Posted On: Saturday - January 11th 2025 12:00PM MST
In Topics:   Immigration Stupidity  University  Trump  The Future  Big-Biz Stupidity

See, this is when we miss VDare.com the most. Instead of going through a bunch of websites to find the truth on the H1B and other ID-visa (Indentured Servant) numbers, Peak Stupidity could have pointed the reader to multiple VDare posts with all the numbers you need. We are still hoping for some sort of downfall of Black! fat-ass NY Attorney General Leticia James, so that VDare could rise out of it's archival ashes.
Commenter E.H. Hail noted Peak Stupidity's way-off numbers in our most recent post on the H1B visa battle. We have corrected that post and apologized. The numbers in my head, from 2 decades of reading VDare were off because of one thing I'm almost certain of now, H1B visa caps. They are a complete joke!
The reader can see from one of the tables on this page on redbus2us.com* for the last 21 years that "cap on H1B visas" has been 85,000. That's 65,000 "Regular Quota" and 20,000 "Masters Quota" yearly. To serve Americans - NO!!! it's an anarchist's cookbook!
Before then, BTW, per a chart here, the cap popped up from 65,000 "normal"** to 115,000 in '99-'00, then up to 195,000 during Bush Jr.'s 1st term. (Granted, a big share of those applications were not approved for a couple of those years, '02-'03, but that was just 9/11 fall-out. The Moslems/Arabs came even faster, though, on their student visas and such.**)
These numbers for the "cap" are more of a joke than the Feral Gov't debt ceiling. At least the latter is put of a vote every time - about yearly anymore - to kick that can down to the (coming) end of the road. There's no vote on busting the cap here. "TECH" titans decide how many more Indentured Servants they still want. Once the cap is reached, as RedBusToUS helpfully informs
The whole thing is just a 3 century later kindler and gentler version of the Charlestown slave market. "I need 10 more field hands for the cotton, a dozen for the indigo, 20 house servants." They had to send someone to the auction and give requests verbally or in writing, as there was no website back in those days. Now, I'm sure there's a portal and an app for these "TECH" titans to order up some more
To get finally to the raw numbers, Mr. Hail's link goes to 3 bar graphs, of '13 through '18, from the US State Dept - H1Bs, H1As, and H2Bs. The latter two are for imported nurses and then "temporary non-agricultural workers" (say, the foreigners running all the rides at the State Fair - Americans don't know how), respectively. Let me just concentrate on the H1B's due to their being the big discussion going on, and that the whole system of "non"-immigrant visas is overwhelming. Mr. Hail gave numbers in the comments, along with his own take on Trump's failure on this. There's a less data-heavy article on the BBC site that gets into the H1B issuances and Trump here.
I'll point the reader to some other, also slightly old, data, here on this US Customs/Immigration page. It has '07 to '17 data, broken up in terms of country of origin, occupation of Indentured Servitude, general type of business doing the indenturing, age range, and compensation. Indians are 2/3 to 3/4 of the recipients, hence their presence in America being heavily "bandied about" on twitter, and the Chinese are the next highest, around the 10% level. Other nationalities, taken individually fall well behind, at less than 3% for the highest (Philippines).
The share of these Indentured Servants brought over for IT work is a majority, 60% or so, of the total. So, Indians in IT, by the millions, is what this particular visa type is all about. The numbers are high, in the high 200,000 to low 300,000 ANNUALLY, from another site I looked at - it was more current. Then, in '24, Dark Brandon went FULL TRAITOR and brought it up to 3/4 of a million!
There you go, a few numbers, as a correction and to inform our readers. The polemics will continue until morale improves or we meet together in Montevideo. Actually, no, but that's another few posts to come ...
PS: Jared Taylor has an Unz Review post out on this subject. I found the image above a few days back, but Mr. Taylor wryly noted for his article, "Seventy-two-point-six percent of the people who come in on them are Indians, 12.5 percent are Chinese, and only about 2 percent are white, but naturally, the sample visa you find on the internet is for a Frenchman!"
* Holy crap, it took me till just a few minutes ago to understand what the URL means. That's "Red Bus to (the) US". Yeah, the site is one little part of the whole LEGAL immigration scam apparatus.
** Normal, master's degree, whatever, they are all staying, and they are all hired for jobs actual American could be doing.
*** The 2 stories in that post are of African immigrants owning slaves in the US, but there have been stories of Indians in New Jersey doing the same. Again, bring back VDare!
Comments:
Moderator
Tuesday - January 14th 2025 8:04PM MST
PS: "--- What gets done to reverse the problem: Nothing, even by supposedly pro-"White Middle America" politicos.
Why?"
I think, Mr. Hail, it's because most Americans still don't see how bad off we are from the current state and the trends. They can't do numbers, very much like Trump.
