H1B and outsourcing are 2 sides of the same coin.
Yes, lets shut down companies so that you can get better job security.infinity ag said:deddog said:Fair. i don't agree with it either, even though i have benefitted.Pookers said:Mass "immigration" like we've been doing since 1965.deddog said:What specifically does not work well? Hiring the best possible talent?Pookers said:
Open a history book please and see that this does not end well. The clown world economy is going to collapse at some point and then you will have people fighting for land.
This discussions was about H1Bs specifically.
The current H1B system is being manipulated by companies. However, not allowing any H1s is a bad idea. Want to make it more expensive to hire H1s? Absolutely, go for it. If you're sponsoring H1s make sure they are truly worth it. But make no mistake, there are some exceedingly talented folks worldwide that you want in the US.
For smaller companies (I work for one) outsourcing is a very efficient way to grow. I can hire 10 engineers in India for the price of 1 really good one in the US. There is a much higher ROI with the 10 engineers, alows us to grow. We want to get to a point where we can hire a US only team - if we were forced to hire only in the US, we would pretty much have to shut shop.
Outsourcing also makes many US companies more competitive globally. We don't like to hear it, and rail on CEOs, but it still doesn't change the fact that it's true.
All I hear from you is taking taking and more taking from the US and tax payers. No giving back.
As another poster said, you are justifying slave labor at obs
Maybe it is better for your company to shut shop.
(I say it figuratively of course, I don't want you to lose your job)
You can control H1Bs and make it more difficult- restricting entry to only those with outstanding talent.BTKAG97 said:
H1B and outsourcing are 2 sides of the same coin.
Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
deddog said:Yes, lets shut down companies so that you can get better job security.infinity ag said:deddog said:Fair. i don't agree with it either, even though i have benefitted.Pookers said:Mass "immigration" like we've been doing since 1965.deddog said:What specifically does not work well? Hiring the best possible talent?Pookers said:
Open a history book please and see that this does not end well. The clown world economy is going to collapse at some point and then you will have people fighting for land.
This discussions was about H1Bs specifically.
The current H1B system is being manipulated by companies. However, not allowing any H1s is a bad idea. Want to make it more expensive to hire H1s? Absolutely, go for it. If you're sponsoring H1s make sure they are truly worth it. But make no mistake, there are some exceedingly talented folks worldwide that you want in the US.
For smaller companies (I work for one) outsourcing is a very efficient way to grow. I can hire 10 engineers in India for the price of 1 really good one in the US. There is a much higher ROI with the 10 engineers, alows us to grow. We want to get to a point where we can hire a US only team - if we were forced to hire only in the US, we would pretty much have to shut shop.
Outsourcing also makes many US companies more competitive globally. We don't like to hear it, and rail on CEOs, but it still doesn't change the fact that it's true.
All I hear from you is taking taking and more taking from the US and tax payers. No giving back.
As another poster said, you are justifying slave labor at obs
Maybe it is better for your company to shut shop.
(I say it figuratively of course, I don't want you to lose your job)
Maybe you are better off working in government , because you clearly have a problem understanding the real challenges faced by startups and small businesses.
Suggesting they shut down, is an absolutely absurd statement.
The rest of us will live in the real world, trying to overcome these challenges.
Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
[Wrong emoji, please ignore]texagbeliever said:Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
Why exactly?
A corporation outsourced 50% of their salary staff.
That means less dollars in the United States to circulate.
Grown to a significant scale that leads to a decrease in buying power for the USA.
That means businesses most reliant on US consumers will suffer the outcome of decreased buying power.
That then causes a recession.
The total cost of the above is likely much more expensive for our society in the USA to sustain then just limiting the overseas salary savings making businesses more "competitive".
Look at the present landscape, America doesn't really have competitors. Japan's means of business is too slow. Western Europe is trash. India and China aren't launching global brands to compete. So this whole we have to do it to stay competitive is just to stay competitive versus US.
texagbeliever said:Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
Why exactly?
A corporation outsourced 50% of their salary staff.
That means less dollars in the United States to circulate.
Grown to a significant scale that leads to a decrease in buying power for the USA.
That means businesses most reliant on US consumers will suffer the outcome of decreased buying power.
That then causes a recession.
The total cost of the above is likely much more expensive for our society in the USA to sustain then just limiting the overseas salary savings making businesses more "competitive".
Look at the present landscape, America doesn't really have competitors. Japan's means of business is too slow. Western Europe is trash. India and China aren't launching global brands to compete. So this whole we have to do it to stay competitive is just to stay competitive versus US.
deddog said:[Wrong emoji, please ignore]texagbeliever said:Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
Why exactly?
