Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Hillary Clinton's endless sellout of American workers

If you have ever visited San Jose/Silcon Valley you will not recognize it as being an American city. For years, Feinstein, Boxer, Eshoo, Lofgren and Waxman have taken big campaign bribes from business interests that wanted endless "cheap high-tech" labor from China, Indian, anywhere but AMERICA. If you're an American don't bother to seek a job in American high-tech. There's hardly a shortage of Indians and Chinese in the world. Which is why all you see in Silicon Valley are Indians and Chinese. But it's not just high-tech jobs they're taking from Americans. Go into any gas station and you will see an Indian. Go into any hotel/inn in California and all you see are Indians that own it, and illegal Mexicans that service it.

BILLIIONIARE BILL GATES has made two recent trips to Congrees where they salivated over his shoes, like they do any billionaire, as he demanded all limits on importing Chinese and Indians to take our jobs. Before he went to D.C., Gates made a trip to Mexico to implore the corrupt Mexican goverment never to stop dumping their poor, illiterate, criminal and pregnant, none of whom he hires, over our borders.

BILL GATES'S MICROSOFT is laying off 5,000 of their workers this year alone.



CLINTON SUPPORTS IMPORTING INDIANS AND CHINESE TO TAKE OUR JOBS.... AND ALSO OPEN BORDERS WITH MEXICOBy John Solomon and Matthew Mosk Washington Post Staff Writers Saturday, September 8, 2007; Page A01 When Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton flew to New Delhi to meet with Indian business leaders in 2005, she offered a blunt assessment of the loss of American jobs across the Pacific. "There is no way to legislate against reality," she declared. "Outsourcing will continue. . . . We are not against all outsourcing; we are not in favor of putting up fences." The two speeches delivered continents apart highlight the delicate balance the senator from New York, a dedicated free-trader, is seeking to maintain as she courts two competing constituencies: wealthy Indian immigrants who have pledged to donate and raise as much as $5 million for her 2008 campaign and powerful American labor unions that are crucial to any Democratic primary victory. Despite aggressive courtship by Democratic candidates, major unions such as the AFL-CIO, the Teamsters and the Service Employees International Union have withheld their endorsements as they scrutinize the candidates' records and solicit views on a variety of issues. Facing a cool reception, Clinton and her advisers have used closed-door meetings with labor leaders in recent months to explain her past ties to Indian companies, donors and policies. Aides have highlighted her efforts to retrain displaced workers and to end offshore tax breaks that reward companies that outsource jobs. But the Clinton camp has been pressed by labor leaders on her support for expanding temporary U.S. work visas that often go to Indians who get jobs in the United States, and it has been queried about the help she gave a major Indian company to gain a foothold in New York state. That company now outsources most of its work to India. Clinton declined repeated requests for an interview about her views on outsourcing. Her campaign advisers, however, say she believes there are no inconsistencies in the comments she has made here and in India or in her actions as a senator. At a recent event in Los Angeles, host Nadadur Vardhan told those gathered that they should support Clinton because "she may shift more jobs to India," according to an Indian news account. Both Clintons made repeated trips to India -- visits that continued during Hillary Clinton's tenure in the Senate. Between them, Bill and Hillary Clinton have made eight visits to India since 2001, and many more to Indian American groups in the United States. Some Indian American connections have benefited the Clintons personally, too. Vinod Gupta, the founder of a Nebraska data-mining firm, has donated more than $1 million to the Clintons' political causes while also paying the former president at least $3.3 million as a business consultant. Among labor officials, a nagging question about Hillary Clinton's commitment to protecting U.S. jobs stems from a deal she helped broker for Tata Consulting, one of India's largest technology firms. In 2002, Clinton helped Tata land an agreement to open an office in New York state and to work with a Buffalo area university to create at least 100 jobs in the depressed community. Tata is one of the largest users of the temporary-worker visas that have allowed U.S. technology companies to fill jobs with high-skilled, lower-paid Indian workers. It used nearly 8,000 such visas last year, according to a recent Senate report. As a senator, Clinton has repeatedly supported that program and backs raising the cap for annual visas from the current 65,000 to 115,000.

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