Sunday, May 2, 2010

DEMOCRATS and the CULTURE of CORRUPTION - No American Need Apply Here!

NO JOBS FOR LEGALS – EXPORT JOBS OR IMPORT THIRD WORLDERS TO TAKE AMERICAN JOBS!


Barbara Boxer is once again running for 6 more years in the Senate, and the staggering bribes she tucks in her son, OAKLAND LAWYER, DOUGLAS BOXER’S pockets as “consultant fees”. This is one of the LA RAZA DEMS more commonly use forms of corruption.
BOXER HAS NEVER HAD A BILL MADE INTO LAW.
She survives by servicing SILICON VALLEY making sure there are boatloads of CHINESE AND INDIANS to take our jobs, and the borders left open for illegals to keep flooding.

THE MASSIVE JOBS SELLOUT is caused by BOXER, FEINSTEIN, LOFGREN, HONDA, WAXMAN, and PELOSI!

A visit to SILICON VALLEY and you would find a state under THIRD-WORLD OCCUPATION. NO LEGAL NEED APPLY HERE! Jobs go only to Chinese, Indians, or illegals from Mexico.
The place is so Chinese Indian it is unrecognizable as an American state. All “tech workers”??? Fill your gas take up and you’re handing your money to an Indian! Stay at any hotel, and they no longer hire illegals from Mexico to clean up, there all Indians. Most hotels in California are now owned and operated by Indians.
THESE LA RAZA DEMS HAVE CAUSED THE MELTDOWN IN CA. THEY WILL NEVER NOT SELL OUT THE AMERICAN PEOPLE FOR THEIR CORPORATE PAYMASTERS AND BRIBESTERS!

YOU REALLY WANT 6 MORE YEARS OF THE UTTERLY WORTHLESS BARBARA BOXER?
6 MORE YEARS FOR HER TO WRITE PULP FICTION AND GO ON 22 CITY BOOK TOURS? SEE AMAZON!

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NO JOBS FOR LEGALS – EXPORT JOBS OR IMPORT THIRD WORLDERS TO TAKE AMERICAN JOBS!

India outsourcers hiring staff as US demand grows
By ERIKA KINETZ, AP Business Writer
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
(01-20) 06:15 PST MUMBAI, India (AP) --
India's top three outsourcing companies are ramping up hiring and increasing pay as global corporations, mainly from the U.S., send more work offshore to cut costs as they emerge from the downturn.
Tata Consultancy Services, Infosys, and Wipro expanded their global workforces by an average of 5.1 percent last quarter, together adding 16,701 employees, company documents show — an early sign that the Great Recession may ultimately benefit India as cost-conscious companies outsource more work, just as they did after the dot-com bust.
"Our expectations are for flat to marginally stronger IT budgets with a greater share of offshore spend," Wipro chairman Azim Premji said in a conference call Wednesday. "Our customers remain focused on cost reduction."
The employment revival in India's outsourcing sector, which counts on the U.S. for about 60 percent of global sales, comes as unemployment in the U.S. stagnates around 10 percent — near a 26-year high. Inflation-adjusted wages in the U.S. last year fell 1.6 percent, the biggest decline since 1990.
"When there is a downturn the compulsion to control costs increases," said Dipen Shah, an analyst at Mumbai's Kotak Securities. "The demand for offshoring will increase. That will play to the advantage of Indian IT companies."
He argues that the cost savings from offshoring has helped U.S. companies survive — and that's good for the American worker.
"You might say jobs in the U.S. are getting displaced by jobs in India, but because of the value provided by Indian companies and lower costs, there are firms who are able to keep their heads above water and continue to employ their existing employees," he said.
TCS, Infosys and Wipro, whose clients include leading companies like Goldman Sachs and General Electric as well as U.S. government agencies, can do everything from call center management and claims processing to software development and consulting. All three reported stronger than expected results for the December quarter, with revenue and volume growth, signaling that the cost-cutting imperative of this last, lean year may be over for India's $60 billion software services industry.
After about a year of hiring slowdowns, all three companies are sweetening compensation as the fight to hold on to talented employees in India heats up.
Infosys offered its Indian employees an average 8 percent pay hike in October, their first raise since April 2008, and executives said last week they are considering another raise to combat rising attrition.
"The market is heating up and we want to retain talent," human resources director Mohandas Pai told reporters.
Infosys last week raised its gross hiring target for the second time this fiscal year, to 24,000 people.
Wipro executives said they plan to offer staffers a raise in February.
Tata Consultancy Services has paid out 150 percent of performance-linked pay — which normally amounts to 20 to 45 percent of compensation — for the last two quarters, and executives say they will raise salaries next quarter, after a year-long wage freeze.
As demand for workers revives, employers have begun to worry about rising staff turnover. Employees who sat tight during the downturn have started to shop around for better jobs and better salaries.
Attrition at Wipro jumped to 13.4 percent last quarter, up from an average of 8.9 percent over the prior three quarters. Attrition at Infosys rose to 11.6 percent last quarter from 10.9 percent the prior quarter. Attrition at TCS has been stable, at around 11.5 percent, though executives say they expect that number to rise.
Indian firms say they are increasing global hiring, including in the U.S., as they pursue higher-end work like consulting. But U.S. employees remain a fraction of total staff.
TCS, for example, recently finished hiring 250 Americans for its Cincinnati campus, but U.S. employees still account for less than 0.5 percent of the company's global workforce.

