Comment Re:Maven success (Score 1) 65
Under-performing rockets? Must be a Monday on Mars. I know the feeling.
Under-performing rockets? Must be a Monday on Mars. I know the feeling.
Or if one accidentally gets metric unit commands while the other accidentally gets Imperial English unit commands.
that won't get you hired on a high-paying job right away. You have to start as a junior, and suck it up when they offer you low pay initially.
That's not how most companies work. If they want to fill position X they want a perfect fit for X, or as close as possible. They don't want juniors nor PhD's, but the exact qualifications with nothing more or less. (If you have excess qualifications, that's seen as a risk of leaving.)
If you owned the company, wouldn't you want the same?
Sure, but they hide their real M.O. from Congress and voters. There is no general shortage, but a shortage of those who instantly fit the profile our company wants. But I don't tell Congress that because then I wouldn't get want I want.
All you need to do is put "expert in " and you will get past the HR screen in 90% of the companies.
You mean lie? In both cases you seem to be endorsing lying.
Perhaps to you that's just the way to play the game in the real world, but it backs my original premise that the H1B program is based on a lie. You just don't seem to think that's a "bad thing", or accept it as the ugly-but-necessary reality of politics and capitalism.
A terrorist walks into the White House bar. The bartender asks, "So what will you be having?"
"72 virgins"
"Sorry, we don't serve that here. How about a Bloody Marry instead? Almost the same."
They should have a fake breakin attempt every 3 months or so to keep everyone alert. Complacency can settle in if nothing ever happens.
Maybe there is a reason it's not locked.
There are some problems you ignored. First is that the industry claims there is a "shortage" to justify high quantities of H1B's. There is no evidence of a general shortage, only spot shortages, which are necessary for those with glut skills to be accepted into new-trend skills.
Second, is that during IT recessions they don't shut off the H1B spigot: visa workers keep coming. IT has been booming and busting since at least the 80's and I see no reason this pattern will change.
And I have seen H1B workers being abused. Your example is only a spot sample.
In general, the industry wants "instant employees" rather than spend time and money on training. This means that if a US techie loses their job in a glut area, they cannot get retraining for the new area because the company will hire an H1B worker that already has experience. The citizen can read books etc., but companies prefer existing paid experience.
Companies just want what they want when they want it and don't want to pay anything inconvenient for these goals.
Regardless of whether there are some H1B abuse myths floating around, the whole premise is based on a lie.
Erect a giant Jar Jar, then the fanboys will be all pissed and lose interest in snooping. Solved!
Georgia? The locals will do it for free if you spread the rumor that "Obama's commie drones are coming to take your guns away and spray you with 'gay gas'."
But it's so cool how your hip glimmers at night.
Until you get really sick or run off to Argentina with Miffy, and then the remaining staff hasn't a clue about how to run or fix all the custom contraptions.
It's the same reasoning that makes us all think that slashdot ridding dupe articles should be easy.
F-35 did at least one thing right: didn't depend on a big website.
Let's have some perspective here: this is the first time a website of this magnitude and complexity has been created on the federal level, at least any that had to be completed within a relatively short time-frame.
Always draw your curves, then plot your reading.