If vote bank politics is the reason, I agree with that. But argument about blue color vs white color does not hold. Blue color votes are more important than white color. But by irking blue color votes, he is not risking much in terms of votes from his base and stands to gain by more Hispanic support. This year, there is no talk about giving more green cards. There were issues like HR 3012, EAD for H4 which does not increase overall green cards. Even there, we have not see any leadership. If Hr 3012 was simply put up for vote invoking cloture, it would have been passed. But someone has to use his political clout at the upper level of leadership which is lagging here. EAD for H4 was simply executive order which did not need any bill.
I agree with your last Edit para that when people have EAD/GC, they feel more secure. Even though one has H1 and a stable job, one would not feel necessarily stable/secure as he is dependent on H1 employer to stay in this country. He would not have flexibility to change jobs as GC person would have. So, my point as you have agreed to in your edit para is that America does tend to benefit by converting temporary workers to permanent workers.
Perhaps, best to move most of this last page into the 'left vs. right' thread.
To those on the left attacking Obama for being too far to the right, i agree with your concerns. I don't understand how people in the center can simultaneously attack him for being too far to the left. I am not a 'dyed-in-the-wool-liberal'. I have always been a moderate, and I like where Obama has stood all through these last 4 years. I think Obama has ranged between slightly left of center to slightly right of center on pretty much everything. Slightly right of center on things like drone strikes, medical marijuana, record deportations, and infact, Health care reform. Slightly left of center with the stimulus, Lilly-Ledbetter, energy policy and financial sector regulations. With the exception of the financial sector regulations, which I think Congress fluffed (not just him, by going too far on some regulations and not far enough on others) I think he's got it right every time.
However, I support Obama because Obamacare benefits me personally, and it will benefit most of you too. When you become citizens, if you want your parents to get their GCs and spend considerable periods of time in the US, the travelers insurance they use now will be insufficient. Your parents will not qualify for free Medicare or Medicaid and there is a 5 year period (until they become citizens) when they will not be able to buy into Medicare. Currently, insurance options for them are a) expensive and b) don't cover pre-existing conditions (if your parents have either diabetese or high blood pressure, basically all it covers are broken bones and little else) and c) have limited coverage ($50K for folks like my dad who are over 73). Right now, my parents do not want to spend much time in the US because of this. They don't want a significant health event to end up bankrupting my brother and me. If Obama wins, that worry ends. With Obamacare, starting in 2014, they will have have insurance that will take care of b) and c). Republicans argue that the coverage will still be expensive, but Democrats and many independent studies argue that prices will trend down. Eitherway, even if i have to spend$2000 a month on insurance, I will save most of that through nanny-cost / day-care savings.
For me the choice is both simple and personal. If Obama wins, my parents move to the US in 2014 and live with us (they already have their GCs, btw since my brother is a citizen). If Romney wins, I will get to spend less time with them. I suspect, this will be true for most of you, at some point in the future. You're just not aware of it yet.
NSC (originally TSC, transferred to NSC on 02/13/13) |-| PD - 04/25/08 |-| MD - 01/19/12 |-| RD - 01/27/12 |-| ND - 01/31/12 |-| Check Encashed - 02/02/12 |-| NRD - 02/04/12 |-| FPND - 02/09/12 |-| FPNRD - 02/17/12 |-| FP Early Walk-In - 02/24/12 |-| EAD/AP Approval & card production notice - 03/07/12 |-| EAD/AP RD - 03/12/12 |-| EAD/AP renewal RD - 12/11/12 |-| EAD/AP renewal approval - 01/22/13 |-| 485 Approval notice - 09/04/13 |-| GC RD - 09/11/13|
Thanks Pedro for the thoughtful post.
Despite all the criticism of Obama, if he wins and then when the dust settles on his 8 years as the President, I think he would be considered one of the great ones - surely on par with LBJ and FDR. Remember that Lincoln was not quite liked much either when he was running for his second term.
