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  • When you import a “third world” population you become a “third world” nation. The economic integration of North America will mitigate some of the worst aspects of this problem, but some trends are emerging
    1. Corporations and the wealthy are absenting their money and sometimes themselves to avoid taxes
    2. Private security companies are becoming a land office business guarding rich areas from poor areas
    3. Prison populations continue to explode
    4. Police forces continue to militarize (Mexico’s ‘drug war’ is the future of Canada and the USA)
    5. Non-tradable low wage services jobs are being created in large numbers to insure that the working poor don’t become the idle poor
    6. Large numbers of American and Canadian middle class and wealthy individuals (over 6 million to date) are buying homes and investing in Mexico
    7. Politics is joining sports and other entertainment industries as meaningless distractions for ‘the masses’ economics (resources control) is what matters and government is becoming a side show to that
    8. Mexico’s new president is promising to turn Mexico into the North American sweat shop for repatriated jobs from Asia
    9. Robots are becoming the workers and soldiers of the future.
    I could go on but why bother?

    Reply to: The Permanent Dependency Class   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • Who could have predicted this? Oh, wait.
    UBS will pay a fine it has been declared, no one goes to jail or prison, and they will continue to operate their business as if nothing happened. Until they commit another crime, they will lobby the DOJ and regulators, no one goes to jail or loses a job (at least at the top bankster levels, pay a fine, rinse and repeat). And the fines, well, of course those will just be passed on to customers in the form of higher fees. And if they can't bleed clients or customers enough, they can always threaten to collapse and take the world with them (like good parasites, they apparently will sacrifice the host to survive) and then demand taxpayer $ for free like TARP from which to pay any fines and also megasalaries and bonuses. UBS, Barclays, and everyone else will go on as if nothing happened. I guess the people that paid and lost billions and trillions in the aggregate over all these years for paying way too much for $ will just have to suck it up. How's that for fairness or justice or capitalism or equality before the law? What a fantastic "free market" where a tiny group of people can rig a system to steal money and get away with it. I wonder, which book is this system praised in? Ayn Rand's? Is this the Utopian capitalism? Socialism? Communism? Anarchy? A piece of crap?

    Compare what would happen if a small business or a group of regular citizens decided to pay bribes, commit wire or mail fraud daily involving thousands, or millions, or billions of dollars internationally involving individuals all the way up to national governments and multinationals, fix prices, etc. with tens of thousands of documents and witnesses proving easily they broke dozens of laws. Who would they lobby at the local DA's office to avoid culpability? Would the DOJ return their phone calls and meet them for lunch until a sweet deal was hammered out? Would their local city council members meet them, let alone Senators and Reps.? No, it's a quick indictment, a quick press conference by local authorities, 20+ years in prison for them even if they acted as a business, massive fines and forfeitures that would destroy them and their families and businesses. But that matters not in the United States and Global World of Banksterism. Break the law, step on other people, cry poverty and unfairness when someone calls you out and ask that criminals please, please not make $40 million/year. Damn it pays to be a bankster (literally and figuratively). Rules, morals, we don't need no stinkin' rules and morals.

    Reply to: Leapin' LIBOR - Banks Busted For Manipulating InterBank Interest Rates   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • For example, a candidate for a House seat may raise no more than $1,000 per year from individuals who are adult residents of the district. That would provide about $200,000 available to fight a general election. A Senator could raise $1,000 a year from constituents in that state, so in California about $20,000,000, or double that if the candidate starts raising money in previous years. It would be a felony to accept funds from anyone outside the district or state, from any PAC, corporation, lobbyist, political party, etc. - from anyone not in the district or state, or any entity whatever. Presidential candidates would have the same rules, but on a national level, giving them a potential generous kitty of $100,000,000.

    The objections?

    1. How to enforce this? You would need watchdogs with investigative and enforcement power - a bureaucracy really, on the federal level.

    2. The whole primary extravaganza would have to be curtailed somehow and the general election campaign shortened.

    3. What to do about in-kind donations? Someone in that district volunteering to go door to door for the candidate can not be objected to, or manning phones or GOTV efforts. But paying for air time for the candidate? That has to count against the $1,000.

    4. Television stations would scream to the heavens. That's probably a good thing, but for sure they have become dependent on this two year advertising bonanza that comes their way.

