Outsourcing insanity

When it comes to this outsourcing insanity, it doesn’t just stop with computer professionals. Any job using computers is at risk: Accounting. Order taking. Computerized factory floor. Even debt collection.

How appropriate–after a corporation electronically brings in a migrant to do your job, they’ll electronically bring in another to harass you as you go broke.

It is such a drain on our economy that any sane person has to ask: Why do we have to let those jobs go?

Of course, we don’t. But large corporations want it. It gives them an advantage over small companies. They can sell to Americans but not hire Americans. These corporations pay enough in campaign bribes to get their way–and the correct term is bribes. The campaign money comes with strings even if the Supreme Court can’t see it, yet any fool outside the Court’s ivory tower knows that what looks, works and stinks like a bribe, is a bribe. Those bribes grease the way for multinational conglomerates that prefer to ignore national boundaries.

Yet the jobs exist. The jobs are here. Americans could be doing them.

So there’s no law.

It’s our border. These are our jobs.

We can make a law.

Our politicians may think that they work for the multinationals ninety-nine percent of the time, but they still need our votes, even if it’s only once every few years. As a matter of fact, they need our votes this year.

Maybe our politicians have forgotten that?

Maybe we should remind them?

A footnote for 2020:  One might get the impression that I don’t like immigrants or foreigners. I hope not. Nothing could be further from the truth. They are people, just like you and me. I’ve trained and work with any number of people working in India, as well as worked and work with lots of immigrants.  Though I resented the company firing Americans to hire in a foreign country, I still found and do find I like my Indian compatriots. Today, of course, after driving so many Americans out of Information Systems, the mostly likely candidate for a job in America is an immigrant.  I have some Indian friends who have become citizens and now live with the threat of their job going overseas.  So at least the corporate hate for jobs in America applies to everyone in America.

It’s not the people in the jobs.  It’s the destruction of the American economy as a substitute for knowing how to run a business that gripes me.

This, I think, is the major reason for President Trump’s unpopularity with Big Tech. They are the worst offenders at building companies with Americans and our tech and then firing the Americans to make themselves even richer.