By
John Miano,
February 21, 2011
By
John Miano,
February 1, 2011
By
John Miano,
September 27, 2010
I recently wrote about how two separate newspapers ran nearly word-for-word identical editorials on H-1B visas. The piece at issue he was published as an opinion of the newspaper without attribution to another source.
It has happened again with the same text. This time at September 26 editorial in the Ventura County Star: Read more...
By
John Miano,
September 10, 2010
Political correctness is the guiding force in most of the mainstream media's coverage of immigration issues. Very often the media's hunger for political correctness goes from out of touch with reality into the truly bizarre.
A September 5 editorial from the Metrowest Daily News in Massachusetts starts off like this:
In a rare show of bipartisanship last month, Congress approved a $600 million border-security bill to help cut off the flow of illegal immigrants.
By
John Miano,
July 15, 2010
I would like to bring an urgent situation to Attorney General Holder's attention. That is that the state of New Jersey is unconstitutionally interfering with the federal government's authority under Article I of the Constitution to coin money and punish counterfeiting.
New Jersey's action creates a patchwork of state and local policies would seriously disrupt federal currency enforcement. Read more...
By
John Miano,
May 25, 2010
The new law in Arizona addressing immigration enforcement has produced the predictable response from the drive-by media. The Denver Post tells us, "that the U.S. Constitution gives the federal government, not states, authority over immigration"
The U.S. Constitution, Article 1, § 8 states:
"The Congress shall have Power ...To establish an uniform Rule of Naturalization"
Below that passage, one also finds: Read more...
By
John Miano,
May 14, 2010
I read Sen. Reid's call to address the "challenge of fixing our broken immigration system" with great amusement.
Sen. Reid correctly notes that, "We have to replace this broken system with one that works."
The paradox, one that I have noted here previously, is that fixing the immigration system must be done by the same folks that broke it in the first place: Congress. Read more...
By
John Miano,
May 11, 2010
By
John Miano,
May 9, 2010
For those of us who support the principle that American citizenship should have value and that American workers should not be replaced by foreign workers in their own country, good news came on Saturday: Sen. Bob Bennett has lost his re-nomination fight in Utah. Read more...
By
John Miano,
May 2, 2010
Reading the Reid-Schumer-Menendez "Conceptual Proposal for Immigration Reform" drives home the inherent paradox of fixing the immigration system:
The same group that broke it in the first place -- Congress -- would have to do the fixing.
Reid-Schumer-Menendez demonstrate they are not up to the task. Read more...
By
John Miano,
January 21, 2010
Read more on IBM and H-1Bs
A couple of news items have converged with research. Recently, I have been reading the legislative history of the H-1B program. It is interesting to see how some things have changed and other things keep repeating. The H-1B visa was created in the Immigration Act of 1990. From the House Judiciary Committee we have the findings that: Read more...
By
John Miano,
December 15, 2009
By
John Miano,
December 4, 2009
Those of us who seek to change U.S. immigration policy so that it will no longer serve as a tool to displace, disrupt, and impoverish working Americans get subject to a lot of name calling: "xenophobe," "anti-immigrant," "racist."
Those who bash Americans generally get away unscathed in the press. There has been a surge an American-bashing articles recently. This one, claiming Americans don't do their "fair share," comes from Electronic Design news: Read more...
By
John Miano,
November 29, 2009
Over the past couple of days I have read a couple of editorials on guest workers in which the level of arrogance has reached new heights.
This gem comes from the Austin American Statesman. In it, regular contributor John Young asserts that those of us who want to limit the number of foreign workers do so because our "policy is driven by wanting to curb the flow of brown-skinned people."
Holy race card, Batman! Read more...
By
John Miano,
November 18, 2009
I just returned home from vacation. While doing the crossword puzzle in the in-flight magazine I came across:
44 Across: Dobbs of CNN
That was a bit out of date. Lou Dobbs has left CNN. And the lunatic fringe is celebrating. Much of what is being written about Dobbs borders on libelous. Read more...
By
John Miano,
November 17, 2009
The concept behind the "Big Lie" is that if you make the lie a big one and repeat it often enough, it becomes a fact.
A Big Lie that has been prominent in the immigration debate has been the existence of a shortage of tech workers. The repeated claims a tech worker shortage has been the rallying cry for industry calls for more cheap foreign labor, generally on H-1B visas. Read more...
By
John Miano,
October 29, 2009
The Wall Street Journal has a front page story today on that portrays a sharp decline in the number of H-1B visas.
The paper reports that "only 46,700" applications had been made for 65,000 H-1B visas available.
Intel's director of work-force policy and manager of the firm's immigration policies, Jenifer Verdery, proclaims that, "The fact that the 65,000-visa cap hasn't been reached this year shows that the market will temper demand when necessary" Read more...
By
John Miano,
October 28, 2009
The H-1B visa, that was supposed to be used to fill jobs where U.S. workers are unavailable, has created the business of importing people on H-1B visas. These companies are known as "H-1B bodyshops".
The way the system normally works is that a bodyshop gets H-1B visas for workers then rents those workers to other companies. The end company pays the the bodyshop who then pays the workers on H-1B visas. This arrangement allows companies to circumvent worker protections under the law and has detached H-1B usage from economic need. Read more...
By
John Miano,
October 13, 2009
The Indian news media is notable for its candor in regard to the H-1B visa program. While advocates in America will proudly claim with straight faces (and 13-inch Pinocchio noses) that H-1B cannot be used for cheap labor, the Indian press will tout the benefits of cheap labor that H-1B provides. Read more...
By
John Miano,
July 20, 2009
The U.S. currently has the very sensible policy of not allowing student visas to be the gateway to immigration. Currently the law requires that those seeking student visas must prove they intend only to come to the U.S. to study and will return home at the completion of their studies. There are, however, mechanisms for some students to remain in the U.S. after graduation. Still, as a general policy, the immigration system expects that one comes to the U.S. on a student visa only to be a student. Read more...
By
John Miano,
April 1, 2009
One again H-1B season is upon us. Today USCIS starts taking application for next year's batch of H-1B visas. Although we are in the midst of a severe economic downturn, it is likely the entire visa quota will be exhausted -- demonstrating industry's demand for cheap labor is insatiable. Read more...
By
John Miano,
March 11, 2009
The latest chapter in the Alice in Wonderland story of the H-1B visa program for cheap foreign labor surrounds provisions applied to employers receiving money from the Troubled Assets Recovery Program ("TARP"). Read more...