Immigration Axis launches Ardennes Offensive
By Peter Brimelow
“You know something's up when Jack Kemp,
Spence Abraham and Bill Gates find themselves on
the same side of the barricades as Al Gore, Bob
Graham and the folks at the National Council of
La Raza,” says the Wall Street Journal
Editorial Page this morning (June 12, 2000). You
sure do: you know that the Anti-American Axis of
professional ethnics, cheap-labor hogs,
campaign-contribution whores, low-IQ libertarian
loonies, neocon nasties, fossilized Republican
publicists and New World Order nogoodniks that
has paralyzed the immigration debate is about to
launch its long-awaited Ardennes Offensive in
Washington, aimed at enacting a vast expansion
of H1-B “temporary” indentured-servant visas
under cover of the election.
Needless to say, the economic arguments
behind H1-B expansion are completely specious.
Labor economists are always skeptical when they
hear talk of labor “shortages.” They ask:
“Shortages at what price?” Inexplicably, in
this area the Wall Street Journal Edit
Page seems suddenly to have lost its faith in
the price mechanism.
But at least it now admits, indeed proclaims,
that immigration policy is broke and needs
fixing. Its fix would make things worse. But it’s
a start. Too bad the Wall Street Journal
Edit Page has worked so hard to suppress other
attempts to point this out.
Suppression has been the order of the day in
this corrupt debate. But it’s kind of hard to
suppress UC-Davis computer scientist Professor
Norm Matloff http://heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/itaa.html,
whose efforts to save his students from the
breadline have revealed him to be a formidable
natural polemicist. In this morning’s email to
his supporters, he exposes a typical bit of Axis
black propaganda:

SPECIAL REPORT - FRADULENT TESTIMONY TO
SENATE
I know a lot of you receive a large amount of
e-mail, but you need to pay extra attention to
this one. Forgive me for writing in all-caps,
but the information here is that A HIGH-TECH
INDUSTRY CEO SUBMITTED *FRAUDULENT TESTIMONY* TO
THE SENATE IMMIGRATION SUBCOMMITTEE IN SUPPORT
OF RAISING THE H-1B CAP.
Many of you will remember womenConnect.com CEO Susan
deFife, poster woman for the industry
lobbyists. The lobbyists put her on the ABC
World News Tonight story just last week (June
6), for example, highlighting the H-1B she
hired. She highlighted the same H-1B in her
testimony to the Senate in October 1999, saying:
Last year, we spent months recruiting
for a systems administrator who has the
critical role of ensuring our content is
presented correctly and on time to our
audience. We were fortunate to
eventually find Noemi Nieto-Mendieta, a
young woman from Mexico who was
finishing coursework at a local
university. (Noemi is with me today.)
(http://www.senate.gov/~judiciary/102199sd.htm)
Now, I thought it would be interesting to
know just how much Ms. deFife is paying this
"rare worker" she sponsored for an
H-1B visa, so I took a look at Rob Sanchez's
online database of H-1B applications, which he
obtained under FOIA from the Dept. of Labor.
(This is the first time I used the database. I
must say it is an amazingly powerful tool.)
The database is at http://www.zazona.com/ShameH1B/.
Click on "H-1B
Visa Database," then enter Virginia for
the state and womenConnect.com for the company
name - and voila!, there is the entry for
deFife's H-1B.
(The database does not give names, but this
entry is the only one for womenConnect.com. The
year of hire is given as 1998, matching what
deFife testified, the job title matches, the
company name and place match. Rob assures me
that the database is complete for Virginia.)
So here it is: deFife hired this system
administrator for only $35,000!
Remember, she said that this woman was a new
graduate, and at that time (NACE survey, 3
months after the hire) new IT graduates were
being paid on average $45,000 for a Bachelor's
degree!
No wonder some of the industry lobbyists have
reportedly been pushing to remove a provision
from Rep. Lamar Smith's H-1B bill which would
set a floor of $40,000 for salary. The national
median IT salary is over $60,000, so setting a
$40K floor might seem rather toothless - it is
rather toothless, actually, but one can see why
the lobbyists' constituency like deFife even
object to a $40K floor.
In short, this is perhaps the worst outrage
I've seen in all the years
I've been following the H-1B issue. I knew
that some H-1Bs were being paid salaries as low
as this, but I never thought that a CEO
TESTIFYING ON THE MATTER WOULD SO BRAZENLY
MISLEAD THE SENATE. Here deFife is telling what
a dearth of IT workers we have, and yet she is
paying her "rare find" well below
average.
By the way, I just checked Ecutel,
another Virginia firm whose CEO has testified to
Congress in favor of raising the H-1B cap. I
already knew they were suspect, because a member
of my e-mail list who possessed the skills they
wanted applied to them, contacting them
repeatedly, and was never even given an
interview. The H-1B database shows them hiring
several H-1Bs in 1997 as software engineers at
salaries at the $35,000 level. That level would
have been below the average for new graduates,
and if they weren't new graduates, the gap would
be even bigger.
I hope that FAIR, NumbersUSA,
APG, AEA, IEEE-USA (!),
etc. really run with this one. The public may or
may not understand that a veteran programmer can
easily pick up a new language like Java, but the
public certainly can easily see that fraudulent
testimony - claiming a "desperate"
shortage while egregiously underpaying one's
workers - is an absolute disgrace.
Norm Matloff <matloff@cs.ucdavis.edu>
June 12, 2000