Nicole Shanahan: H1-B Visas a ‘Massive’ Cheap Labor Boon for Big Tech – IOTW Report

Nicole Shanahan: H1-B Visas a ‘Massive’ Cheap Labor Boon for Big Tech

Breitbart-

Nicole Shanahan, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s running mate in 2024, said on Thursday that the H1-B visa program delivers “massive breaks” for cheap labor for tech companies, and those with the visas are essentially “indentured servants” for big tech.

The selection of Siriam Krishnan as a senior policy adviser for artificial intelligence in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy has sparked a widespread debate over the H1-B visa program, which conservatives have railed as “abusive” and designed to undercut wages of white-collar Americans.

Vivek Ramaswamy further enflamed the controversy when he claimed that America “has venerated mediocrity over excellence.”

Shanahan weighed into the debate, stating emphatically that the visa program has been abused to serve as corporate welfare, as it delivers “massive breaks” for cheap labor for big tech, and that these visa workers are “indentured servants” for big tech companies. more

10 Comments on Nicole Shanahan: H1-B Visas a ‘Massive’ Cheap Labor Boon for Big Tech

  1. Big business went from putting a finger on the scale to increase H1B workers, to putting both hands and both feet onto the scale. This has gone on long enough that those US citizens entering the labor market today have seen first their grandparents, and then their parents, being jerked around by the system.

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  2. As an IT Project Manager with a BS in Computer Science and Certs from Lotus, Microsoft, Cisco, and Project Management I saw my 14 position shop go from all American IT workers with college degrees to H1B employees that had only certifications while loosing 4 positions in 8 years. I was the last one let go where a H1B guy got my position. As a tech he was making half of what I made. I had to change career fields to land a job.

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  3. Tsquared, it looks like the company is now getting the job done with 30% fewer people and paying 50% less money. Somewhere around 70% reduction in labor cost?

    Probably related to the 2 Reynolds Wrap boxes I have. The old one had 250 square feet of foil. The new one has 200.

    See? things are so much better this way.

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