CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 2, 2013 OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JULY 2, 2013 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“ZUCKERBERG PAC: PATRIOTIC TALK, BUT SAME AIM AS THE OTHERS”
Now
it’s official: Despite happy talk about doing what’s best for America, Facebook
billionaire Mark Zuckerberg and the cadre of other Silicon Valley titans
helping with his new lobbying organization FWD.us are looking out for their own
self-interest, just like every previous political action committee or
billionaires’ club.
Zuckerberg tried to explain himself
the other day in the Washington Post, writing that U.S. immigration policy
today is “unfit for today’s world…To lead the world in this new economy, we
need the most talented and hardest-working people. We need to train and attract
the best.”
What that means is that Zuckerberg and
allies from companies like Google, Netflix, Microsoft, Yahoo, Yelp and
LinkedIn, along with some of the venture capitalists who bankroll many Silicon
Valley high-tech start-ups, want to bring in more workers on H-1B visas.
They argue there aren’t enough
American-born math and science majors to fill all job openings, leaving many
companies starving for qualified workers.
But critics call that claim exaggerated,
suggesting the real motive is to bring in workers at wages far below those the
companies would have to pay equally qualified American citizens. They say the
H-1B program, which lets companies bring in 65,000 workers annually for
six-year sojourns, trains foreign workers who often continue in similar jobs
for the same companies in their home countries after the visas expire. So the
H-1B program, they say, is essentially an outsourcing system designed to save
companies money and ship American jobs overseas.
One critic is Ron Hira, a professor of
public policy at the Rochester, N.Y., Institute of Technology.
He told National Public Radio the
other day that “What these firms do is exploit the loopholes in the H-1B
program to bring in on-site workers to learn the jobs of Americans to then ship
(jobs) offshore. And also to bring in on-site workers who are cheaper (to)
undercut American workers’ rights here.”
Stunningly, three of the four largest
users of H-1B visas – aimed at bringing
in skilled workers to fill jobs for which no Americans qualify – last year were
Infosys, Wipro and Tata, all India-based high-tech firms with facilities in the
U.S. H-1B workers are often paid 70 percent or less of what U.S. citizens make
for the same work.
The biggest H-1B users did not answer
queries about their use of the visas and the salaries they pay, but current
immigration law requires that the workers get “prevailing wages.” However, the
federal Government Accountability Office has found that supervision is “cursory”
at best, which means companies can get away with paying far lower wages to
immigrants than to citizens, because the immigrants are so happy to be here,
even temporarily, and what they get is still much more than they can earn at
home.
So it’s easy to see why Zuckerberg and
friends want more H-1Bs, despite any high-sounding talk. As with most things
political, follow the money to get a better understanding.
But
the high-tech tycoons know they’ll need politicians of all stripes behind them
in order to get a big H-1B increase into whatever immigration bill Congress
eventually passes this year. The latest version would raise the number to
110,000.
So to please conservatives, they’ve
aired TV commercials in "red" states backing the Keystone XL pipeline,
criticizing President Obama and his health care reform plan and touting the
work of Republican Sen. Lindsay Graham of South Carolina, who has come under
fire from fellow GOPers for helping craft an immigration compromise.
They’ve also aired an aid praising
Democratic Sen. Mark Begich of Alaska for supporting oil drilling in the Alaska
National Wildlife Refuge.
To please liberals, they’ve paid for
other ads praising more pro-environmental stands.
As the Business Insider blogger Henry
Blodget put it, the idea of all these ads is “to grease senators on both sides
of the aisle,” even if Zuckerberg and some of his friends who normally plug
liberal causes might be appalled by some of the messages they are sending.
Which means that while Zuckerberg may
be a newfangled social network trailblazer, he’s following the old-fashioned
political path of doing and saying and spending whatever it takes to get the
votes he wants.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net.
No comments:
Post a Comment