Truth Warrior
Banned
- Joined
- Dec 3, 2007
- Messages
- 18,789
Government "managed" trade CALLED "free trade" is NOT free trade. The WTO and GATT are NOT your friends. They only serve the purposes of TPTB.
Last edited:
Even better, we can indeed look at Hong Kong, one of the most densely crowded places on earth. with about 18,000 people per square mile. I do not want to live in a box under a box on top of a box, which is what Hong Kong apartments are like.
Let's not to mention their utter disregard for international copyright laws, and the bilions of dollars that adds to their economy.
Government "managed" trade CALLED "free trade" is NOT free trade. The WTO and GATT are NOT your friends. They only serve the purposes of TPTB.
2 - H1B Visas take away jobs from American Educated workers
3 - H1B Visas are just a PLOY by CORPORATE America to:
a. Hire workers at lower WAGES compared to Americans Workers
You're arguing the opposite. You're arguing that our wages should be diluted until they're equal to that of a third world nation, even though we live better far better than that.
Ron paul voted yes 9 years ago when there was a massive shortage of HIGHTECH workers... but now, there are so many unemployeed HIGHTECH workers/Engineers/ETC...
I think hording the hightech workers around the world is doubly counter-productive:
1 - H1B Visas takes away any foreign assets to their respective countries workforce
2 - H1B Visas take away jobs from American Educated workers
3 - H1B Visas are just a PLOY by CORPORATE America to:
a. Hire workers at lower WAGES compared to Americans Workers
b. HOLD H1B WORKERS HOSTAGE to working more hours
c. Stay in AMERICA or they can notify INS/ICE to initiate deportation procedures
d. Industrial Relations IR/HR depts to control H1B workers because of NO US Civil rights (FOREIGNERS)
Ron Paul's previous record on H1Bs...
Voted YES on more immigrant visas for skilled workers.
Vote to pass a bill to increase the number of temporary visas granted to highly skilled workers from 65,000 to 115,000 by the year 2000.
Reference: Bill introduced by Smith, R-TX.; Bill HR 3736 ; vote number 1998-460 on Sep 24, 1998
Whether or not there is a shortage of American workers or a shortage of jobs, nobody owes any of you a freaking living. Say what you want, but I've been out of work this round for ten days now. Four months ago I had been out for several months. In the last two years, I've worked a total of eight months. Since I am an independent contractor, I don't get unemployment or welfare. I don't work, I don't eat. Nobody owes me a job and nobody owes any of you a job either.
Yeah, we get it. Many of you don't believe in nations. One borderless world, where human nature has been replaced by a Utopian social and economic Darwinism where every decision is made based on a perfect knowledge of value, and the losers somehow disappear. "Evolve or die", and evolution is now something that takes place in months, not millions of years.
I am an american tech worker and I support allowing skilled people to work in the country unhindered.
They generally speak good english, are good citizens, and are the kind of people most likely to start businesses.
It's silly to invite people here as PhD students and then kick them out once they are educated.
They then just go and hire all the other foreign skilled workers we kept out, and undercut american businesses.
People complain about foreign workers, then turn around and complain about outsourcing.
The problem is, you can't just shoot these foreigners. They are going to find tech work somewhere, often at lower wages, and they are going to compete with american tech workers one way or the other.
If more workers really caused mass unemployment, then the US would be a nation of unemployed, as our population has doubled many times over.
The reality is these foreign tech workers become customers too, so unemployment is not increased. This is "Say's Law", the fact that supply creates it's own demand.
Is that why I can't tell if they are speaking English or Hindi half the time? Please, most speak English so badly that only other Indians can understand them. The reason for this is because they don't speak American English, they speak Indian English.
Q: What do you think of the H1-B program?
Ron Paul: I’ve supported that because it’s legal. I know some people say they don’t follow the law….
Q: The argument is that it’s a form of corporate subsidy—powerful interest groups have arranged to break down their workers’ wages by bringing in temporary workers.
Ron Paul: the market always works to put pressure on the businessman to spend the least amount of money to provide product. So what some may call a corporate subsidy is also a subsidy to the consumer. The consumer is the one protected in the free market. The object of labor is to push wages up as high as possible. The object of business is to get the most efficient labor at the best price. In the free market, that works out. But the problem is we have too much welfare and we have a currency that’s losing value.
