The leading source for guide to immigration, law and work permit
Header

Immigration Business

September 23rd, 2009 | Posted by Admin in Green Card - (Comments Off)

Although charged with the security of national borders by the “supreme” law of the land, Congress has pursued open door policies over the past century or longer. When lawmakers subvert the law they create, by deliberate non enforcement, they surrender all legal and moral authority to compel you and me to uphold their never ending laws. They encourage and allow the continuous daily invasion of this nation by those who understand American law amounts to window dressing.

Now we are faced with a situation where Congressional criminals demand that citizens make life difficult for the guests they invite and encourage. If an employer of undocumented workers cannot win this case in court, it can only be the courts are as criminal as Congress itself. Do as we say, not as we do.

Illegal immigration is nearly as good for business as war. If we could choose one or the other, I would prefer the immigration. But this is America so we do both. If we could only admit whatever is good for business is good for everyone, we could end all the hypocrisy.

We could all admit we serve money while pretending to serve God and humanity. We could all work for a dollar per day and fairly compete with workers all over the world. Of course, professionals and politicians would receive ten dollars per day to encourage sixteen or twenty years of education and indoctrination, just as we do now.

Let’s end the hypocrisy. Let’s throw the national doors open to any who want to live and work here. Let us make citizens of all who desire citizenship. However, if the hypocrisy is more profitable to business than an official open door policy, give us more. When corrupt and criminal government fails, as it always does, the undocumented worker will teach us how to feed ourselves and prosper in the cash economy.

I swear there is an up side to every stupid rule. We only need patience to see and apply it. The region where I live is literally and figuratively hot. Migrants are filling the land from the North and the South. No matter what happens in Detroit or New York, boom times are here to stay in my neighborhood. (more…)

The Race for H1b Visas: Who are the Winners?

September 12th, 2009 | Posted by Admin in Immigration Law - (Comments Off)

Is your company getting ready for the yearly H1B visa race? Are you hoping to process enough visas to meet personnel needs? Or are you one of the potential employees waiting to see whether the USCIS will allow you to enter the states on a temporary work visa? How will President-elect Obama’s advisors impact the cap for these work visas? What kind of immigration reforms will take place?

Meet Department of Homeland Security nominee Janet Napolitano. Her confirmation hearing will be overseen by Senator Joseph Lieberman, an occasional friend and occasional foe of the H1B Visa Program and its reform. While both Ms. Napolitano and Mr. Lieberman have strongly pushed for an increase in the number of H1B visas issued each year, Mr. Lieberman is also a strong supporter of visa reform.

Ms. Napolitano’s push for increasing the limit on the number of visas issued each year is based on the solid argument that the United States lacks skilled workers to fill the technology needs experienced by American companies. Although she couldn’t achieve her desired reforms (this is controlled by Congress, and is currently set at 85,000), she could push to streamline the process, making the application much easier for persons with foreign degrees.

Another possible outcome of Napolitano’s nomination as Director of Homeland Security is that students who earn American Degrees would have no difficulty obtaining an H1B visa after passing a background check. In fact, she pushes for attaching a green card to these students’ diplomas! She believes this streamlining would help to keep technology workers, as well as the resultant innovations in design and technology, within the United States.

However, to successfully implement her ideas, Ms. Napolitano will probably be forced to rectify the many indiscretions that have become a part of the H1B program. In the past two years of reviewing applications, USCIS officials found that more than one-fifth of these applications violated federal rules and regulations. Even more so, certain trends surfaced in the violations.

First, some foreign academic credentials, which are required for persons seeking H1B visas, reference universities or diplomas that lack the correct credentials. Some applications contain falsified signatures. While some applications were processed for shell companies. In addition, some companies hired professionals to perform job duties not listed on the labor certificate. (more…)

This site is protected by WP-CopyRightPro