|
|
|
|
|
by praneshp
3159 days ago
|
|
> That is not even remotely true. Anyone who can afford a software developer can afford an immigration attorney to handle applying for an H1B. The problem with using sweeping statements like "anyone who can..." is that one example is enough to disprove you. There'll be Who's Hiring thread in a couple of days, watch how many young startups say no new H1Bs on that. Your OPT case is only true when hiring a student on F1 |
|
We don't have to wait - we can look at the one from last month: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=15384262
I did a Ctrl+F and nothing came up for "H1B" and the only thing that came up for "citizen" was a job posting for the US government itself.