September 27, 2007
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09/26/07 -
Indiana’s State Director Of The Federation For
Immigration Reform And Enforcement Says The Clintons
Have No Loyalty To America
A Washington State Reader and IT Pioneer Supports Ron Paul
From: James A.
Bowery (e-mail
him)
Re: Peter
Brimelow’s Column:
Ron Paul: “I Believe In National Sovereignty”
As one of the
builders of the computer industry who saw his 35-year
career destroyed by
H-1B visas, I appreciate the irony that I just got
back from
a Ron Paul rally in Seattle, thus giving me a chance
to comment on Brimelow's important interview first hand.
I'm a firm, if
skeptical, Paul supporter because he is the best hope
for to solve our problems.
As harsh as my career
loss has been and as difficult as it is to see my fruits
reaped by foreigners with
arranged marriages and intact clan support
structures, Paul’s opponents in the presidential race
would create greater problems for all of us.
It's good that
Brimelow got
Paul to answer some tough questions regarding H-1B
visas, but the
bigger problem is illustrated by what I observed
during my trip to weekend trip to Seattle.
The demographic
change overwhelming America as evidenced by the foreign
invasion in and around Seattle is a bigger concern to me
than of my loss of livelihood to hundreds of thousands
of
H-1B visa holders with
questionable diplomas from
Indian paper mills in jobs frequently handed to them
because of ethnic nepotism.
As much as I
appreciate Brimelow's accurate emphasis on the impact of
H-1B visas on people like me, his failure to talk to
Paul about
Randall Burns' idea of
auctioning off citizenship and visas was the most
glaring omission of the interview—particularly to the
faithful and thoughtful readers of
VDARE. Com,
Despite
Paul’s shortcomings, if you subscribe to the "the
least of evils" theory, he is the closest thing many
of us have seen to a "good" candidate in our life
times—even if he further damages some of us.
Bowery fixes computers
for his neighbors and does odd jobs in the rural Pacific
Northwest. Until the H-1B invasion, he was
a leader
in computer networking starting in 1974 at the
PLATO network
where he developed many firsts. He also provided the
first
iterative solution
to the
Tower of Hanoi
problem in 1977 helping his then friend
Ray Ozzie,
Microsoft’s chief software architect.