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To the long list of crimes the British are guilty of against Indians, let’s add one more – Virginity tests on dozens of Indian girls.

According to an AP story, the British High Commission conducted tests on 73 women in New Delhi and nine in Bombay between 1976 and 1979.

The reason offered for conducting the virginity tests on sati Savitris was to weed out bogus immigration claims.

Although the news that the British conducted virginity tests on Indian girls is not new, the scale of their testing is higher than previously disclosed.

Here’s an excerpt from the AP story:

Newly discovered documents indicate that the British government concealed how often it administered so-called “virginity tests” to female immigrants hoping to enter the country in the 1970s on marriage visas.

The documents, unearthed by legal researchers Marinella Marmo and Evan Smith from Australia’s Flinders University, showed that the tests — meant to prove that women coming into Britain to marry were virgins — had been administered more than 80 times.

Although the tests first drew condemnation in the late 1970s, the extent to which the practice had taken place was not clear until now. The British government had previously acknowledged only two cases, both done at Heathrow Airport.

Recent Developments
Wonder how many of the Indian girls the British tested were virgins?

Since it was the 70s and pre-marital sex was mostly taboo, we’d bet at least 90% of the Indian girls tested were virgins.

Today, of course, the ratio of Indian boys and girls who have left any of their orifices unexplored pre-marriage would trend far lower. Isn’t that what they call development? ;)

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Aye Aye Yippee Yippee Aye Aye.

Nice day outside, eh? ;)

Folks, we can’t contain our excitement.

Ha ha ha ha. :lol:

Just had to share this wonderful news with y’all.

Smartsoft Violated H1B Rules
Indian software firm Smartsoft International, founded by Murugadass Krishnan and Shanthi Murugadass (Tamils??), has been royally screwed for H1B violations and ordered to pay $1 million in back wages and interest to 135 H1B workers employed by the company.

The U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division determined that Smartsoft violated the H-1B program’s rules.

A U.S. Labor Dept’s Wage and Hour Division investigator determined that some Smartsoft employees:

*  were not paid any wages at the beginning of their employment

* were paid on a part-time basis despite being hired under a full-time employment agreement

* and were paid less than the prevailing wage applicable to the geographic locations where they performed their work Continue reading »

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After years of importing tens of thousands of foreign workers of Japanese descent from Latin American countries like Brazil and Peru for blue-collar jobs, Japan is now doing an U-turn on its immigration policy.

An U-turn that America must seriously consider (but only partially) vis-a-vis its H1B Visas.

Facing growing unemployment of its own citizens because of slumping production, Japan is now paying these guest workers who came there on special Nikkei Visas $3,000 for air fare and $2,000 for each dependent if they agree to go back home and not seek employment in Japan again.

With growing unemployment in the U.S. (going beyond 10% in some parts), America must study the Japanese model with some modifications.

Here are some suggestions on how we can reform the H1B program:

* Offer to pay the airfares of H1B employees and families who promise to return to their native countries and not apply for job visas for 10 years. U.S. airlines are in bad shape anyway so this H1B cargo should provide a fillip to their business.

* Impose a 10% H1B tax on the wages of H1B employees to fund the state labor departments and help pay unemployment insurance to American workers.

* Impose a $10,000 fee on the employer for each H1B Visa issued over and above the immigration fees to fund the investigation into  the massive H1B fraud. Continue reading »

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A report co-authored by a desi says that H1B Visa admissions into the U.S. pull down wages for native IT programmers and systems analysts by 5%-6%.

Are you surprised?

You shouldn’t be: Because coolies always work for less (you know just like the Walmart slogan We sell for less you see on the back of their trucks).

Desi Co-Author
The report by NYU Assistant Professor Prasanna Tambe and Lorin Hitt of the Wharton School also calculates that offshoring reduces wages of a broader class of IT workers (including IT managers) by 3%.

Apparently, the impact of H1B and offshoring is larger for new graduates or job-hoppers, who are exposed to external labor market forces.

The researchers arrived at their conclusion after examining the U.S. Department of Labor databases and a large pool of sample data.

Queen Anne’s Dead
We’ve been shouting ourselves hoarse for quite some time that the H1B Visas and outsourcing are having a devastating impact on American IT workers, particularly in the current economic climate. Continue reading »

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First it was the H1B software coolies that began screwing American workers (thanks to greedy U.S. corporations).

Now, the down-on-their-luck American workers are being bitch slapped by other things Indian.

The New York Times has an interesting article today on how Indian steel pipes are being used in an oil pipeline project in Granite City, Illinois even as a local steel plant remains closed for the last four months and 2,000 workers are out of work.

Here’s an excerpt from the NYT story:

Jeff Rains, a retired steel worker at the sprawling mill here, made the discovery. Out walking a month ago, he waited impatiently at a rail crossing while a freight train slowly passed, its flatbed cars stacked with steel pipes, each wide enough for a child to crawl through. Then he noticed “Made in India” stenciled on the pipes.

That observation has made him a Paul Revere Continue reading »

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Even recessions have silver linings – as in less number of H1B applications (mostly from the Indian coolies for U.S. IT jobs).

As of April 9, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services had received only 42,000 fresh H1B Visa applications for fiscal 2010 starting on October 1.

CIS, which started accepting applications on April 1, said it’d continue to accept H1B applications until it reaches the limit of 65,000.

Last year (i.e. for fiscal 2009), the U.S. CIS received 150,000 H1B applications for the 65,000 Visas in two days.

Why the Decline
No, no, the coolies have not developed a hatred of America. By no means.

The primary reason for the drop in H1B Visa applications is the slump in the U.S. economy.

Petitions filed on behalf of current H-1B workers (who have been counted previously against the 65,000 cap) will not count toward the fiscal year 2010 H-1B cap.

Disgrace
H1B Visas are a disgrace, a kick in the face of hard working American IT workers. Continue reading »

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