[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

A Missile Shield for America - A Trillion Dollar Fantasy?

Kentucky School Board Chairman Resigns After Calling for People to ‘Shoot Republicans’

These Are 2025's 'Most Livable' Cities

Nicotine and Fish

Genocide Summer Camp, And Other Notes From The Edge Of The Narrative Matrix

This Can Create Endless Green Energy WITHOUT Electricity

Geoengineering: Who’s Behind It and How We Stop It

Pam Bondi Ordered Prosecution of Dr. Kirk Moore After Refusing to Dismiss Case

California woman bombarded with Amazon packages for over a year

CVS ordered to pay $949 MILLION in Medicaid fraud case.

Starmer has signed up to the UNs agreement to raise taxes in the UK

Magic mushrooms may hold the secret to longevity: Psilocybin extends lifespan by 57% in groundbreaking study

Cops favorite AI tool automatically deletes evidence of when AI was used

Leftist Anti ICE Extremist OPENS FIRE On Cops, $50,000 REWARD For Shooter

With great power comes no accountability.

Auto loan debt hits $1.63T. 20% of buyers now pay $1,000+ monthly. Texas delinquency hits 7.92%.

Quotable Quotes from the Chosenites

Tokara Islands NOW crashing into the Ocean ! Mysterious Swarm continues with OVER 1700 Quakes !

Why Austria Is Suddenly Declaring War on Immigration

Rep. Greene Wants To Remove $500 Million in Military Aid for Nuclear-Armed Israel From NDAA

Netanyahu Lays Groundwork for Additional Strikes on Iran: 'We Didn't Deal With The Enriched Uranium'

Sweden Cracks Down On OnlyFans - Will U.S. Follow Suit?

Joe Rogan CALLS OUT Israel's Media CONTROL

Communist Billionaire Accused Of Funding Anti-ICE Riots Mysteriously Vanishes

6 Factors That Describe China's Current State

Trump Thteatens to Bomb Moscow and Beijing

Little Bitty

Vertiv Drops After Amazon Unveils In-House Liquid Cooling System, Marking Pivot To Liquid

17 Out-Of-Place Artifacts That Suggest High-Tech Civilizations Existed Thousands (Or Millions) Of Years Ago

Hamas Still Killing IDF Soldiers After 642 Days


Immigration
See other Immigration Articles

Title: Visas for ‘the Brilliant’ Is Kushner Code for Replacing You
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.unz.com/imercer/visas-fo ... ushner-code-for-replacing-you/
Published: May 24, 2019
Author: Ilana Mercer
Post Date: 2019-05-24 08:58:10 by Ada
Keywords: None
Views: 1355
Comments: 18

“The U.S. government discriminates ‘against genius’ and ‘brilliance’ with its immigration system,” asserted President Trump, as he rolled out Jared Kushner’s immigration plan.

The president has insisted that “companies are moving offices to other countries because our immigration rules prevent them from retaining highly skilled and even … totally brilliant people.”

While it’s true that U.S. immigration policy selects for low moral character by rewarding unacceptable risk-taking and law-breaking—it’s incorrect to say that it doesn’t “create a clear path for top talent.”

Kibitzing about a shortage of talent-based immigration visas is just Mr. Kushner channeling the business and tech lobby’s interests.

No doubt, Big Business wants the “good” old days back. They currently operate in a labor market. They don’t like that, because, in a labor market, firms compete for workers and wages are bid up. Companies don’t like a labor market. They prefer that workers compete for jobs and wages not rise.

Multinationals, moreover, are stateless corporations. They are “global beasts with vast balance-sheets” and no particular affinity for American labor. But it’s not only about the Benjamins (to borrow from a U.S. congresswoman who, too, dislikes Americans).

The “men” who run multinationals are true believers. They are social justice warriors first; businessmen second. Tech traitors like the FAANG—Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, Google—are certainly radical leftists, who believe in replacing American labor as a creed and as a principle to live by.

Back to the talent-shortage myth. The 2017 IEEE-USA Employment Survey, which appears to be the latest from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, has some “bad news.” “The nearly two-thirds of U.S. IEEE members who reported being unemployed at some point during 2016, had not been re-employed by mid-April of 2017.” Hopefully, the updated report will be more upbeat.

Still, there is unemployment in the ranks of American electrical engineers. Yet for years, consumers of the H-1B visa (multinationals) have insisted they were bringing in the best and the brightest because America had too few, if any at all. Not true. The H-1B visa brings in ordinary workers to displace ordinary Americans, the kind the IEEE tracks.

Why doesn’t the president know that the H-1B visa category is a huge high-tech hoax, not a special visa for highly skilled individuals? It goes mostly to average workers. “Indian business-process outsourcing companies, which predominantly provide technology support to corporate back offices,” by the Economist’s accounting.

Overall, the work done by the H-1B intake does not require independent judgment, critical reasoning or higher-order thinking. “Average workers; ordinary talent doing ordinary work,” attest the experts who’ve been studying this intake for years. The master’s degree is the exception within the H-1B visa category.

While visa advocates—economist Stephen Moore, Trump’s adviser, is one—perpetuate the tall tale that the H-1B visa provides a steady supply of talent; visa opponents, for their part, like to cry croc about exploitation and slave-labor. I guess they think that misplaced compassion adds force to their arguments.

H-1B visa holders are not paid inferior wages. From the fact that an oversupply of high-tech workers has lowered wages for all techies, it does not follow that these (average) men and women are being exploited. Rather, it is the glut of average worker bees—their abundance—that has depressed wages for all. Which is just the way billionaire businessmen like it.

More significantly, and as this column has attempted to inform, since 2008, there is a visa category reserved exclusively for individuals with extraordinary abilities and achievement. It doesn’t displace ordinary Americans.

It’s the O-1 visa. There is no cap on the number of O-1 visa entrants allowed.

“Extraordinary ability in the fields of science, education, business or athletics,” states the Department of Homeland Security, “means a level of expertise indicating that the person is one of the small percentage who has risen to the very top of the field of endeavor.”

So, you see, America could recruit as many as it wished from the world’s pool of “totally brilliant people.” Access to this limited pool of talent is unlimited.

But this is not what business wants. When Big Businesses bend Trump’s ear about “top talent,” they mean, largely, the H-1B system. Touted as a means of trawling for the best and the brightest, the H-1B system is anything but.

In 2018, ten years after my O-1 visa revelation,* immigration lawyers who make their living by outsourcing American lives, are finally admitting as much: The H-1B visa was always meant to displace Americans. Via Forbes magazine:

“The drumbeat of an H-1B being intended to only bring the best and the brightest has been incessant the last three years or so. The problem is, of course, that was not the purpose of the H-1B and we already have a temporary visa for that – the O-1.”

* The principal sponsor in the Mercer family is a recipient of the 0-1 visa. The visa 0-1 visa replaces no American. It’s a unique-abilities/achievements visa.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 18.

#5. To: Ada (#0) (Edited)

There is no cap on the number of O-1 visa entrants allowed. ... 0-1 visa replaces no American. It’s a unique-abilities/achievements visa.


Americans need to start their own private-market economy (with private businesses and a private stock exchange) that imports nothing and employs no foreign workers.

GreyLmist  posted on  2019-05-24   18:20:33 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: GreyLmist (#5)

Americans need to start their own private-market economy (with private businesses and a private stock exchange) that imports nothing and employs no foreign workers.

This is easier said than done with all the EPA and OSHA requirements.

Most of the businesses have left the country with their manufacturing for precisely these reasons.

Detroit used to be the motor city because of the auto manufacturing. Now those buildings are vacant and crumbling.

GM is a mere shell of its former self and many of the dealers are gone for good. We had one here in this small town and it closed several years ago. The main show room was torn down and one of the banks bought the property.

It seems the banksters are the only ones making a profit, as untenable is it is. After all, fractional reserve banking is as crooked as it gets. ;)

BTP Holdings  posted on  2019-05-24   19:03:02 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: BTP Holdings (#6)

Don't overcomplicate this prospective project, BTP. Somehow the Amish manage to make their system workable so we should be able to also. I think we ought to be able use the abandoned buildings in cities like Detroit, that you mentioned, where those buildings could be repaired and increased in value by people who could work there and even have small apartments there as well, so that they don't freeze in the winter from homelessness. We also need our own private-market credit union and private-community alternate-currency option.

GreyLmist  posted on  2019-05-24   19:35:14 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: GreyLmist (#7)

use the abandoned buildings in cities like Detroit,

The problem there is the scavengers have gotten into those buildings and stripped everything of value, even drain pipes from the roofs. Rain water then gets into the buildings and causes them to decay more rapidly. Detroit is a shambles and nature is reclaiming everything. It is a little like the lower 9th ward in New Orleans. ;)

BTP Holdings  posted on  2019-05-24   21:04:56 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: BTP Holdings (#9)

use the abandoned buildings in cities like Detroit,

The problem there is the scavengers have gotten into those buildings and stripped everything of value, even drain pipes from the roofs. Rain water then gets into the buildings and causes them to decay more rapidly. Detroit is a shambles and nature is reclaiming everything. It is a little like the lower 9th ward in New Orleans. ;)

There is societal value by people simply volunteering their time to de-litter places that are abandoned. The problem is that the "establishment" monetary system doesn't appreciate it enough to pay people for such efforts. The valuation system is probably the biggest problem causing deterioration, imo. Change that to a private alt-currency system and things might soon start improving. Buildings that can't be salvaged could still be dismantled for re-use at others -- steel frames, bricks, that sort of thing.

GreyLmist  posted on  2019-05-24   21:47:55 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: GreyLmist (#11) (Edited)

Buildings that can't be salvaged could still be dismantled for re-use at others -- steel frames, bricks, that sort of thing

In Chicago when they would demolish an old brick building, the brick scavengers would come in and grab as many of the old "Chicago pink bricks" as they could. Those pink bricks have high resale value. ;)

BTP Holdings  posted on  2019-05-24   21:53:36 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: BTP Holdings, 4 GLM, Brick lovers (#12)

www.windycitybricks.com/w...que-brick-company-history

Our home and three of our rentals, built in the early 70's, have the Chicago Common Full Range bricks, unique and beautiful. They were plenty inexpensive back then or the builder wouldn't have used them; pre-EPA.

Lod  posted on  2019-05-25   15:15:05 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#18. To: Lod, 4 (#16)

www.windycitybricks.com/w...que-brick-company-history

Our home and three of our rentals, built in the early 70's, have the Chicago Common Full Range bricks, unique and beautiful. They were plenty inexpensive back then or the builder wouldn't have used them; pre-EPA.


I read in the comments for the 2nd video at Post #17 that those sort of high-quality, historical bricks (durable enough for re-use) cost about a quarter each. Even though that sounds affordable for smaller scale construction projects (burdened with the "establishment" monetary system), could even be a practical way to detour around the bulk of EPA/OSHA regulatory-obstacles, would function well and look grand, too, it seems that security guards would have to be available in the alt-currency community to work all hours of the day and night at every stage of the building projects to keep those prized bricks from being stolen and stalling the completion of those projects; which might also cause a patchwork appearance from not being able to acquire equal-grade replacement materials.

Somewhere amongst the discussions here of building a wall at our border with Mexico, I think I may have posted this Wikipedia link for making sun-dried adobe-styled bricks: "an air-dried brick, made of a mixture of loam, mud, sand and water mixed with a binding material such as rice husks or straw." They could be made quickly and easily, then dried in deserts (which would be more eco-friendly than a kiln and safer than a factory, except for rattlesnakes in the vicinity) and we'd have an alt-currency brickmaking business working to free us of the "establishment" monetary/commerce system designed for them to downtrod Americans. The EPA and OSHA shouldn't even object, imo, other than advising common sense standards like wearing snakebite-resistant boots and a wide-brimmed hat, work mostly when the sun is coming up or going down to prevent sunburns and heat exhaustion, have a cooler with enough drinking water at the worksite and don't leave any litter there.

GreyLmist  posted on  2019-05-28   19:42:01 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 18.

        There are no replies to Comment # 18.


End Trace Mode for Comment # 18.

TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]