February 17, 2009
"Information
Clearinghouse"
-- - The Bush/Obama
bailout/stimulus plans
are not going to work.
Both are schemes
hatched by a clique of
financial insiders.
The schemes will
redistribute income
and wealth from
American taxpayers to
the shyster banksters,
who have destroyed
American jobs, ruined
the retirement plans
of tens of millions of
Americans, and
worsened the situation
of millions of people
worldwide who naively
trusted American
financial
institutions. The
ongoing theft has
simply been recast.
Instead of using
fraudulent financial
instruments, the
banksters are using
government policy.
Michael Hudson
captures the nature of
the heist in
CounterPunch (February
12):
“When it comes to
cleaning up the
Greenspan Bubble
legacy by writing down
homeowner mortgage
debt, the Treasury
proposal offers
homeowners $50 billion
– just [half of one
percent] of the $10
trillion Wall Street
bailout to date, and
less than half the
amount given to AIG to
pay its hedge fund
speculators on their
derivative gambles.
The Treasury has
handed out $25 billion
to each and every big
bank, so just two of
these banks alone got
as much as the
reported one-quarter
of all homeowners in
America suffering from
Negative Equity on
their homes and in
need of mortgage
renegotiation. Yet
today’s economic
shrinkage cannot be
reversed without a
recovery in consumer
demand. The economy
has lost the
“virtual wealth”
in higher-priced homes
and the stock market,
and must rely on
after-tax earnings.
But I see little
concern for wage
earners in the
Treasury plan. Without
debt relief, consumer
spending and business
investment will not
recover.”
The big money men
cannot conceive of
anyone’s suffering
except the mega-rich.
If billions are not at
stake, what is the
problem? How can a
family losing its
house bring down the
economy?
There was a time in
America when the
interests of elites
were connected to
those of ordinary
Americans. Henry Ford
said that he paid his
workers good wages so
they could buy his
cars.
Today American
corporations pay
foreign workers low
wages so CEOs can pay
themselves
multi-million dollar
“performance”
bonuses.
Congress has had a
parade of CEOs,
ranging from Bill
Gates of MIcrosoft and
IBM brass on down the
line, to testify that
they desperately need
more H-1B work visas
for foreign employees
as they cannot find
enough American
software engineers and
IT workers to grow
their businesses. Yet,
all the companies who
sing this song have
established records of
replacing American
employees with H-1B
workers who are paid
less.
Just the other day
Microsoft, IBM, Texas
Instruments, Sprint
Nextel, Intel,
Motorola, and scores
of other corporations
announced thousands of
layoffs of the
qualified American
engineers who “are
in short supply.”
IBM has offered to
help to relocate its
“redundant” but
“scarce” American
engineers to its
operations in India,
China, Brazil, Mexico,
the Czech Republic,
Russia, South Africa,
Nigeria, and the
United Arab Emirates
at the salaries
prevailing in those
countries.. http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=213000389
On January 28, USA
Today reported: “In
2007, the last full
year for which
detailed employment
numbers are available,
121,000 of IBM's
387,000 workers [31%]
were in the U.S.
Meanwhile, staffing in
India has jumped from
just 9,000 workers in
2003 to 74,000 workers
in 2007.”
In order to penetrate
and to serve foreign
markets, US
corporations need
overseas operations.
There is nothing
unusual or unpatriotic
about this. However,
many US companies use
foreign labor to
manufacture abroad the
products that they
sell in American
markets. If Henry Ford
had used Indian,
Chinese, or Mexican
workers to manufacture
his cars, Indians,
Chinese and Mexicans
could possibly have
purchased Fords, but
not Americans.
Senators Charles
Grassley and Bernie
Sanders offered an
amendment to the
Troubled Asset Relief
Program (TARP) bill
that would prevent
companies receiving
bailout money from
discharging American
employees and
replacing them with
foreigners on H-1B
visas.
The U.S. Chamber of
Commerce, no longer an
American institution,
and immigration
advocates, such as the
American Immigration
Lawyers Association,
immediately went to
work to defeat or to
water down the
amendments. Senator
Grassley’s attempt
to prevent American
corporations from
replacing American
workers with
foreigners on H-1B
work visas in the
midst of the most
serious economic
crisis since the Great
Depression was met
with outrage from the
U.S. Chamber of
Commerce, an
organization concerned
solely with the
multi-million dollar
bonuses paid to
American CEOs for
reducing labor costs
by offshoring American
jobs or by replacing
American employees
with foreign guest
workers.