    5. Lobbyists and wealthy interests could still influence voting once a candidate wins an election. That brings us back to limiting lobbying somehow. Maybe you make it okay for a elected representative to meet with corporate or lobbying interests, as long as they don't accept any money or in-kind donations or free trips, etc. That would make it at least as important for the politician to meet with an actual constituent as anyone else.

    Somehow we have to look to the British parliamentary system for some answers. They manage to keep the entire campaign period down to a month and expenditures well under control. We simply must do the same, even if it takes a Constitutional amendment to put some of this in place.

    Reply to: The Permanent Dependency Class   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • We write about economics and labor economics (check out our articles!).

    References used for the statistics are mostly linked above. USCIS H-1B info is in separate reports to Congress, bi-annual, titled "Characteristics of H-1B Specialty Workers" for Fiscal years, the last being FY11. Here is FY 2011, which has the data in tables sprinkled through the report.

    The Economic Populist is officially the media. We're a news source and often are cited by much larger organizations. Hopefully others will stop publishing spin and dig out these statistics, the same as I just did.

    I've seen some ridiculous pieces that are beyond belief statistical spin, not only in the press, but those same lobbyist talking points come out of the mouths of Congressional representatives on their sites and on the House and Senate floor. Sad, which goes to show how the American scientific community is overall going downhill. Spin is presented as fact and the ethical code of "thou shalt not spin thy statistics" clearly isn't being followed. Downright immoral.

    The reality is most STEM jobs require a BS only, although they usually want some sort of work experience, such as internships and co-ops as well as mastery. There are some jobs where a MS is listed on the job requirements, but it must be a U.S. MS, which is 30 credit hours past the 120 STEM credit hours at the better schools. Still, many employers consider those with BS degrees in those jobs due to excellence and previous experience.

    Obviously Academia jobs often require a PhD, yet tenure track have disappeared and Post Docs are covered under the J-1 Visa as well as Academia has unlimited H-1B Visas, they are exempt. Teaching positions, including Academia, universities, are not included in these BLS occupational categories utilized for this article.

    Many other countries MS is really a MSc, which can be 120 credit hours (the same as a U.S. BS degree) to only 90 credit hours. Additionally there is much less design and labs requirements in other nations. To make it more confusing some schools abroad are matching the U.S. BS and MS requirements while other schools in that nation do not.

    There also are some advanced research jobs which require a PhD. Still, even BS degreed people work in research labs, but again, it's talent and experience dependent quite often.

    That said, very obviously one doesn't necessarily need even a BS degree to innovate, as evidenced by our now labor arbitraging Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg. Google search was developed by two PhD students who did complete their MS but got their idea while thinking about PhD dissertations. I should also mention Sergey Brin was brought over to the U.S. as a child, which clearly isn't the same thing as coming over to the states as labor arbitrage cannon fodder in terms of opportunities to innovate.

    Additionally, the United States has an unlimited Visa, the "O" Visa for true excellence, although those achievements had to be accomplished before entry into the U.S.

    Honestly, this was so easy to examine this statistics, even though I look at economic and labor statistics daily, I really was shocked as I researched this article to see how obvious it was not only is there no worker shortage, STEM occupations are not even really growing by size!

    A final note, most H-1Bs are BS degreed but unfortunately the USCIS does not require proof or U.S. equivalent degrees listed. Therefore those BS degrees could be a BSc which is more like trade school in many countries, or at best community college here and I already discussed the issues with a "MS" as above. A PhD is usually a PhD, it's the terminal degree and it's merit is more the school, the adviser and most importantly the quality of the publications and research performed by the person holding the Doctorate.

    So, to present this material to lawmakers one needs to write them, visit their offices and prepare your own documentation. I can tell you what corporate lobbyists do (beyond give millions in campaign donations and high paying jobs to friends and family members).

    Corporate lobbyists put together media packages, which #1 consist of a 1 page flier with "talking points" they want to be "known". Now those talking points are very often fiction, spun with some biased paper or research by some propped up person posing as a research "group" or think tank and so on. That said, they always give 1 page flier talking points to Congressional staff with their other 1 page agenda. Then, they "repeat the lie" over and over until the "lie becomes truth". Lobbyists also actually write legislation they want "introduced" by a Congressional representative (and you thought Congress wrote their own bills, ha ha).