A corporation outsourced 50% of their salary staff.
That means less dollars in the United States to circulate.
Grown to a significant scale that leads to a decrease in buying power for the USA.
That means businesses most reliant on US consumers will suffer the outcome of decreased buying power.
That then causes a recession.
The total cost of the above is likely much more expensive for our society in the USA to sustain then just limiting the overseas salary savings making businesses more "competitive".
Look at the present landscape, America doesn't really have competitors. Japan's means of business is too slow. Western Europe is trash. India and China aren't launching global brands to compete. So this whole we have to do it to stay competitive is just to stay competitive versus US.
Because corporations are the best judge of what they need to outsource.
This is not saying that they are good at it, but all things considered, they are still the best judge, and often have the most to lose from making a bad decision.
We need to make it more attractive for companies to retain jobs in the US.
Well tell is what X is. Because details matter.infinity ag said:Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
OK. But I think there needs to be a caveat. If you consider your business to be an "American" business, then have 'x'% of workers in the US. Else move your business overseas.
I am sure no one will move their business anywhere. US is the best country for tech businesses.
What 'x' is, I don't know yet. Something reasonable. You cannot offshore everything but still use the US as HQ and get benefits that accrue from it without giving anything back.
I think 75% seems okay to me. You can offshore 25%.
If America does not get anything from a business, they should GTFO.
i don't "trust" corps.infinity ag said:deddog said:[Wrong emoji, please ignore]texagbeliever said:Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
Why exactly?
A corporation outsourced 50% of their salary staff.
That means less dollars in the United States to circulate.
Grown to a significant scale that leads to a decrease in buying power for the USA.
That means businesses most reliant on US consumers will suffer the outcome of decreased buying power.
That then causes a recession.
The total cost of the above is likely much more expensive for our society in the USA to sustain then just limiting the overseas salary savings making businesses more "competitive".
Look at the present landscape, America doesn't really have competitors. Japan's means of business is too slow. Western Europe is trash. India and China aren't launching global brands to compete. So this whole we have to do it to stay competitive is just to stay competitive versus US.
Because corporations are the best judge of what they need to outsource.
This is not saying that they are good at it, but all things considered, they are still the best judge, and often have the most to lose from making a bad decision.
We need to make it more attractive for companies to retain jobs in the US.
You trust corps too much. Corps care only about themselves (rather the top management, not the employees), not the US.
We care about the US. I hope you do too, as a citizen.
So if something does not benefit the US, they need to GTFO.
If it benefits the US, then stay.
It is really that simple. America first.
infinity ag said:Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
OK. But I think there needs to be a caveat. If you consider your business to be an "American" business, then have 'x'% of workers in the US. Else move your business overseas.
I am sure no one will move their business anywhere. US is the best country for tech businesses.
What 'x' is, I don't know yet. Something reasonable. You cannot offshore everything but still use the US as HQ and get benefits that accrue from it without giving anything back.
I think 75% seems okay to me. You can offshore 25%.
If America does not get anything from a business, they should GTFO.
Some people whine.Tom Fox said:infinity ag said:Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
OK. But I think there needs to be a caveat. If you consider your business to be an "American" business, then have 'x'% of workers in the US. Else move your business overseas.
I am sure no one will move their business anywhere. US is the best country for tech businesses.
What 'x' is, I don't know yet. Something reasonable. You cannot offshore everything but still use the US as HQ and get benefits that accrue from it without giving anything back.
I think 75% seems okay to me. You can offshore 25%.
If America does not get anything from a business, they should GTFO.
If the business is owned by Americans they should be able to run it however they see fit without governmental social engineering restrictions.
It is the reason I left the government and opened my own business. If I want only white male attorneys, guess what? That's what I have.
If I want to outsource my intake process to ramjit in India, that is my choice.
Now, in my business I have zero incentive to ever do that. I beat my competition through hiring the very best that I can. That means Americans.
deddog said:Well tell is what X is. Because details matter.infinity ag said:Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
OK. But I think there needs to be a caveat. If you consider your business to be an "American" business, then have 'x'% of workers in the US. Else move your business overseas.
I am sure no one will move their business anywhere. US is the best country for tech businesses.
What 'x' is, I don't know yet. Something reasonable. You cannot offshore everything but still use the US as HQ and get benefits that accrue from it without giving anything back.
I think 75% seems okay to me. You can offshore 25%.
If America does not get anything from a business, they should GTFO.
What's reasonable? Who gets to decide?
The ****ing government gets to decide how much a corporation can outsource? Based on what?