Q: If you’re President, various interest groups are going to come to you and say, there’s a shortage of nurses or teachers or (goodness!) possibly journalists; therefore we have to have these temporary work programs to bring in labor in this area. If the labor is organized, it’s going to say to you, look, the problem isn’t that there’s a shortage, the problem is business doesn’t want to pay higher wages. What will you do?
Ron Paul: Well, whatever we do will be legal. Congress has to have a say, they have to pass a law, and the President has to decide to sign it or not. And I would lean in the direction of saying, if there is indeed a shortage, and this is a legal process, this shouldn’t be threatening to us.
Q: How would you determine that there was a shortage?
Ron Paul: Well, I don’t think it would be easy but if there’s a need and immigrants can get a job, that means there’s a shortage. If there was no shortage, they wouldn’t have jobs. Obviously the companies can’t fill some of these jobs and they’re looking for people to fill them.
Q: Well, the counter-argument is that they can’t fill them at the price that they’re offering.
Ron Paul: That’s right, but the market has to set the price. Set the product and set the price of labor.
Q: But the argument of the displaced software engineers is that the government is colluding with the business owners to break down the price by importing temporary workers.
Ron Paul: I don’t think we should have minimum wages to protect the price of labor. I want the market to determine this. At the upper level as well.
Q: It’s really a question of defining the rules, isn’t it? Is it fair for corporations to increase supply by bringing in temporary workers?
Ron Paul: Which, means they’re going to fill a need for a certain time at a certain price, by people who have come here voluntarily. Otherwise, you have to be anti-immigrant and I don’t think our country is anti-immigrant. I think its anti-illegal immigrant. I think the problem you identify is occurring because we don’t have a healthy free market economy and we reward people for not getting training and becoming the type of individual who might get a job in a software company.
We believe in freedom. We don't believe in forcing companies to hire one person over another.
You apparently do, and that's fine, just stop pretending that it is the pro-liberty position.
There's a reason Paul has consistently supported more open immigration, especially skilled immigration. Start at 4:10
What is your view on legal immigration?
I think it depends on our economy. If we have a healthy economy, I think we could be very generous on work programs. People come in, fulfill their role and go back home.
I'm not worried about legal immigration. I think we would even have more if we had a healthy economy.
But in the meantime, we want to stop the illegals. And that's why I don't think our border guards should be sent to Iraq, like we've done. I think we need more border guards. But to have the money and the personnel, we have to bring our troops home from Iraq.
Is the economy healthy enough right now?
No. I don't think so. I think the economy is going downhill. People are feeling pinched—in the middle, much more pinched than the government is willing to admit. Their standard of living is going down. I saw a clip on TV the other day about somebody who was about to lose their house, they couldn't pay their mortgage. There're millions of people involved, people are very uncertain about this housing market. That can't be separated from concern about illegals.
Define "pro-Liberty". Ron Paul is not an anarchist.
I apply supply and demand to the issue of importing workers. A healthy economy has a shortage of workers, and that shortage of workers is mandatory for all other liberty to come about. A labor excess destroys liberty. A vibrant, expanding economy can take on more workers, a recessing economy can not.
Do you support enacting federal laws providing for any or all of the following: a) a permanent research-and-development tax credit, b) a permanent moratorium on Internet access taxes, and c) an increase in the current limits on H-1B visas?
Paul: I support either abolishing or greatly reducing as many taxes as possible, and placing money back into the hands of individuals and businesses. Therefore, I would support a permanent research-and-development tax credit, as well as a permanent moratorium on Internet access taxes.
I support immediately getting rid of the corruption in the H-1B visa program. This program allows for immigrants to legally and legitimately come to work here for a set time. I would support expanding it to decrease the incentive to come here illegally.
I'm no longer sure it's a good idea for the government to be able to tell me who I can and cannot hire.
Interesting. I have gone the other direction. I was once a young, idealistic, open-borders person. It is a much more complex issue than that, and the situation we have now is a product of the corporatocracy, not any "liberty" movement.
I think you are manipulating his words to try and make them mean what you want them to mean.
I support immediately getting rid of the corruption in the H-1B visa program. This program allows for immigrants to legally and legitimately come to work here for a set time. I would support expanding it to decrease the incentive to come here illegally.
He acknowledges that the corruption in the H-1 program is caused by the artificial cap itself, and that he would expand it. This is from the 2008 campaign, and the economy wasn't exactly charging along at that point.
He acknowledges that the corruption in the H-1 program is caused by the artificial cap itself