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  1. #1
    EricSmith's Avatar
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    CFR Immigration: More Cheap Labor Import

    Many in Congress are CFR members, this may be a outline of what we will see.

    Section "Attracting Skilled Immigrants" starts on PDF reader page 102. (Page 82 of report)

    The Task Force recommends that foreign students who earn graduate degrees from American universities should be presumptively eligible to seek work in the United States and to receive employment-based visas. The exceptions would be students who come on scholarship programs (such as the U.S. Fulbright scholarship) that require them to return home after their program of study, unless waived for just cause. There should be no quotas on the number of foreign students eligible for work visas.



    The Task Force recommends that quotas for skilled work visas like the H-1B visa be increased, but fluctuate in line with economic conditions. Similarly, the number of employment-based green cards should not face a hard cap, but should be allowed to increase and decrease as economic conditions warrant. Under most economic conditions, the number of employment-based green cards should be significantly higher than current levels.

    The United States should retain a labor market test for the handful of companies that are heavy users of H-1B visas to ensure that they are also seeking qualified American workers. The United States could even consider restricting the percentage of H-1B workers that any single company could hire. But in general, companies should be free to employ skilled foreign workers without having to jump through expensive and time-consuming hurdles to prove that they cannot find American workers. There is simply no good empirical evidence that foreign workers are depressing wages, even in the skilled fields in which they are most abundant, such as computer programming and software engineering.131 The best way to prevent hiring abuses is for the government to fund and prioritize enforcement to ensure that H-1B workers are paid appropriately and not used to undercut similarly qualified merican workers. In principle, however, it makes no sense to restrict the immigration of those skilled workers who are highly sought after by many countries, and who would bring the greatest economic benefits to the United States.

    131. Kirkegaard, The Accelerating Decline in America's High-Skilled Workforce, p. 82.

    http://www.cfr.org/content/publications ... _TFR63.pdf

  2. #2
    Senior Member vmonkey56's Avatar
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    How are third world illegals more trained than Americans? Cheap labor and slavery is the mix.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  3. #3
    ELE
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    Disgusting betrayal of American workers.

    This is disgraceful with all the qualified Americans that are out of work they have the audacity to bring in people from out of our country.

    And not only is it immoral, it's stupid:

    The foreign workers aka illegals are not going to pay taxes? Americans will have to in fact go on welfare, if it is available to them being that they are not illegals.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  4. #4
    Senior Member GaPatriot's Avatar
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    In principle, however, it makes no sense to restrict the immigration of those skilled workers who are highly sought after by many countries, and who would bring the greatest economic benefits to the United States.
    Exactly how is it an economic benefit to the United States to bring in foreign workers and put Americans out of work?

    How's it working so far?

  5. #5
    Senior Member lccat's Avatar
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    Do we have a link to a list of the "Many in Congress are CFR members"? A list of those in Congress who continue to support higher H-1B work visas and increase work visas in general would be helpful? I would like to know if any of my Senators or House members are CFR members.

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