Exactly what does a bureaucrat know about running a high tech corporation?
Last corporation I worked for made 80% of their revenue outside the US. They are US based because they are very high tech and get significant talent here. Some of the talent is H1s and they also moved a development center overseas.
What would you suggest? What percentage should they be allowed to send overseas? Or would you shut them down too?
We paid 70 million in taxes last year.
What's your solution?
deddog said:i don't "trust" corps.infinity ag said:deddog said:[Wrong emoji, please ignore]texagbeliever said:Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
Why exactly?
A corporation outsourced 50% of their salary staff.
That means less dollars in the United States to circulate.
Grown to a significant scale that leads to a decrease in buying power for the USA.
That means businesses most reliant on US consumers will suffer the outcome of decreased buying power.
That then causes a recession.
The total cost of the above is likely much more expensive for our society in the USA to sustain then just limiting the overseas salary savings making businesses more "competitive".
Look at the present landscape, America doesn't really have competitors. Japan's means of business is too slow. Western Europe is trash. India and China aren't launching global brands to compete. So this whole we have to do it to stay competitive is just to stay competitive versus US.
Because corporations are the best judge of what they need to outsource.
This is not saying that they are good at it, but all things considered, they are still the best judge, and often have the most to lose from making a bad decision.
We need to make it more attractive for companies to retain jobs in the US.
You trust corps too much. Corps care only about themselves (rather the top management, not the employees), not the US.
We care about the US. I hope you do too, as a citizen.
So if something does not benefit the US, they need to GTFO.
If it benefits the US, then stay.
It is really that simple. America first.
I understand the realities of running both small businesses and corporations, and understand the complex decisions that have to be made.
This simplistic thinking is not realistic.
deddog said:Some people whine.Tom Fox said:infinity ag said:Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
OK. But I think there needs to be a caveat. If you consider your business to be an "American" business, then have 'x'% of workers in the US. Else move your business overseas.
I am sure no one will move their business anywhere. US is the best country for tech businesses.
What 'x' is, I don't know yet. Something reasonable. You cannot offshore everything but still use the US as HQ and get benefits that accrue from it without giving anything back.
I think 75% seems okay to me. You can offshore 25%.
If America does not get anything from a business, they should GTFO.
If the business is owned by Americans they should be able to run it however they see fit without governmental social engineering restrictions.
It is the reason I left the government and opened my own business. If I want only white male attorneys, guess what? That's what I have.
If I want to outsource my intake process to ramjit in India, that is my choice.
Now, in my business I have zero incentive to ever do that. I beat my competition through hiring the very best that I can. That means Americans.
Some people do.
Congratulations man, and I really do mean it. I don't have an entrepreneurial bone in my body.
Tom Fox said:infinity ag said:Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
OK. But I think there needs to be a caveat. If you consider your business to be an "American" business, then have 'x'% of workers in the US. Else move your business overseas.
I am sure no one will move their business anywhere. US is the best country for tech businesses.
What 'x' is, I don't know yet. Something reasonable. You cannot offshore everything but still use the US as HQ and get benefits that accrue from it without giving anything back.
I think 75% seems okay to me. You can offshore 25%.
If America does not get anything from a business, they should GTFO.
If the business is owned by Americans they should be able to run it however they see fit without governmental social engineering restrictions.
It is the reason I left the government and opened my own business. If I want only white male attorneys, guess what? That's what I have.
If I want to outsource my intake process to ramjit in India, that is my choice.
Now, in my business I have zero incentive to ever do that. I beat my competition through hiring the very best that I can. That means Americans.
deddog said:You don't think there are talented engineers in India?infinity ag said:AJ02 said:deddog said:H1Bs the way they are currently handled are trash.Pookers said:
H1B visas are trash and so are the paper Americans who support them.
But there needs to be a pathway for outstanding and exceptional talent to make it to the US.
Either you get them here, or they become competition.
Just in my immediate circle I know exceptionally bright talented H1s that were at the top of the class in their far more competitive schools in Asia, and now work for US startups or corporations.
You want those people here.
This is how it used to be before Y2K.
Any indian or chinese who came into the US before that was almost always exceptional. There was a high bar. Somewhere along the line, companies realized they could use it to suppress wages and opened the floodgates.
Which worked out well for me of course. But that's a different story
Agreed. I have two fantastic people on my team. Highly intelligent, hard workers. One from Venezuela, the other from Panama. I'd pick them any day over a lot of the American people I've worked with in the past.
I am sure you also bring in Mohammed and Xiaohua into your own home, 2 nice boys who are well behaved and work hard, and would pick them above your own kids Steve and Melissa.
