a bridge to sell ya.

There are other previous threads that carefully spell out the scam pipeline involving bribery, South Asians responsible for the hiring process, etc. I urge everyone to read them.

This scam pipeline is hurting American workers. I live in Loudoun County and see the surging population of H1B immigrants. My friends and neighbors, brilliant and profoundly qualified, are losing their jobs to these people.



I would like to share my personal experience.   I have been developing software since 1982.

In 1980s and 1990s software development was a great career. I was trained in fortran. I was a business major but a company took a chance on me and trained me to do software development. No companies will do that today.

In 1990's I hired many folks with 2 year associate degrees and trained them to be developers.  that is unheard of today.  training budgets have been mostly eliminated for software developers. and the reason is simple, supply and demand.

The 1990 Bush Immigration bill for H1B and the executive order in 2007 for OPT  unleashed a huge migration of cheap temporary "guest" workers. There became a huge supply of cheap disposable workers, and companies took advantage of that.

stop the overwhelming supply and the market will adjust. now tech workers are getting fired , tens of thousands, and we have hundreds of thousands of cheap visas for foreign workers.

call your senators and congressman. repeal or pause the H1B and OPT visas. There is no worker shortage.   this is government manipulation of the labor market to benefit big companies on the backs of US workers. 

the tragedy is that Democrats have been brainwashed. They believe Zuckerberg/Musk etc as gospel. Instead of listening to the youth and other young adults struggling to find good jobs. They should be leading the effort to repeal H-1B, OPT, L1 visa programs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The Trump administration is crippling the HB1 visa program by requiring employers to pay a $100,000 fee—most won’t do it. Isn’t that what you want? Fewer HB1 visas to go to foreigners?

H2B visas are another matter…


Yes and no. I suspect it won’t fix the issue as co will offshore more and also hide their hiring behind vendor contracts.

Ex I am not going to hire an employee to do X Y Z in the US. Instead I’ll contract with A company (often an offshore company with a US registered entity) for projects that do XYZ and I can terminate my contract easily.

See how easy it is?

if they could do that they would have done that instead of H1 as that is cheaper. But they need the workers here, and so use H1 if they can't get away with using L visa.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The Trump administration is crippling the HB1 visa program by requiring employers to pay a $100,000 fee—most won’t do it. Isn’t that what you want? Fewer HB1 visas to go to foreigners?

H2B visas are another matter…


Yes and no. I suspect it won’t fix the issue as co will offshore more and also hide their hiring behind vendor contracts.

Ex I am not going to hire an employee to do X Y Z in the US. Instead I’ll contract with A company (often an offshore company with a US registered entity) for projects that do XYZ and I can terminate my contract easily.

See how easy it is?

if they could do that they would have done that instead of H1 as that is cheaper. But they need the workers here, and so use H1 if they can't get away with using even cheaper L visa.
Anonymous
Yay, our resident Indian from Ashbourn is here. Can you tell me why Indians love new construction? I do too, but I couldn’t afford those closer to DC, and didn’t want a long commute.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:People like you OP do not hire for jobs like I do. You could not be more run in terms of skills. I hope and want and wish to fill my jobs with American talent from a culture and language/comms perspective. However I have Russian, Indian, Chinese and ever more frequently Nigerian talent in engineering and software development to choose. You think Americans are studying and getting skilled in engineering and you are wrong. So. Totally. Wrong. Culturally, Americans do best in finance, sales, business, law. They do not do math and tech. Go to high schools and you'll see all the kids playing sports are Americans and all those playing an instrument are either American who have a strong tradition culturally in academic all around excellence or they are typically those with a foreign last name. There's a tradition of studying math, science and STEM that's rooted in tradition v cultural oh I think that might be cool but maybe I'll go where the money is and it's easier attitude among most Americans. Quite honestly the truth is Americans are rockstar sales people. They are not rock star geeks



I hire in biomedical research and what you’re saying is true for us too. Not enough Americans are graduating with Ph.Ds and doing postdocs for the price that republicans are willing to pay via NIH funding. And yet, the work still needs to be done. If not, we will continue to fall further behind the rest of the world.


use your common sense - Long term labor shortages do not happen naturally in market economies.

https://users.nber.org/~sewp/references/archive/weinsteinhowandwhygovernment.pdf

"Upcoming labor market shortages will devastate Science and Engineering."

