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[quote=Anonymous]Why Are They Proposing Citizenship for the Children of Temporary Workers? That question alone should set off alarms. The Dream Act of 2025 is sponsored by Sen. Richard Durbin and Sen. Lisa Murkowski. It did not come from labor groups or unemployed Americans. It came from Washington’s long-running coalition of immigration expansion politicians and the corporate lobbyists behind them. Nothing in this proposal helps a single American. While displaced tech workers wait for relief, Washington somehow has endless energy for expanding the labor pipeline that replaces them. Temporary visas were never meant to become permanent settlement programs. Yet this bill proposes a green card pathway not just for Dreamers, but for the children of H-1B, L, E, and other temporary visa holders. Ask yourself what the real intent is. Children do not choose the visa system. Employers do. By granting citizenship pathways through children, the government quietly creates a backdoor path to permanence for the entire temporary workforce. If a temporary visa results in long-term population growth through dependents, is it still a temporary visa? Or has Congress quietly turned it into something else? This is not accidental. It is structural. Corporations bring in temporary workers. Lobbyists push “compassionate” fixes. Politicians convert temporary status into permanent residency. Over time, every temporary program becomes a settlement pipeline. Meanwhile the social media prostitutes are talking about non-existent labor shortages, ignoring the truth while cashing checks for every post they put out. And this is happening while 18 to 20 million working-age American men are out of the labor force, not including millions of women as well. Not retired. Not disabled. Not in school. Simply ignored. Instead of rebuilding domestic labor participation, Congress is locking in foreign labor permanence. Instead of raising wages and training Americans, they are stabilizing global labor supply chains. This is not about children. It is about policy design. It is about creating a workforce model that is cheaper, more dependent, and easier for global corporations to control. The beneficiaries are the same people who profit from every labor shortage narrative. At what point should we reevaluate a temporary work visa if the number of dependents grows beyond what the program was designed to support? A government serious about Americans would start with Americans. Instead, it is designing a future workforce around imported labor and asking citizens to accept it after the fact. Should temporary worker programs be reconsidered when they begin expanding the population instead of filling short-term labor gaps? Most people have no idea this is how the system expands. But once you see it, you cannot unsee it. https://x.com/barefootstudent/status/2000687814912938242?s=46[/quote]
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