Giant Hindu Statue In Texas

I heard about this for the first time this week. This is, of course, an enormous problem:

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4 thoughts on “Giant Hindu Statue In Texas

  1. TC: A friend of mine is employed in another state.

    He sent me his take on this article:

    https://www.wnd.com/2025/04/the-skilled-worker-hoax-how-indias-human-capital-scheme-took-over-american-jobs/

    “FYI….I can speak to the validity of this essay, as I have been dealing with this in my industry (and my employer!) over the last 20+ years – greatly accelerating over the last 10. In 2012, when I joined my current employer, all of the engineers (about 30) involved in my programs were US citizens, and US based. Now in 2024, my role has expanded and I have about 60-65 engineers and program managers in my programs – and -0- zero – are US citizens, and only 12 are US based (and they are all Indian H1B workers).

    As a country we need to reverse this trend – nothing against my Indian friends and co-workers, all of them are hard working and smart – but the decline of the US as a technological and economic leader has reached a critical point, and if we are to recover we need to re-engage and incentivize our kids to be involved in STEM learning and create good job opportunities in the hightech/engineering/medical industries for our native citizens right here in the USA.”

    1. This is a much bigger deal, Fred, than many people might know. The technology-related professions and industries are overrun with this kind of thing.

      What compounds the problem is that this is viewed as “good” immigration by the political class because it is legal and the folks at least nominally possess skills. Therefore, the imperative to reverse the situation is almost non-existent.

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