NO JOBS FOR LEGALS – EXPORT JOBS OR IMPORT THIRD WORLDERS TO TAKE AMERICAN JOBS!

WHY DOESN’T JEFF GREENE HAVE A JOB? BECAUSE HE STANDS AT THE BACK OF THE LINE IN SILICON VALLEY BEHIND ENDLESS BOATLOADS OF CHINESE AND INDIANS.

NO AMERICAN NEED APPLY!

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S.F. garden to help feed the homeless
Rachel Gordon, Chronicle Staff Writer
Saturday, May 1, 2010

Jeff Greene, an out-of-work engineer who would be homeless if not for a room in a residential hotel paid for by the city, grabbed a shovel Friday afternoon and began digging holes in a patch of dirt in Hayes Valley.
Greene, 45, was helping plant an urban fruit orchard along Octavia Boulevard on land once under the shadow of a freeway ramp.
His volunteer labor was used to help launch a nationwide project dubbed "Communities Take Root" in which fruit trees will be planted in 25 more communities across the United States to bring fresh and nutritious foods to the poor and others in need.
San Francisco's fruit orchard is being incorporated into a budding community food garden run by Project Homeless Connect, a 6-year-old program started by Mayor Gavin Newsom to help the homeless get housing, health care, clothing and other essential goods and services.
The garden, which runs along the east side of Octavia between Oak and Page streets, opened in February. The produce is intended to feed the homeless.
On Friday afternoon dozens of volunteers gathered in the sun-warmed garden to plant 17 fruit trees, among them grapefruit, apple, pear, guava, persimmon and apricot, and about two dozen plants and shrubs that will produce huckleberries, raspberries, grapes and the like.
The project is a joint effort of the Fruit Tree Planting Foundation of Mill Valley and Dreyer's, the Oakland food company.
The first substantial harvest should emerge in two or three years, said Cem Akin, executive director of the Fruit Tree Planting Foundation.
Ed DeMasi, deputy director of Project Homeless Connect, surveyed the garden - now sprouting greens and planted with fruit trees - that not long ago had been a neglected patch of asphalt beneath the Central Freeway ramp. The freeway, damaged in the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, is gone and a renewed neighborhood has taken root.
The garden is a symbol of the rebirth.
"Now people who are homeless and who have homes are coming together as one to work on a common goal, and that's learning about and growing sustainable food and building community," DeMasi said.
Greene, who is working to put his life back on track, said the garden has given him that and more.
"All these trees we're planting," he said, "remind me of hope."
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NO JOBS FOR LEGALS – EXPORT JOBS OR IMPORT THIRD WORLDERS TO TAKE AMERICAN JOBS!

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