You have a point
However, our public schools would rather teach LGBTQP curriculum then advanced math
Our schools are teaching kids to believe the government will take care of them and working for a living is for suckers.
The reason H1-B is tech and science are needed is because we can’t provide them here. Of course some companies abuse the program and bring in low level IT guys or support people who will live in a company house with 10 other guys and work 14 hour days for $5 an hour cause that is 100x more then they would have gotten in India or where ever.
I am not saying the system is not abused and it is.
But some of them are actually legit
And some of them target advanced degree grads on student visas who are there cause they are extremely smart and good at the field they are learning. Why are not american kids filling those spots? Because they are still trying to figure out what gender they want to be, that is why
Now we do have some good kids who ignored this crap and pretty much ignored school, since school did not prepare them for these advanced degrees, they instead look at trades like electrical, plumbing, auto mechanic, etc
Those kids got through school and went to vocation school or trade union hall and got the training/classes they need. They will do fine and raise a middle class family
So we are not totally screwed just yet.
And of course, we can’t forget about all the PRIVATE and home school students who are taking spots in these advanced universities as well, but just isn’t enough of them.
What you are saying is you are fake conservative and don't believe in free markets or the theory of supply and demand. You don't think higher wages will create incentives for more AMERICANS to get IT training. You are a fake. A cynical bastard.
Our schools are teaching kids to believe the government will take care of them and working for a living is for suckers.
We do have a potential STEM pipeline problem.
The reason H1-B is tech and science are needed is because we cant provide them here.
Not true (at least not yet); there are millions of un- or underemployed American STEM graduates.