This was a mantra heard through much of the 1980s. And yet, the predicted “seller’s market” for talent never materialized as unemployment rates actually spiked for newly minted PhDs in technical fields. In fact, most US economists seemed to think that the very idea of labor market shortages hardly made sense in a market economy since wages could simply rise to attract more entrants. Yet we have had workers visas for over 34 years to alleviate mythical worker shortages.

In the late nineties, in the course of research into immigration, I became convinced that our US high skilled immigration policy simply did not add up intellectually. As I studied the situation, it became increasingly clear that the groups purporting to speak for US scientists in Washington DC (e.g. NSF, NAS, AAU, GUIRR) actually viewed themselves as advocates for employers in a labor dispute with working scientists and were focused on undermining scientists’ economic bargaining power through labor market intervention and manipulation.

Increasingly the research seemed to show that interventions by government, universities and industry in the US labor market for scientists, especially after the University system stopped growing organically in the early 1970s were exceedingly problematic. By 1998, it was becoming obvious that the real problems of high skilled immigration were actually rather well understood by an entire class of policy actors who were not forthcoming about the levers of policy they were using to influence policy. The NSF/NAS/GUIRR complex appeared to be feigning incompetence by issuing labor market studies that blatantly ignored wages and market dynamics and instead focused on demographics alone.

During the late 1990s I became convinced that in order to orchestrate lower wages for scientists, there would have to have been a competent economic study done to guide the curious policy choices that had resulted in the flooded market for STEM PhDs. For this theory to be correct, the private economic study would have had to have been done studying both supply and demand so that the demand piece could later be removed, resulting in the bizarre ‘supply only’ demographic studies released to the public. Through a bit of economic detective work, I began a painstaking search of the literature and discovered just such a study immediately preceded the release of the foolish demography studies that provided the public justification for the Immigration Act of 1990. This needle was located in the haystack of documents the NSF was forced to turn over when the House investigated the NSF for faking alarms about a shortfall.

The title of this study was “The Pipeline For Scientific and Technical Personnel: Past Lessons Applied to Future Changes of Interest to Policy-Makers and Human Resource Specialists.” The study was undated and carried no author’s name. Eventually I gathered my courage to call up the National Science Foundation and demand to speak to the study’s author. After some hemming and hawing, I was put through to a voice belonging to a man I had never heard of named Myles Boylan. In our conversation, it became clear that it was produced in 1986, as predicted, immediately before the infamous and now disgraced demographic shortfall studies.

The author turned out, again as predicted, not to be a demographer, but a highly competent Ph.D. in economics who was fully aware of the functioning of the wage mechanism. But, as the study makes clear, the problem being solved was not a problem of talent but one of price: scientific employers had become alarmed that they would have to pay competitive market wages to US Ph.D.s with other options.

The study’s aim was not to locate talent but to weaken its ability to bargain with employers by using foreign labor to undermine the ability to negotiate for new Ph.D.s

That study was a key link in a chain of evidence leading to an entirely different view of the real origins of the Immigration Act of 1990s and the H1-B visa classification. In this alternative account, American industry and Big Science convinced official Washington to put in place a series of policies that had little to do with any demographic concerns. Their aims instead were to keep American scientific employers from having to pay the full US market price of high skilled labor. They hoped to keep the US research system staffed with employees classified as “trainees,” “students,” and “post-docs” for the benefit of employers. The result would be to render the US scientific workforce more docile and pliable to authority and senior researchers by attempting to ensure this labor market sector is always flooded largely by employer-friendly visa holders who lack full rights to respond to wage signals in the US labor market.

The correlate of these objectives were shifts in orientation toward building bridges to Asia and especially China, so that senior scientists, technologists, and educators could capitalize on technological, employment, and business opportunities from Asian (and particularly Chinese) expansion. This, in turn, would give US scientific employers and researchers access to the products of Asian educational systems which stress drill, rote learning, obedience, and test driven competition while giving them relief from US models which comparatively stress greater creativity, questioning, independence, and irreverence for authority.

I wrote this up in a study that the National Bureau of Economic Research published. Until a few weeks ago, it was available on their website. With other studies now appearing that are consonant with my conclusions and the Trump administration studying a possible revision of legislation on visas, I am grateful for INET’s encouragement and willingness to republish my study.




This is amazing. Great job and thank you!
Anonymous
This is probably the best overview of how special interests affected the political process. How they scammed Democrats I still do not understand.

This time, the push to expand the H-1B would be primarily driven by the IT industry, rather than the broader business community that supported the original push for the visa. Along with Harris Miller, software giant Microsoft and semiconductor firm Intel emerged as major players in policy advocacy. Jennifer Eisen, who led American Business for Legal Immigration (ABLI), served as Intel’s public policy advocacy director from 1996 to 2010.

