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H1B – the super secret weapon

1 点作者 shna大约 10 年前

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dalke大约 10 年前
Videos are too slow to watch or quote. This appears to be a repeat of what Kaku said in 2011. A partial transcript is at <a href="http://blog.chron.com/sciguy/2011/06/how-come-the-scientific-establishment-of-the-united-states-hasnt-collapsed-because-it-has-a-secret-weapon/" rel="nofollow">http:&#x2F;&#x2F;blog.chron.com&#x2F;sciguy&#x2F;2011&#x2F;06&#x2F;how-come-the-scientific...</a> .<p>&gt; How come the scientific establishment of the United States doesn’t collapse? Let me tell you something. Some of you may not know this. America has a secret weapon.<p>&gt; That secret weapon is the H1B.<p>&gt; Without the H1B, the scientific establishment of this country would collapse. Forget about Google! Forget about Silicon Valley! There would be no Silicon Valley without the H1B.<p>Compare this to the analysis posted yesterday here on HN, at <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9125193" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=9125193</a> . (I chose this because it was very recent, and indicative of the ongoing discussion about the H1B.)<p>&gt; H-1B is not about skills or skills gap<p>&gt; [Proponents of the H-1B] claim the H-1B is used: 1) to recruit and hire the “best and brightest” workers from around the world; 2) to fill skills gaps in the U.S. workforce; and 3) as a way to retain talented foreign students with advanced degrees who received their education and training in the United States (this is a favorite canard of President Obama). H-1B data and the SCE case show that none of these arguments are even remotely true.<p>&gt; If American workers are training their foreign replacements before they get laid off, then it is quite obvious that it’s the American trainers—not the H-1B trainees—who have the superior skills. Are H-1B workers being brought in because they have extensive formal training, like an advanced degree? The answer to that is a definitive no.<p>FWIW, the term &quot;Silicon Valley&quot; was coined in 1971, and the H1B program didn&#x27;t start until 1990, so all evidence shows that SV was created and existed for decades without the H1B. It&#x27;s not clear to me that the absence of the H1B would have killed it during the dot com era or later.