    What regular people need to do is "repeat the truth until it becomes truth again" for corporate lobbyists have been spoon feeding politicians pure bunk (along with their money) for over 30 years in order to labor arbitrage U.S. STEM.

    The other thing lobbyists do is divide and conquer. While this is clearly a labor issue they use the phrase "racist xenophobe" to divide people and confuse the issues in order to get their agenda through. In other words, if you want your career secured, well, then, you must be a card carrying KKK member. This technique divides various political fractions who normally would join forces on labor issues.

    So, even as an individual, you need to make an appointment, put together a 1 page flier of talking points, then print out your back up research papers and there are many, from the GAO to Urban Institute to many other groups which are statistically valid and walk in and let it be known. Then the only thing that really can move Congress past corporate lobbyists and agendas is to shut down Congress by protests. That's voice, phone, sit ins, fax and general raising of hell (legally). It seems one can have the entire country in outright revolt but all Congress as well as this administration listens to are lobbyists, their campaign donors and uber-rich class.

    I'd say again it does seem the most active union is the AFL-CIO DPE and maybe one can start a STEM, not workplace affiliated branch. One thing is very obvious, U.S. STEM really needs some labor representation, power to organize and thus protect U.S. STEM career (labor) interests.

    Reply to: Congress Betrays The U.S. STEM Worker Once Again   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • Thank you Robert for your insightful and powerful article. Your information is too important and timely to American techs and their families who have lost our jobs, homes, and more because of the mythical skilled labor shortage /labor arbitrage scam. Does your organization or others on this thread have PR and Government Affairs horsepower to shop this story with the media and with the right influencers in DC?

    Reply to: Congress Betrays The U.S. STEM Worker Once Again   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • There are a few leftist historians out there who have observed that the US was designed and intended from the start to be an aristocracy with two classes of people: those with important wealth and those without, the latter subdivided into free and slave. Those with skin in the game got an official say in the workings of Federal government; those who don't, didn't.

    One lesson of the past 100 years or so is that the extension of the voting franchise to a larger segment of the population has not significantly opened up access to the levers of power or increased the influence which the median citizen can exert on policy. Those standing for national election, or appointed to offices, have generally been of the aristocracy, though we have had the good fortune that some of them have not forgotten _noblesse oblige_. Merely opening the vote has not actually opened the boundaries of political discussion much, because the group of constituencies with effective veto power over a candidate has expanded and strengthened. In particular, the importance of money as a veto point has increased drastically, as public election financing has fallen out of favor and statutory limits on private financing have been constrained by a Supreme Court that favors money as speech. Without a commitment to making affordable and available other social goods, such as health care or transit or post-secondary education or a fair share in productivity gains or a sustainable natural environment or the ability to run for public office on a reasonably even footing with anyone, how can one vote *against* wealth in a first-past-the-post voting regime?

    So, is the Constitution permanently fixable, even in theory, even if there were an informed, thoughtful, and willing electorate? Is there enough tar to patch all the holes of unearned privilege structurally conferred on the wealthy by the Constitution and a Supreme Court that has been tolerant at best of the rights of the underclass? Or would it be better to start over, with a charter that would make access to public goods, both enumerated and unenumerated, both tangible and not, a practical right?

    Reply to: The Permanent Dependency Class   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • We know your stories are true and please leave them for you matter. You might also start raising hell. Organize, go to your Congressional representatives town hall meetings, show up to their offices in person. Beyond the AFL-CIO DPE and the teamsters, believe that or not, there isn't any real organization out there representing your labor interests. The lack of political power is precisely how and why politicians feel it's perfectly fine to step all over you, offshore outsource your jobs, displace you with foreign guest workers, offer stipends so low you can't even rent a shoe box while in graduate school and on and on.

    Here's the kicker. U.S. universities are the best in the world, therefore your education is the best in the world, therefore you are the best in the world.

    Reply to: Congress Betrays The U.S. STEM Worker Once Again   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • I am a 2002 graduate of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from a top-20 university. Completed both my degrees in 4 years in the top quartile of my class. Sent out thousands of resumes to Silicon Valley tech firms and elsewhere, only to receive almost no response, or a response claiming the job requisition had been cancelled and that I should apply for other jobs. Meanwhile, employers who didn't need top calibre skills rejected me for being 'overqualified' for the few jobs they had available (not that it mattered, those jobs were receiving hundreds, sometimes thousands of resumes).

