Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg's political action group is very much against mass deportation.
I worry about postelection, prerobot America.
Will this really be a country that gets a neighbor to build
a wall and then deports 11 million undocumented immigrants in order,
supposedly, to give more opportunities to documented Americans?
This is the promise of leading (in many polls) Republican
presidential candidate Donald Trump.
During Wednesday night's Republican debate, he didn't seem
to waver from that intention. He did, however, deny referring to fellow
candidate Marco Rubio as "Mark Zuckerberg's personal senator" for
advocating for expansion of the H1-B visa program, which US tech companies use
to attract skilled workers from overseas. The denial came despite the
"personal senator" remark being plainly written on the Trump website.
Zuckerberg, the CEO of social-networking giant Facebook, has
been the leading light in supporting the political action group Fwd.us, which
vows to "fix our country's broken immigration system." Tech
luminaries such as Bill Gates and Marissa Mayer have also lent their support to
the organization.
So in response to the debate, Fwd.us CEO Todd Schulte posted a robust
response to Trump's plan. He described the plan as "horrible."
"It is astounding that some in a party that espouses
smaller government wants one big enough to deport 11 million undocumented
immigrants and millions of their US citizen family members," he said.
"Mass deportation is absurd on its face and these policies are
indefensible on human, economic and political grounds."
How many new government hires would it take to deport 11
million people? Trump's immigration
plan already calls for the hiring of three times as many Immigration
and Customs Enforcement officers.
Or is the idea to hire people to deport themselves?
Mass deportation may strike more than a few as especially
inhumane and un-American, especially many who are from immigrant families who
arrived in the US via disparate routes. America has long welcomed people as
people, rather than as foreigners.
However, Schulte decided to focus rather on the
"astronomical costs" of such an idea. He doesn't suggest what these
costs might be. Indeed, has anyone even attempted to calculate such costs? The
Trump campaign wasn't immediately available for comment.
Fwd.us has insisted from its very inception that US
immigration policy is,in Zuckerberg's words, "unfit for today's world."
It wants more H1-B visas to be granted so that hiring can be easier and swifter,
while Trump wants more restrictions on the program.
Those of a drier nature might suggest that bringing in more
foreign workers on H1-B visas ties them more easily and more cost-effectively
(for their employers) to the tech company that sponsors them.
Indeed, Trump's immigration plan suggests raising the
prevailing H1-B salary.
"More than half of H-1B visas are issued for the
program's lowest allowable wage level, and more than 80 percent for its bottom
two," it says. "Raising the prevailing wage paid to H-1Bs will force
companies to give these coveted entry-level jobs to the existing domestic pool
of unemployed native and immigrant workers in the US, instead of flying in
cheaper workers from overseas."
Schulte, whose organization claims allies on both sides of
politics, insists that 75 percent of Americans support "common sense immigration
reform."
The problem, though, is that there's little common ground on
what constitutes common sense. As election candidates pander to their perceived
audiences, they might say anything that they believe will have visceral appeal.
American politics simply isn't geared toward planning.
Instead, it's a series of cycles punctuated by excessive dramas that suck
energy from the task of actually governing.
Indeed, Congress and the whole lobbying system are one of
the best advertisements for government by algorithm.
Related: Zuckerberg vows to fix annoying Facebook game invites
Related: Zuckerberg vows to fix annoying Facebook game invites
Source: Yahoo
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