| I would like everyone answer few questions to define what is fair and what is not: 1. Is it fair for high-skilled Indian-nationals to wait 10+ years for a GC? 2. Is it fair that indian consultancy bodyshops overwhelmed the IT market and H1B quota and then brought down the wages of IT professionals via C2C, 1099, OPT/CPT, fake resumes and other tricks? 3. Is it fair that indian GC backlog will delay GC for other nationals, in case the 7% limit is lifted? I would say since Indians enjoyed getting the majority of H1-Bs, they should also bear the consequences of hitting the country limit. Otherwise, it would only benefit Indian nationals only at a cost of other nationals. I am not even talking about nurses and other professions that will be harmed by this bill. |
Regarding #2, the body shops are able to get away with it because of the long GC backlog for Indians. Hence companies like to hire Indians precisely because they will work for them for a long time without pay hikes because of the GC backlog, compared to hiring Americans or workers from other non-backlogged countries. This bill will take that away and equalize everyone's footing. You know the body shops and staffing companies hate this bill right?
>Is it fair that indian GC backlog will delay GC for other nationals, in case the 7% limit is lifted?
Yes, it is. It's called first come first served. That's like asking if it is fair that people who got into the queue at the DMV before you get to go to the counter before you. Yes, it definitely is.