    It breaks my heart every time I hear the Silicon Valley employers are claiming a labour shortage without even bothering to open their resume queues and find them filled with folks like me. I could accept the situation if the employers interviewed me, tested me, and found I was less qualified than a competitor. That's the merit principle in action. But to just ignore me while claiming a need for foreign guest workers strikes me as completely unnacceptable.

    Reply to: Congress Betrays The U.S. STEM Worker Once Again   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • thank you for your work on this. As a working mechanical engineer, age 46, I'd just like to supply my personal history. I have personally seen 100's of my fellow Americans, blue collar and of course over the past 15 years my fellow engineers outsourced mercilessly. I'm getting close to that age where the next layoff may well be my last in the field. I was lucky enough to have only been let go in the downturn of 2008 but i have no illusions about retiring from this field.

    Personally I have seen only outsourcing and have not personally experienced being displaced by a foreign guest worker but I know others who have.

    The last company that laid me off in 2008 is named Winchester Electronics. A company that at one time employed 1000+ people in the state of Connecticut. A state that in my youth was noted for manufacturing. Please google this company and just note how many Free trade adjustment assistance they have been granted. By the way, they are now owned by the Audax Co. a offshoot of Bain Capital started by former Mitt employees or co-workers.

    I've seen honest hard working middle class people just trying to do the right thing and pay their bills thrown under the bus. It has truly disgusted and radicalized me.

    thank you for your good work.

    Reply to: Congress Betrays The U.S. STEM Worker Once Again   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • Robert, this is an excellent story. Thanks for your research and your excellent delivery. If I would have anything to add, I would discuss how the IEEE and the IEEE-USA, organizations that collect membership fees from disenfranchised US STEM workers, are leading the charge of betraying the US STEM worker.

    Reply to: Congress Betrays The U.S. STEM Worker Once Again   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • I think it comes from the very definition of an aristocrat- someone of the "landed gentry" who inherited his fortune who may or may not be equipped to manage it well. The first born son of a noble, after all, was not necessarily the best choice to run the family manor and estates, and in situations like England where title passed to the eldest son if there was one, it was quite possible for the estate to fall into dissolution under incompetent or wasteful management.

    In the case of the Waltons, we are one stepped removed even from that situation. They weren't expected to take over the family business, or at least Sam didn't see any of them having his ability to do so. A technocratic leadership at Wal-Mart was allowed to take over - faceless men who ruthlessly exploited the company's cost cutting culture and had none of Sam's paternalistic concern for his workers. His four children sat on the sidelines, each of them incredibly wealthy, but now several steps removed from the management of the company. They cared about their dividends and the stock price most of all. It is possible for them not to see the irony in their actions to eliminate the death tax, which are quite aggressive on the part of some of them. Instinctively they seem to have taken on the concerns of aristocracy to keep the aristocracy going. By the way, some of the other big players in this attack on the death tax are the Koch brothers and the successors to the Mars candy fortune.

    Reply to: The Permanent Dependency Class   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • While it took me a day to run all of these statistics, reporters have NO EXCUSE to not report the facts on STEM employment. One cannot even easily find the statistics used in this article, reporters have every responsibility to obtain accurate facts and figures and most do not! Google is front loaded with pure fiction, statistical lies, pumped in by lobbyists their 50¢ an hour SEO hires.

    As I went through the statistics I was really disgusted for they are much worse than I originally thought.

    You're not alone and folks, anyone, if you are not familiar with the requirements to obtain a U.S. BS in Mechanical engineering, Chemical Engineering, Computer Engineering, Electrical Engineering, let us just tell you it's one big bitch!

    These degrees are very hard to master, to obtain and one studies their ass off to get them. BS degrees are 120+ credit hours and some schools have no padding, no liberal arts, "easy A" courses to buffer with.

