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The Yin and Yang of Hour of Code & Immigration Reform 220

theodp writes "The weeklong Hour of Code kicks off tomorrow, with Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates doing their part to address a declared nationwide CS crisis by ostensibly teaching the nation's schoolchildren how to code. But a recent NY Times Op-Ed by economist Paul Collier criticizing Zuckerberg's FWD.us PAC as self-serving advocacy (echoing earlier criticism) serves as a reminder that Zuckerberg and Gates' Code.org and Hour of Code involvement is the Yin to their H-1B visa lobbying Yang. The two efforts have been inextricably linked together for Congress, if not for the public. And while Zuckerberg argues it's 'the right thing to do', Collier argues that there are also downsides to the tech giants' plans to shift more bright, young, enterprising people from the poorest countries to the richest. 'An open door for the talented would help Facebook's bottom line,' Collier concludes, 'but not the bottom billion.'"

Comment Re:Y chromosome is special (Score 1) 309

Actually Y chromosomes do have a small recombination region. They pair up with a similarly short corresponding region on the X chromosome. This makes sense because the X and Y chromosomes evolved from a homologous pair, and a part of the recombination machine has been preserved. If one of these crossover events had occurred, the results may have been significantly different.

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