EB2I NSC | PD: 08/07/2009 | Forum Glossary
To say that H1bs have all the rights of American citizens except voting can not be further from the truth. H1b is dependent on his employer to stay in this country. The day he goes out of job, he can no longer stay here or for some reason USCIS or Dos decides that they are not going to approve h1b extension or transfer, that person can not stay. So his existence is dependent on various factors. That is not true for American citizen. When you are talking about revenue in the form of tax, you are only looking at the revenue from the salary tax. When temporary worker becomes permanent citizen, he is surely going to make more investments and revenue is going to increase in different for of taxes. I absolutely do not believe that giving EAD to illegal was because of national interest. If that was the case, there was no need to wait till election. It could have been done much in advance.
You and I normally agree on things, but with all due respect you have no idea what you are talking about. Non-US citizens no longer have customary due process rights or habeaus corpus which is a pretty big deal and goes right to the heart of civil rights and liberties, if not fundamental rights. In theory you are also required to carry your papers at all times - I don't think it can get more draconian than that.
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/pol...dead037877.php
That completely eviscerates your argument, which was weak as it is since, as already mentioned, H1Bs have employer mobility as most USCs do.
Civil rights exist precisely for such 'hypotheticals'. If civil rights didn't exist, such hypotheticals would be routine occurrences. In fact some already are despite laws to the contrary.
If you had actually wised up after reading 1984 you would realize that civil liberties are rapidly eroding around right before your eyes - the right to privacy, the right to a free and fair trial, the right to just and reasonable punishment, existence of probable cause for searches, etc. Go read about the NDAA and Hedges vs. Obama and other violations of civil liberties and then come back and tell me that the government won't persecute (or prosecute) you for what is essentially thoughtcrime.
How would you feel about attending an Occupy Wall St. protest as a H1B? What if they arrest you and charge you with something just for being in a park and supporting those kids? Does it reduce your motivation to participate? That's direct suppression of your 1st Amendment (which thankfully is still guaranteed to everyone on US soil regardless of their citizenship) right there. Good luck trying to fight the system on that. Civil rights are eroded in small pernicious ways that in aggregate result in a large scale impact to what the populace can and cannot do.
Anyway, it's hard to argue with someone who simply wants to ignore the facts.
And re illegals, it is a choice they make. I am not asking them to make that choice. They made it and they can live with the consequences of their actions. It's really not my problem. That is the brutal reality. (I'm not talking about DREAMers here, I mean the original illegal that migrated.)
Ironically - that is actually true for a variety of reasons: some rational some irrational:
1. The power of numbers. Legal backlogs runs into a few hundred thousands max. Illegal one is in millions.
2. The political expediency - Legal ones don't influence politics. Illegal ones do.
3. The job situation - illegal ones already have illegal jobs and are not pereceived to be taking jobs away. While legal immigration is attacked for jobs going to India or China or whatever.
4. Value / or Loss due to legal immigration backlog hasn't been demonstrated anywhere by anybody. Its anecdotal at best e.g. Bill gates talking about it. But how do you value 60K EB2 and EB3 bright people rotting in immigration pipeline? So unless somebody demonstrates that and makes a case for it is not going to make anybody believe that it is more important than the big numbered illegal alien backlog.
I no longer provide calculations/predictions ever since whereismyGC.com was created.
I do run this site only as an administrator. Our goal is to improve clarity of GC process to help people plan their lives better.
Use the info at your risk. None of this is legal advice.
Forum Glossary | Forum Rules and Guidelines | If your published post disappeared, check - Lies and Misinformation thread
I guess you will at least have Grassley as one taker of this argument. Correction here, he won't agree about illegal part. But at least you got 50% vote for legal immigration from him.
Grassley opposes legal immigration just like you who says it is not in national interest. Btw, do you support or oppose HR 3012? HR 3012 makes it easier for people to get green card. So, according to your logic, you should oppose it since it is not in national interest. And going further by that logic, there should not be any green card number available. That way, people will stay on H1, EAD which will be good for national interest.
Pl keep the discussion objective rather than personal.
I no longer provide calculations/predictions ever since whereismyGC.com was created.
I do run this site only as an administrator. Our goal is to improve clarity of GC process to help people plan their lives better.
Use the info at your risk. None of this is legal advice.
Forum Glossary | Forum Rules and Guidelines | If your published post disappeared, check - Lies and Misinformation thread
You can count me as supporter of Grassley on strict control of H1B.