Michael Teitelbaum, Vice Chair of the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform (also known as the Jordan Commission, from its chair, Congresswoman Barbara Jordan), described Intel’s lobbyist as “the most stridently opposed to our reform ideas when we met with high-tech lobbyists.”15 These tech firms not only advocated for H-1B visas but also funded several satellite advocacy organizations to fight on their behalf. ABLI, for example, “came mainly from Microsoft, Cisco, Intel, and other IT companies.”16 Additionally, there was support from within the government, particularly from Senate Immigration Subcommittee Chair, Michigan Senator Spencer Abraham, who focused exclusively on the H-1B visa issue. These industry advocates would exert pressure on Congress, both externally and internally.


https://americanaffairsjournal.org/2025/11/the-rise-and-fall-of-the-h-1b-visa/
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:If you don't understand the scope of H1B overtaking the U.S. high tech landscape? Take a drive to the Broadlands neighborhood in Ashburn, VA. It is heavily Indian. They are buying new $1M+ houses with all the bells and whistles.

Do you think these H1B immigrants who are buying these homes are underpaid and overworked? Man, do I have a bridge to sell ya.

There are other previous threads that carefully spell out the scam pipeline involving bribery, South Asians responsible for the hiring process, etc. I urge everyone to read them.

This scam pipeline is hurting American workers. I live in Loudoun County and see the surging population of H1B immigrants. My friends and neighbors, brilliant and profoundly qualified, are losing their jobs to these people.



That includes my white husband. Add to the fact that most of the recruiters are not looking to hire white men
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:People like you OP do not hire for jobs like I do. You could not be more run in terms of skills. I hope and want and wish to fill my jobs with American talent from a culture and language/comms perspective. However I have Russian, Indian, Chinese and ever more frequently Nigerian talent in engineering and software development to choose. You think Americans are studying and getting skilled in engineering and you are wrong. So. Totally. Wrong. Culturally, Americans do best in finance, sales, business, law. They do not do math and tech. Go to high schools and you'll see all the kids playing sports are Americans and all those playing an instrument are either American who have a strong tradition culturally in academic all around excellence or they are typically those with a foreign last name. There's a tradition of studying math, science and STEM that's rooted in tradition v cultural oh I think that might be cool but maybe I'll go where the money is and it's easier attitude among most Americans. Quite honestly the truth is Americans are rockstar sales people. They are not rock star geeks



I hire in biomedical research and what you’re saying is true for us too. Not enough Americans are graduating with Ph.Ds and doing postdocs for the price that republicans are willing to pay via NIH funding. And yet, the work still needs to be done. If not, we will continue to fall further behind the rest of the world.


use your common sense - Long term labor shortages do not happen naturally in market economies.

https://users.nber.org/~sewp/references/archive/weinsteinhowandwhygovernment.pdf

"Upcoming labor market shortages will devastate Science and Engineering."

This was a mantra heard through much of the 1980s. And yet, the predicted “seller’s market” for talent never materialized as unemployment rates actually spiked for newly minted PhDs in technical fields. In fact, most US economists seemed to think that the very idea of labor market shortages hardly made sense in a market economy since wages could simply rise to attract more entrants. Yet we have had workers visas for over 34 years to alleviate mythical worker shortages.

In the late nineties, in the course of research into immigration, I became convinced that our US high skilled immigration policy simply did not add up intellectually. As I studied the situation, it became increasingly clear that the groups purporting to speak for US scientists in Washington DC (e.g. NSF, NAS, AAU, GUIRR) actually viewed themselves as advocates for employers in a labor dispute with working scientists and were focused on undermining scientists’ economic bargaining power through labor market intervention and manipulation.

Increasingly the research seemed to show that interventions by government, universities and industry in the US labor market for scientists, especially after the University system stopped growing organically in the early 1970s were exceedingly problematic. By 1998, it was becoming obvious that the real problems of high skilled immigration were actually rather well understood by an entire class of policy actors who were not forthcoming about the levers of policy they were using to influence policy. The NSF/NAS/GUIRR complex appeared to be feigning incompetence by issuing labor market studies that blatantly ignored wages and market dynamics and instead focused on demographics alone.

