Cheap Labor Proves Expensive For
Citibank [Randall
Burns] - 04/08/05
Citibank has been among the
50 most popular searches for H-1b visa use for a
while. Recently, it appears the outsourcing facilitated
by their intensive use of H-1b and L-1 visas is having
consequences. [Indian
Call Center Employees Hack US Bank Accounts,
Slashdot.com]
The question remains: are
immigration intensive companies a good investment?
Every indication is no. The SEC should start requiring
all publicly traded companies to report their use of
work-based visas (L-1/H-1B) immediately. Then we'd have
the clear data to prove just how bad a financial
decision these guest worker visas are.
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Changing Names [James
Fulford] - 04/08/05
If you haven't heard about the
James Guckert/Jeff Gannon mini scandal, you are
officially out of it. Here's the official
version, it must be official because it comes from a
Real Journalist, with a press card and everything: [“Online
Reporter Quits After Liberals' Expose (washingtonpost.com)
By Howard Kurtz, February 10, 2005;]
What gets me about it is not the
Snob Journalism angle, which goes back to
Matt Drudge's appearance before the
National Press Club. Nor is it the
Democratic Press Corps' shock and horror at the idea
of a Republican being allowed to ask a "loaded
question." Nor yet the
gay angle.
No, it's the idea that, in America
of all places, you can't
change your name. If my name were Guckert, I'd
run to the
Office Of Name Changing to drop it. (Why he thought
Jeff was better than James is a puzzle, of course.)
Seriously, immigrants and second
generation-Americans changing their names to make them
easier for normal people to spell is a traditional form
of assimilation. and when Mississippi Congressman John
Rankin made a 1947 speech about
Hollywood pro-communists in which he listed their
embarrassing birth names ("Another one here calls
himself Melvyn Douglas, whose real name is Melvyn
Hesselberg"), he was simply embarrassing the
anti-Communist cause.
But when Debra Solomon
questioned Gannon, she
refused to accept this:
A. My
Amex card still comes in the name of James Guckert, but
I want to be called Jeff Gannon. That is who I am.
Q. Or rather it is the
pseudonym under which you gained access to White House
press briefings for two years, until your identity was
revealed. Why do you think they let you in?
German-Americans have frequently
changed their names, because of the terrible problems
people have pronouncing them or spelling them. Examples
American Generals
George Armstrong Küster, Black Jack
Pfoershing, and Dwight David Eisenhauer.
Others have changed their names
because they were simply embarrassing, in English.
Authors
Dean Koontz and
Stephen Coonts are descended from German immigrants
with the same last name, which, as you can infer, was as
liability in an English speaking country.
(Michelle Malkin is different, she
simply writes under her married name, but
stupid leftists insist on calling her Magalang. I'm
not clear if this is reverse racism, or reverse sexism,
but it's highly annoying.)
But if it's now a Real Journalist
rule that no one is allowed to change their name, or use
a pseudonym, what do they have to say about the former
"most
trusted man in America"—Walter
Krankheit?
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