We are forgetting that by H1B, we are getting very many special privilages than any other country in the world.
Only the issue is that with H1B, you have to have a job all the times. But that is the aspect of H1B-temperory worker in a special skills category and and nothing more.
Or else, you can come with extraordinary special catogory skills without any job ! No objection!
Frankly, once the H1B skills are avaiable locally, they are no longer needed and hence the 6 years limit rightly put.
Due to the dual intent nature, H1Bs can also apply for GC and that should be considered as an advantage as against other counries for eg. Middle East where people would stay only temperorily even for 10-15 years with the intent of going back to the home country.
As per the waiting times/Visa number increase etc. for EB2 and EB3, it is to be decided and guided by US economy,growth factors and local people.
If one thinks 10 years tax paying H1B with without GC is very hard.
But if so- why so many applicants for H1B in 2007/2008 even resulting in lottery.
it shows that despite all this, people still prefer this route of H1B to GC.
With recent 2007 and 2010 alloting EAD's you can not complain as it gave us a very good opportunity to stay on AOS even without job.
What more one would expect? dole and food stamps? like they do it in NZ and AUS but no jobs even for doctors who have to resort to driving cabs?
Stopping illegal immigration is like trying to hold a paper cup under a faucet. The focus needs to be on slowing down influx through border protection and legalizing the DREAMers. Without illegal immigration, a lot of the menial jobs will not be done in a cheap manner. So the cosy of your lawn care goes up, your nanny or housekeeper gets too expensive, etc etc.
I'm not in favor of solving illegal before legal but the reality is that it is a bigger problem in terms of sheet numbers. Plus it's a political play.
Not directly related to the topic at hand, but the Wadhwa report released by the Kaufmann foundation (summarized in this Murthy memo here: http://www.murthy.com/2012/10/23/kau...among-indians/) has some interesting points.
I don't endorse anyone engaging in the time consuming India vs. ROW debates, but to those of you who do, this may help combat the "Indians are all frauds" argument. To be clear, the numbers above probably mirror the % of EB visas given to each of these countries, so it would not support an "Indians are the best" argument either. It would however support an argument that, as a group, Indians pull their weight in terms of job creation, so a switch to a FIFO distribution of visa numbers and the resulting increase in Indians getting GCs at the expense of ROWers will not result in a change in numbers of jobs created in the US economy.Indian entrepreneurs rank first among immigrants that have founded companies since 2006, in high-tech industries like bioscience, computers and communications, innovation and manufacturing, semiconductors, software, defense / aerospace, and environmental products and services.
Several other findings underscore the pivotal role played by Indian entrepreneurs in the engineering and technology sectors, during the 2006-2012 period studied by the Kauffman team:
Indians continue to be at the forefront of immigrant-led entrepreneurship.
Of the total of immigrant-founded [engineering and technology] companies, 33.2% had Indian founders, up about 7% from 2005. Indians have founded more such companies than immigrants born in the next top seven immigrant-founder-sending countries combined.
The top ten sending countries of immigrant entrepreneurs in descending order were India (33.2%), China (8.1%), the United Kingdom (6.3%), Canada (4.2%), Germany (3.9%), Israel (3.5%), Russia (2.4%), Korea (2.2%), Australia (2.0%) and the Netherlands (2.0%).
Last edited by Pedro Gonzales; 10-24-2012 at 01:06 PM.
NSC (originally TSC, transferred to NSC on 02/13/13) |-| PD - 04/25/08 |-| MD - 01/19/12 |-| RD - 01/27/12 |-| ND - 01/31/12 |-| Check Encashed - 02/02/12 |-| NRD - 02/04/12 |-| FPND - 02/09/12 |-| FPNRD - 02/17/12 |-| FP Early Walk-In - 02/24/12 |-| EAD/AP Approval & card production notice - 03/07/12 |-| EAD/AP RD - 03/12/12 |-| EAD/AP renewal RD - 12/11/12 |-| EAD/AP renewal approval - 01/22/13 |-| 485 Approval notice - 09/04/13 |-| GC RD - 09/11/13|
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