On January 23 Senator
Grassley wrote to
Microsoft CEO Steve
Ballmer:
“I am concerned that
Microsoft will be
retaining foreign
guest workers rather
than similarly
qualified American
employees when it
implements its layoff
plan. As you know, I
want to make sure
employers recruit
qualified American
workers first before
hiring foreign guest
workers. For example,
I cosponsored
legislation to
overhaul the H-1B and
L-1 visa programs to
give priority to
American workers and
to crack down on
unscrupulous employers
who deprive qualified
Americans of
high-skilled jobs.
Fraud and abuse is
rampant in these
programs, and we need
more transparency to
protect the integrity
of our immigration
system.
“Last year,
Microsoft was here on
Capitol Hill
advocating for more
H-1B visas. The
purpose of the H-1B
visa program is to
assist companies in
their employment needs
where there is not a
sufficient American
workforce to meet
their technology
expertise
requirements. However,
H-1B and other work
visa programs were
never intended to
replace qualified
American workers.
Certainly, these work
visa programs were
never intended to
allow a company to
retain foreign guest
workers rather than
similarly qualified
American workers, when
that company cuts jobs
during an economic
downturn.
“It is imperative
that in implementing
its layoff plan,
Microsoft ensures that
American workers have
priority in keeping
their jobs over
foreign workers on
visa programs.
“My point is that
during a layoff,
companies should not
be retaining H-1B or
other work visa
program employees over
qualified American
workers. Our
immigration policy is
not intended to harm
the American
workforce. I encourage
Microsoft to ensure
that Americans are
given priority in job
retention. Microsoft
has a moral obligation
to protect these
American workers by
putting them first
during these difficult
economic times.”
Senator Grassley is
rightly concerned that
recession layoffs will
shield increased jobs
offshoring and use of
H-1B workers. On
February 13, Pravda
reported that
“America has begun
the initial steps to
final outsourcing of
it’s last dominant
industry”--oil/gas
and oil/gas services.
Pravda reports that
“as with other
formerly dominant
industries, such as
light manufacturing,
IT, textiles,”
recession is “used
as the knife to
finally do in the
workers.”
According to Pravda,
“IT is a prime
example. The companies
used the bust to lay
off hundreds of
thousands of tech
workers around the US
and Britain, citing
low profits or debt.
The public as a whole
accepted this, as part
of the economic
landscape and protests
were few, especially
with a prospect of the
situation turning
around. However,
shortly after the turn
around in the economy,
it became very clear
that there would be no
turn around in the IT
employment industry.
Not only were
companies outsourcing
everything they could,
under the cover of the
recession, they had
shipped in tens of
thousands of H-1B work
visaed workers who
were paid on the
cheap.” http://english.pravda.ru/world/americas/107104-america_dominant_industry-0
It is rare to find US
Representatives and
Senators, such as
Grassley, who will
take a stand against
powerful special
interests. Some do so
inadvertently,
forgetting that
patriotism is no
longer a
characteristic of the
American business
elite. Hoping to
stimulate American
rather than foreign
businesses, the House
version of the
economic stimulus
bill, the American
Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of
2009, required that
funds provided by the
bill cannot be used to
purchase foreign-made
iron, steel, and
textiles.
The Senate provision
was more sweeping,
mandating that all
manufactured goods
purchased with
stimulus money be
American-made.
The U.S. Chamber of
Commerce, the National
Association of
Manufacturers,
Caterpillar, General
Electric, other
transnational
corporations, and
editorial writers
whose newspapers are
dependent on corporate
advertising set out to
defeat the buy
American requirement.
As far as these
anti-American
organizations are
concerned, the
stimulus bill has
nothing to do with
American jobs or the
American economy. It
only has to do with
the special interest
appetites that have
the political power to
rip off the American
taxpayers. [see
Manufacturing &
Technology News,
February 4, 2009]
Senator John McCain is
their man.
“Protectionism”
exclaimed the man the
Republicans wanted as
president. McCain said
the buy American
provision would cause
a second Great
Depression. U.S.
Chamber of Commerce
President Thomas
Donohue said that
buying abroad was
“economic
patriotism.”
The American economic
elite are hiding their
treason to the
American people behind
“free trade.”
I want to say this as
clearly as it can be
said. The offshoring
of American jobs is
the anthesis of free
trade. Free trade is
based on comparative
advantage. Jobs
offshoring is an
activity in pursuit of
lowest factor cost--an
activity that David
Ricardo, the
originator of the free
trade theory,
described as the
betrayal of one’s
own country in pursuit
of “absolute
advantage.”
The “free market”
shills on the payroll
of the U.S. Chamber,
NAM, and in economics
departments and think
tanks that are
recipients of grants
from transnational
corporations are
whores aligned with
elites who are
destroying the
American work force.
Obama has appointed to
his National Economic
Council blatant
apologists for the
offshoring of American
jobs.
Possibly Obama loves
the country that
elevated him to its
highest office. But
his administration is
populated with people
whose loyalty does not
extend beyond elites
to the American
people.
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