China? You need to get out more and work with folks far more talented than yourself.
It's a sobering experience.
Either you hire the best or you have them compete against you.
We need to allow H1s, though i'm fine by making it a lor more expensive for companies to do so.
You cannot stop companies from moving jobs overseas. A lot of times it makes business sense, and especially if you are competing in those markets.
Nanomachines son said:deddog said:You don't think there are talented engineers in India?infinity ag said:AJ02 said:deddog said:H1Bs the way they are currently handled are trash.Pookers said:
H1B visas are trash and so are the paper Americans who support them.
But there needs to be a pathway for outstanding and exceptional talent to make it to the US.
Either you get them here, or they become competition.
Just in my immediate circle I know exceptionally bright talented H1s that were at the top of the class in their far more competitive schools in Asia, and now work for US startups or corporations.
You want those people here.
This is how it used to be before Y2K.
Any indian or chinese who came into the US before that was almost always exceptional. There was a high bar. Somewhere along the line, companies realized they could use it to suppress wages and opened the floodgates.
Which worked out well for me of course. But that's a different story
Agreed. I have two fantastic people on my team. Highly intelligent, hard workers. One from Venezuela, the other from Panama. I'd pick them any day over a lot of the American people I've worked with in the past.
I am sure you also bring in Mohammed and Xiaohua into your own home, 2 nice boys who are well behaved and work hard, and would pick them above your own kids Steve and Melissa.
China? You need to get out more and work with folks far more talented than yourself.
It's a sobering experience.
Either you hire the best or you have them compete against you.
We need to allow H1s, though i'm fine by making it a lor more expensive for companies to do so.
You cannot stop companies from moving jobs overseas. A lot of times it makes business sense, and especially if you are competing in those markets.
China yes, India no. I have met almost no one from India that I would consider to be a good engineer. Zero practical knowledge, most of them cannot turn a wrench and don't understand how things work in the field at all. It's generally awful to work with them.
Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
infinity ag said:Nanomachines son said:deddog said:You don't think there are talented engineers in India?infinity ag said:AJ02 said:deddog said:H1Bs the way they are currently handled are trash.Pookers said:
H1B visas are trash and so are the paper Americans who support them.
But there needs to be a pathway for outstanding and exceptional talent to make it to the US.
Either you get them here, or they become competition.
Just in my immediate circle I know exceptionally bright talented H1s that were at the top of the class in their far more competitive schools in Asia, and now work for US startups or corporations.
You want those people here.
This is how it used to be before Y2K.
Any indian or chinese who came into the US before that was almost always exceptional. There was a high bar. Somewhere along the line, companies realized they could use it to suppress wages and opened the floodgates.
Which worked out well for me of course. But that's a different story
Agreed. I have two fantastic people on my team. Highly intelligent, hard workers. One from Venezuela, the other from Panama. I'd pick them any day over a lot of the American people I've worked with in the past.
I am sure you also bring in Mohammed and Xiaohua into your own home, 2 nice boys who are well behaved and work hard, and would pick them above your own kids Steve and Melissa.
China? You need to get out more and work with folks far more talented than yourself.
It's a sobering experience.
Either you hire the best or you have them compete against you.
We need to allow H1s, though i'm fine by making it a lor more expensive for companies to do so.
You cannot stop companies from moving jobs overseas. A lot of times it makes business sense, and especially if you are competing in those markets.
China yes, India no. I have met almost no one from India that I would consider to be a good engineer. Zero practical knowledge, most of them cannot turn a wrench and don't understand how things work in the field at all. It's generally awful to work with them.
Well Sir, that is a bit harsh. I have worked with several good ones from India myself, and a few extraordinary ones. Chinese engineers work very very hard, much harder than Indian ones, but they are order takers with no innovation or ideas. They are good implementers. Not inventors.
We only feel that Indian engineers are trash because the volume of Indian engineers is so much more than Chinese. So the trashy ones are also huge in numbers.
These days Chinese engineers get into Data Science and other areas, not as much in pure software engineering.
deddog said:[Wrong emoji, please ignore]texagbeliever said:Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
Why exactly?
A corporation outsourced 50% of their salary staff.
That means less dollars in the United States to circulate.
Grown to a significant scale that leads to a decrease in buying power for the USA.
That means businesses most reliant on US consumers will suffer the outcome of decreased buying power.
That then causes a recession.
The total cost of the above is likely much more expensive for our society in the USA to sustain then just limiting the overseas salary savings making businesses more "competitive".
Look at the present landscape, America doesn't really have competitors. Japan's means of business is too slow. Western Europe is trash. India and China aren't launching global brands to compete. So this whole we have to do it to stay competitive is just to stay competitive versus US.