During the late 1990s I became convinced that in order to orchestrate lower wages for scientists, there would have to have been a competent economic study done to guide the curious policy choices that had resulted in the flooded market for STEM PhDs. For this theory to be correct, the private economic study would have had to have been done studying both supply and demand so that the demand piece could later be removed, resulting in the bizarre ‘supply only’ demographic studies released to the public. Through a bit of economic detective work, I began a painstaking search of the literature and discovered just such a study immediately preceded the release of the foolish demography studies that provided the public justification for the Immigration Act of 1990. This needle was located in the haystack of documents the NSF was forced to turn over when the House investigated the NSF for faking alarms about a shortfall.

The title of this study was “The Pipeline For Scientific and Technical Personnel: Past Lessons Applied to Future Changes of Interest to Policy-Makers and Human Resource Specialists.” The study was undated and carried no author’s name. Eventually I gathered my courage to call up the National Science Foundation and demand to speak to the study’s author. After some hemming and hawing, I was put through to a voice belonging to a man I had never heard of named Myles Boylan. In our conversation, it became clear that it was produced in 1986, as predicted, immediately before the infamous and now disgraced demographic shortfall studies.

The author turned out, again as predicted, not to be a demographer, but a highly competent Ph.D. in economics who was fully aware of the functioning of the wage mechanism. But, as the study makes clear, the problem being solved was not a problem of talent but one of price: scientific employers had become alarmed that they would have to pay competitive market wages to US Ph.D.s with other options.

The study’s aim was not to locate talent but to weaken its ability to bargain with employers by using foreign labor to undermine the ability to negotiate for new Ph.D.s

That study was a key link in a chain of evidence leading to an entirely different view of the real origins of the Immigration Act of 1990s and the H1-B visa classification. In this alternative account, American industry and Big Science convinced official Washington to put in place a series of policies that had little to do with any demographic concerns. Their aims instead were to keep American scientific employers from having to pay the full US market price of high skilled labor. They hoped to keep the US research system staffed with employees classified as “trainees,” “students,” and “post-docs” for the benefit of employers. The result would be to render the US scientific workforce more docile and pliable to authority and senior researchers by attempting to ensure this labor market sector is always flooded largely by employer-friendly visa holders who lack full rights to respond to wage signals in the US labor market.

The correlate of these objectives were shifts in orientation toward building bridges to Asia and especially China, so that senior scientists, technologists, and educators could capitalize on technological, employment, and business opportunities from Asian (and particularly Chinese) expansion. This, in turn, would give US scientific employers and researchers access to the products of Asian educational systems which stress drill, rote learning, obedience, and test driven competition while giving them relief from US models which comparatively stress greater creativity, questioning, independence, and irreverence for authority.

I wrote this up in a study that the National Bureau of Economic Research published. Until a few weeks ago, it was available on their website. With other studies now appearing that are consonant with my conclusions and the Trump administration studying a possible revision of legislation on visas, I am grateful for INET’s encouragement and willingness to republish my study.




This is amazing. Great job and thank you!


What's frustrating is just how embedded this in our government. Numerous agencies are involved, DOL, DHS (USCIS), scientific agencies, DOJ(looking the other way giving Apple/Meta) slaps on the wrists, Department of Education, scientific agencies HHS.

Who needs a government like that? This really needs to be purged from the system.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This is probably the best overview of how special interests affected the political process. How they scammed Democrats I still do not understand.

This time, the push to expand the H-1B would be primarily driven by the IT industry, rather than the broader business community that supported the original push for the visa. Along with Harris Miller, software giant Microsoft and semiconductor firm Intel emerged as major players in policy advocacy. Jennifer Eisen, who led American Business for Legal Immigration (ABLI), served as Intel’s public policy advocacy director from 1996 to 2010.

Michael Teitelbaum, Vice Chair of the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform (also known as the Jordan Commission, from its chair, Congresswoman Barbara Jordan), described Intel’s lobbyist as “the most stridently opposed to our reform ideas when we met with high-tech lobbyists.”15 These tech firms not only advocated for H-1B visas but also funded several satellite advocacy organizations to fight on their behalf. ABLI, for example, “came mainly from Microsoft, Cisco, Intel, and other IT companies.”16 Additionally, there was support from within the government, particularly from Senate Immigration Subcommittee Chair, Michigan Senator Spencer Abraham, who focused exclusively on the H-1B visa issue. These industry advocates would exert pressure on Congress, both externally and internally.


https://americanaffairsjournal.org/2025/11/the-rise-and-fall-of-the-h-1b-visa/


Did they scam them or were they paid for their help? Congress gets VERY rich, very suddenly after being elected.
post reply Forum Index » Political Discussion
Message Quick Reply
Go to: