H-1B visas: It's wage theft, pure and simple, Neuberger

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June Zaccone

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Dec 31, 2024, 1:16:58 PM12/31/24
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It's wage theft, pure and simple Thomas Neuburger Dec 31






 

A bar chart from Revelio Labs that shows software engineers represent 20% of layoffs in 2023.
For those who bought the “Learn to code” lie (source)

“We live among predators, lions and tigers and bears, each determined to eat what they can of us before another takes a bite first.”
—Yours truly, here

This is something everyone who’s worked in high tech has known for decades. As I put it a few days ago: “H-1B is a wage-theft scam, because the rich aren’t rich enough yet.”

Now for some detail. First, from reporter Lee Fang:



Next this, about Amazon and its H-1B visa applications for warehouse jobs:



Image

And this, from right-wing commenter Ashley St. Clair. (She could lose her seat at the table if she keeps on like this.)



Finally, consider reading this data-rich thread regarding the “body shops” involved in H-1B worker trafficking:



Within which we find such goodies as thisten times the statutory limit of approvals per year. Your (well, actually their) government breaks the law for them voluntarily.



And this — almost all of these wages are well below market:



‘Learn to Code’

It’s very simple. High tech companies like Google and Apple (and, really, all of them) bring in foreign H-1B workers to 1) create indentured employees — people who can only live in the U.S. by staying in the good graces of their employer — and 2) keep Americans from earning too much. Because money.Share

Americans in high tech have been suffering through layoffs since 2022, massive ones, with no end in sight, and H-1B visas exist to fill the gap. Take that, well-paid American worker. “Learn to code” indeed.

We live among predators...

--
June Zaccone
National Jobs for All Network
http://www.njfac.org
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