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Suit: Sun fired US workers to hire lower-paid Indians
Boston Globe ^
| March 18, 2003
| Hiawatha Bray
Posted on 03/18/2003 2:16:51 AM PST by sarcasm
Edited on 04/13/2004 2:09:19 AM PDT by Jim Robinson.
[history]
The lawsuit, for which class-action status is being sought, is certain to intensify an already fierce debate between technology companies and American engineers over the future of the H-1B visa program. Such visas let companies temporarily bring foreign workers into the United States.
(Excerpt) Read more at boston.com ...
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: h1b
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Comment #41 Removed by Moderator
To: Jumper
As a Systems Administrator I know full well that there are too many overpaid "professionals" around me....Are you going to feel that way until you're the "overpaid professional" who is replaced?
42
posted on
03/18/2003 6:12:15 AM PST
by
grania
("Won't get fooled again")
To: Poohbah
And at that point we have to sit back and say it's their right to do so. We need to move to get our government to make it "more attractive" to create the jobs at home.
43
posted on
03/18/2003 6:16:17 AM PST
by
Caipirabob
(Democrats.. Socialists..Commies..Traitors...Who can tell the difference?)
To: grania
Naw, I'm already underpaid working for the Government and under no illusions at this point (I thought I was trading less salary for job security but there won't be many of us left working for Uncle Sam unless we become contractors) - we're all going to outsourced in the next five years anyway. I've got that gypsie spirit and will move to work to eat to live!
I know you guys are gonna flame that last post "like the Red Barron"....:)
44
posted on
03/18/2003 6:16:52 AM PST
by
Jumper
To: Jumper
I thought I was trading less salary for job security but there won't be many of us left working for Uncle Sam unless we become contractorsUncle is hiring contractors instead of full-timers? I hope they're US citizens.
45
posted on
03/18/2003 6:40:01 AM PST
by
grania
("Won't get fooled again")
To: Glenn
You use your keyboard, I should like a crack at the boy with my fists and feet.
46
posted on
03/18/2003 6:44:39 AM PST
by
junta
To: eno_
I don't need that. True. You end up with lots of "analysts" and "project leaders" and no programmers. A whole department dedicated to protecting their own asses instead of churning out work. And they live in a constant state of "Analysis Paralysis" and wonder why they get outsourced.
When I worked at AT&T, we used to dread hiring programmers because the first thing out of their mouths after hiring was "I'm not very technical". Great. Another baby to rock.
47
posted on
03/18/2003 6:52:23 AM PST
by
AppyPappy
(Caesar si viveret, ad remum dareris.)
To: Glenn
Could you be anymore insulting? I'm 50 and I'd kick your ass on the keyboard of your choosing. Your perceptions are bigotry. You're as bad as Sun or anyone else who think engineers have a "shelf life". Moron.
I'LL SECOND THAT !!!!
48
posted on
03/18/2003 6:53:22 AM PST
by
clamper1797
(Credo Quia Absurdum)
To: billorites
Yessiree us old-timers have to stick together on this. Someday FORTRAN and COBOL will be back and then who'll be laughing. Dagnabbit. This "old timer" is compiling a C++ program as I type this
49
posted on
03/18/2003 6:54:44 AM PST
by
clamper1797
(Credo Quia Absurdum)
To: grania
Yea, gotta have a clearance:)
50
posted on
03/18/2003 7:01:31 AM PST
by
Jumper
To: grania
Probably not. In fact, Uncle Sam has been hiring contractors for years so the politicians can say (like Clinton did) that the federal workforce is the smallest since the Kennedy Administration. What it means is that there are fewer civil servants and way more contractors.
I dated a girl who was an Accenture consultant and she managed a team of 20 who worked for the Dept. of Education. That's 21 people being paid by the taxpayers and yet none of them count as part of the federal workforce.
51
posted on
03/18/2003 8:25:48 AM PST
by
Maximum Leader
(run from a knife, close on a gun)
To: sarcasm
There are lots of industries heading to India. One of the most surprising for me was the call center/telemarketing industry. The labor costs between 20-30% of what it is in the US. You'd be amazed how many of your calls to customer service departments aren't answered in the US.
To: clamper1797
This "old timer" is compiling a C++ program as I type this Good for you! Add Python, PHP, and Apache, and you'll be prosperous. Learn how to do Java MIDP too, and you'll be stylin'. Leave the dull IT crap to the outsourcers. The rule of thumb is everything you know today will be utterly worthless in two years. You don't have to over 50 to stagnate. I know lots of ex-dot-bomb people who specialized in some Web tool or other that are totally unemployable. It's not the age, it's the belief that something will go on forever that'll bite you.
53
posted on
03/18/2003 12:29:49 PM PST
by
eno_
To: eno_
Sorry ... I'm a hardware engineer ... chip (ASIC) designer. I do software as a necessary evil.
54
posted on
03/18/2003 12:39:01 PM PST
by
clamper1797
(Credo Quia Absurdum)
To: sharktrager
Re: There are lots of industries heading to India. One of the most surprising for me was the call center/telemarketing industry. The labor costs between 20-30% of what it is in the US. You'd be amazed how many of your calls to customer service departments aren't answered in the US.
Convergy's (Cincinnati Bell spin-off) has open a call center in India that holds 1,900 seats. They plan to lay off 900 more in the USA this year:
http://www.crmdaily.com/perl/story/15176.html
http://www.convergys.com/pdf/brochures/india_brochure.pdf
55
posted on
03/18/2003 12:54:56 PM PST
by
Pro-Bush
(Our day to shine has come...)
To: sarcasm
At the same time, the suit alleges that Sun was applying for permission to bring in about 2,400 foreign workers, mostly from India, to fill technical jobs. Many of these jobs were advertised in the United States, as federal law requires. But the suit alleges that Sun refused to consider any of the laid-off US workers for the positions. I'm strongly in favor of more immigration, as long as it is fair and regulated immigration.
Nevertheless, if these allegations are correct, Sun has lost its right to use the H-1 visa program.
American workers always have priority, meaning American citizens and legal residents must be considered first before foreigners are imported.
To: Jumper
working for the Government and under no illusions at this point (I thought I was trading less salary for job security
Bwahahahahahahhhhha!!!!! Maybe seventy-five years ago. Thanks to government employee unions, the salary is too high and the security elminates productivity. My ex-father-in-law spent a career at BATF and personified the problem.
57
posted on
03/18/2003 2:17:00 PM PST
by
gcruse
(When choosing between two evils, pick the one you haven't tried yet.)
To: taxed2death
It will only end when the American middle class is completely decimated That's the idea.
Comment #59 Removed by Moderator
To: sarcasm
I didn't used to believe that H1b in general and Indians in specific were stealing American jobs.
I sure do now.
The endless parade of Indian engineers I'm required to train in so they can use my head a stepping stone truly astonishes me.
I once asked one of them about a idea I had to speed productivity and the reply I got was "Oh you don't need to know that".
60
posted on
03/19/2003 12:45:32 PM PST
by
Zathras
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