Trump on H-1b Visas: Us Lacks Enough 'talented People'
Postedabout 2 months agoActiveabout 2 months ago
thehill.comOtherstory
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H-1b VisasImmigration PolicyUs Politics
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H-1b Visas
Immigration Policy
Us Politics
Trump's statement on H-1B visas sparks controversy, with some commenters criticizing his incoherence and others disagreeing on the need for foreign talent in the US workforce.
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- 01Story posted
Nov 12, 2025 at 11:03 AM EST
about 2 months ago
Step 01 - 02First comment
Nov 12, 2025 at 11:10 AM EST
7m after posting
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6 comments in 0-1h
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Step 03 - 04Latest activity
Nov 13, 2025 at 2:40 AM EST
about 2 months ago
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Analyzing up to 500 comments to identify key contributors and discussion patterns
ID: 45901814Type: storyLast synced: 11/20/2025, 12:38:35 PM
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Easier to see this in numbers https://www.visualcapitalist.com/mapped-every-countrys-gdp-g...
The only reason American isn’t in the red is because most of the worlds large caps are based here.
Bright and ambitious people see that what used to be principles of openness is now just transactional dealing. And the problem with that is you can't construct stable relations of a life overseas if you need to check in every few years to see if the situation is still good.
So now if you're going to have to deal with the same shenanigans as you did back home, why not just save yourself the trouble and be back home, which will be the same except that now you can be close to family and frieds?
I am afraid all of this is going to be unsustainable because non-western countries don’t have productivity centers, but they have workers (who work for companies producing jobs outside of their own country), and when their quality of life or standard of living goes up, so does the cost of doing business in those places, which companies will offset by firing people. This already happened, this is part of why inflation went up so dramatically post-COVID, and the end result is mass firings and layoffs, disguised as “AI taking jobs”.
In some terrible scenarios this means keeping standards of living down in some countries to ensure populations don’t ask for more worker protections or other types of rights, which is the main driver of increased costs of doing business in western countries. But if your population keeps getting richer because of offshored jobs or remittances, then you’re on a collision course with forces beyond your control.
That is a core theme of the admin. They seem to be radically pessimistic about US capabilities. Otherwise-inexplicable conduct like the sabre-rattling about control of Greenland only makes sense, if you imagine the United States becoming an isolated regional power cut off from the world ocean.
The argument (right or wrong) isn't that Americans aren't capable, but rather that there are not enough of them that are capable.
I will never get over how incoherent this guy is; he’s like a human GPT-2. Like, what on earth does that mean?
What an odd choice of examples.