Because corporations are the best judge of what they need to outsource.
This is not saying that they are good at it, but all things considered, they are still the best judge, and often have the most to lose from making a bad decision.
We need to make it more attractive for companies to retain jobs in the US.
Charpie said:
are we really worried about innovation happening overseas?
Name one cool ass thing besides Nintendo and Sega that were made outside of the United States
What that money went toward, is a different issue.infinity ag said:deddog said:Well tell is what X is. Because details matter.infinity ag said:Tom Fox said:
I am cool with severely restricting H1Bs but companies should be free to outsource whatever they want overseas.
OK. But I think there needs to be a caveat. If you consider your business to be an "American" business, then have 'x'% of workers in the US. Else move your business overseas.
I am sure no one will move their business anywhere. US is the best country for tech businesses.
What 'x' is, I don't know yet. Something reasonable. You cannot offshore everything but still use the US as HQ and get benefits that accrue from it without giving anything back.
I think 75% seems okay to me. You can offshore 25%.
If America does not get anything from a business, they should GTFO.
What's reasonable? Who gets to decide?
The ****ing government gets to decide how much a corporation can outsource? Based on what?
Exactly what does a bureaucrat know about running a high tech corporation?
Last corporation I worked for made 80% of their revenue outside the US. They are US based because they are very high tech and get significant talent here. Some of the talent is H1s and they also moved a development center overseas.
What would you suggest? What percentage should they be allowed to send overseas? Or would you shut them down too?
We paid 70 million in taxes last year.
What's your solution?
I said it, please read. 75% seems good to me.
Trump gets to decide. He is the President. If that is too low, he should jack it up. Just like he is adjusting tariffs.
My point is simple. A business in the US needs to contribute to the US. If they cannot or do not want to, they need to GTFO.
Taxes? ha ha you know where your 70Mil in taxes went to right? To do sex change ops in Guatemala. And for gender studies in Pakistan.
They need to contribute by hiring here. Simple as that.
TSMC is a literal example.Tom Fox said:Charpie said:
are we really worried about innovation happening overseas?
Name one cool ass thing besides Nintendo and Sega that were made outside of the United States
Nope they can only copy and miniaturize what Americans have created.
Nanomachines son said:infinity ag said:Nanomachines son said:deddog said:You don't think there are talented engineers in India?infinity ag said:AJ02 said:deddog said:H1Bs the way they are currently handled are trash.Pookers said:
H1B visas are trash and so are the paper Americans who support them.
But there needs to be a pathway for outstanding and exceptional talent to make it to the US.
Either you get them here, or they become competition.
Just in my immediate circle I know exceptionally bright talented H1s that were at the top of the class in their far more competitive schools in Asia, and now work for US startups or corporations.
You want those people here.
This is how it used to be before Y2K.
Any indian or chinese who came into the US before that was almost always exceptional. There was a high bar. Somewhere along the line, companies realized they could use it to suppress wages and opened the floodgates.
Which worked out well for me of course. But that's a different story
Agreed. I have two fantastic people on my team. Highly intelligent, hard workers. One from Venezuela, the other from Panama. I'd pick them any day over a lot of the American people I've worked with in the past.
I am sure you also bring in Mohammed and Xiaohua into your own home, 2 nice boys who are well behaved and work hard, and would pick them above your own kids Steve and Melissa.
China? You need to get out more and work with folks far more talented than yourself.
It's a sobering experience.
Either you hire the best or you have them compete against you.
We need to allow H1s, though i'm fine by making it a lor more expensive for companies to do so.
You cannot stop companies from moving jobs overseas. A lot of times it makes business sense, and especially if you are competing in those markets.
China yes, India no. I have met almost no one from India that I would consider to be a good engineer. Zero practical knowledge, most of them cannot turn a wrench and don't understand how things work in the field at all. It's generally awful to work with them.
Well Sir, that is a bit harsh. I have worked with several good ones from India myself, and a few extraordinary ones. Chinese engineers work very very hard, much harder than Indian ones, but they are order takers with no innovation or ideas. They are good implementers. Not inventors.
We only feel that Indian engineers are trash because the volume of Indian engineers is so much more than Chinese. So the trashy ones are also huge in numbers.
These days Chinese engineers get into Data Science and other areas, not as much in pure software engineering.
My experience with Indian engineers is in oil and gas, which requires practical knowledge. It's very different from software engineering. You literally cannot do the job if you don't understand how things work in the field so no it's not harsh and I'm actually understating the issue here.