
Dr. Daniel
4.3K posts








I want to reiterate. As I testified to Congress, In my 23 year IT career I managed over 3k H1Bs. Of the 3K there were maybe 15 to 20 that were qualified. Everyone else were "freshers" and their English efficiency was 10% or less. You could not put them in front of the client. They worked 8 hours on-site and 10 hours at night online back to India to accomplish their task. @AAGDhillon @amandalouise416 @BMooreSenate @1819News @USTechWorkers @iaproject @thencamekevin @RealWaKhan @ChiefEngineerCE @NeilMunroDC


Employers are clamoring for workers who can do doctor-like work but who are trained faster and can cost them less. on.wsj.com/4wMBXbr



An alien who is in the U.S. temporarily and wants a Green Card must return to their home country to apply. This policy allows our immigration system to function as the law intended instead of incentivizing loopholes. The era of abusing our nation’s immigration system is over.






Considering how popular SARMs were a few years ago and how many people were willing to risk the side effects, I’m starting to think the real mental barrier to entry for peptides is the injection itself. Normies will automatically lump injections in the same category as steroids. In reality, it’s just a delivery method, nothing more. If anything, it bypasses the liver, which orals tend to be hardest on. But… The poke scares people, even a 31g 5/16” insulin syringe. Going to take a while to change that.









Who can tell me the story of the first hacker the world heard about?