    In other words, people work very hard, study hard, must be bright else they couldn't have graduated, spent hours, thousands of dollars obtaining their degrees to face global labor arbitrage and then age discrimination. One cannot labor arbitrage people who has this level of skill and expertise and expect anything but ....well....
    what HP has become today, destroyed, a shell of the engineering company they used to be. Same with IBM if anyone is familiar with their very crappy work in a host of areas and of course....hmmmm, now about that Windows Phone, Surface, OS? Howz that going for ya labor arbitraging Microsoft? In other words, by displacing, churning, labor arbitraging U.S. technical workers, over the long term, these same companies are succumbing to the competition who do not practice such evil employee policies. Think S. Korea labor arbitrages their engineers? Not even close, it's S. Korean engineers preferred, every step of the way. This is way beyond their employee granted stock options being flat, plenty of other companies have none or are negative.

    Reply to: Congress Betrays The U.S. STEM Worker Once Again   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • Folks, anonymous comments are a courtesy for we want to hear your thoughts. For security purposes, links and so on are disabled in anonymous comments. Consider registering for an account where comments then become mini-blogs, with all of the links, images, citations to your desire plus one can track discussions through their accounts.

    Reply to: Congress Betrays The U.S. STEM Worker Once Again   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • As a mechanical engineer who has spent much of his so-called career either unemployed or underemployed, I agree with everything you said.

    There is no shortage of engineers. But no matter how many engineers are willing to grovel for crummy jobs, employers believe even more groveling is needed.

    Reply to: Congress Betrays The U.S. STEM Worker Once Again   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • Amen.

    This is why it is up to us to find a way to spread the word about what is really happening.

    The only way I know to do it is to find a way to bring it to a head in the media so that all of the people of America understand what is happening and why it will have a major impact on them.

    http://keepamericaatwork.com/?page_id=208796

    I attempt to do so via that link.

    As for the impact to America.

    Think about this.

    If you are a small business owner, say a mechanic shop.
    You might make 50,000 per year for yourself and you might pay your mechanics around 15 per hour and your helpers around 8 per hour and you might bill 65 or 75 per hour for labor.

    The STEM industry jobs are some of the highest paying jobs as I attempt to describe in this article.

    http://keepamericaatwork.com/?p=208652

    How many customers do you think you will have if the middle class is destroyed similar to what happened to me when I made 113,000 in 2002 and 6,000 in 2012?

    Reply to: Congress Betrays The U.S. STEM Worker Once Again   12 years 1 week ago
  • Just incredible the Waltons are subsidized by our tax money:

    "Because Wal-Mart is very stingy with health benefits, it actively encourages employees to use hospital emergency rooms for their health needs. The result of this is that Wal-Mart employees are the single biggest users of Medicaid, which is health care for those in poverty. Also, Wal-Mart employees are the single biggest users of food stamps. On average, a Wal-Mart employee receives $1,000 a year of public aid from the federal government. Yet the children of Sam Walton – Christy, Jim, Alice, and Rob Walton – each of whom as mentioned inherited $26 billion after the death of their father – actively contribute to Republican politicians who want to cut back on Medicaid and food stamps because such services are used by poor people, whom they consider parasites on society."

    Something is seriously wrong here. As this aristocracy regains control it will be more and more a nightmare for our citizens.

    Reply to: The Permanent Dependency Class   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • All statistics were derived by the author, from 1st principles, for this article. Sources are cited in graphs and there is more much detail derived which was not used in the above article for readability purposes. For more details on the statistics used for this article, please leave a comment and we'll respond.

    Reply to: Congress Betrays The U.S. STEM Worker Once Again   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • Good God yes and addition to that, remember when news wasn't parroting some pre-written lobbyist or political talking points that have no basis in reality?

    Reply to: Some Things to Do on Thanksgiving   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • Remember when the "NEWS" wasn't five people in a circle contemplating their navels.

    Reply to: Some Things to Do on Thanksgiving   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:
  • before the fire. About 2 years b4 the fire several thousand walked out, and to their surprise they were joined by tens of thousands other garment workers also protesting conditions, a culmination of previous labor struggles.

    I am not so sure the deaths of those workers would have meant as much without all their previous sacrifice and struggle (there were a lot of horrendous industrial accidents back then, both here and around the world, most of which you have to go look up in a newspaper, not a Wiki article).

    Just to say that we can't forget the need to organize and teach, then leverage that work into change...

    Reply to: The Triangle Fire Goes Global   12 years 1 week ago
    EPer:

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