Until they'd rather discuss these politics rather than last weekend's sportsball, I don't think we're gonna get too far. No, the politicians alone won't help us much, even Trump with his Millers, Homans and Bannons (is the latter still on-board?)
Why?"
I think, Mr. Hail, it's because most Americans still don't see how bad off we are from the current state and the trends. They can't do numbers, very much like Trump.
Until they'd rather discuss these politics rather than last weekend's sportsball, I don't think we're gonna get too far. No, the politicians alone won't help us much, even Trump with his Millers, Homans and Bannons (is the latter still on-board?)
Adam Smith
Tuesday - January 14th 2025 1:18PM MST
PS: Good afternoon, gentlemen of wealth and taste...
𝐼 𝑤𝑜𝑛'𝑡 𝑝𝑎𝑦 𝑡𝑜 𝑟𝑒𝑎𝑑 𝑡ℎ𝑒 𝑊𝑆𝐽...
Lol... Yeah. Me either. I can't imagine anyone would...
https://archive.ph/nmrpD
I remember buying CDs from the record store in the nineties. There were the places at the mall (back when that was still a thing) and Record Theatre, which also sold used CDs for $5-$10 and gave out a string of stamps with each purchase. (When you filled one of their little books with stamps you got a free CD!)(I also waited outside the Record Theatre in the cold one night to score some Rush tickets.)(Back when that was still a thing.)
https://www.rush.com/tour/counterparts/
There was also a place called Stereo Advantage (I bought Clapton's Unplugged CD there which was released in August of 1992.) as well as a few smaller shops. They even had a cool record store in the basement of the House of Guitars. (<𝑠>Maybe it's still there. I don't know. I haven't been in years.</𝑠> Yup. Still there. I just checked.)
https://houseofguitars.com/cds-vinyls/
But then one day, probably around 1999 I came across this little known website called audiogalaxy.com and suddenly every piece of music that I wanted was free! No more buying CDs for $16+ a pop.
In those days you had to download the songs one .mp3 at a time over 56k dialup. (This was long before thepiratebay came along and made downloading easy.) I would cue up 40 or 50 songs in my download manager and let it run overnight. In the morning I would have maybe half of them.
Don't know why I'm getting all nostalgic over the old CD stores and file sharing sites. But since I found audiogalaxy I have never paid for music. Like many/most books, movies and software, music is free now and has been for many years. Even hard to find music can often be found on youtube and it is easy to turn a youtube video into an .mp3 file.
</nostalgicstory>
Confederates in the Attic by Tony Horwitz
https://files.catbox.moe/0j4s4e.epub
https://files.catbox.moe/hj4ct5.pdf
I've been trying out this new (to me) file sharing site...
https://catbox.moe/
It works well on my end, but I don't know how user friendly it is for non-linux users. For all I know it might be unusable on a windows box or all muddled up with ads or something. I like how easy it is, and that it opens .pdf files in the browser. (Unfortunately, it renames the files to an random string of letters. Oh well.) If it is problematic for you guys I'll use something else.
Like Mega.nz...
https://tinyurl.com/3kdka79u
https://tinyurl.com/ysk4tswh
Happy Tuesday! ☮️
𝐼 𝑤𝑜𝑛'𝑡 𝑝𝑎𝑦 𝑡𝑜 𝑟𝑒𝑎𝑑 𝑡ℎ𝑒 𝑊𝑆𝐽...
Lol... Yeah. Me either. I can't imagine anyone would...
https://archive.ph/nmrpD
I remember buying CDs from the record store in the nineties. There were the places at the mall (back when that was still a thing) and Record Theatre, which also sold used CDs for $5-$10 and gave out a string of stamps with each purchase. (When you filled one of their little books with stamps you got a free CD!)(I also waited outside the Record Theatre in the cold one night to score some Rush tickets.)(Back when that was still a thing.)
https://www.rush.com/tour/counterparts/
There was also a place called Stereo Advantage (I bought Clapton's Unplugged CD there which was released in August of 1992.) as well as a few smaller shops. They even had a cool record store in the basement of the House of Guitars. (<𝑠>Maybe it's still there. I don't know. I haven't been in years.</𝑠> Yup. Still there. I just checked.)
https://houseofguitars.com/cds-vinyls/
But then one day, probably around 1999 I came across this little known website called audiogalaxy.com and suddenly every piece of music that I wanted was free! No more buying CDs for $16+ a pop.
In those days you had to download the songs one .mp3 at a time over 56k dialup. (This was long before thepiratebay came along and made downloading easy.) I would cue up 40 or 50 songs in my download manager and let it run overnight. In the morning I would have maybe half of them.
Don't know why I'm getting all nostalgic over the old CD stores and file sharing sites. But since I found audiogalaxy I have never paid for music. Like many/most books, movies and software, music is free now and has been for many years. Even hard to find music can often be found on youtube and it is easy to turn a youtube video into an .mp3 file.
</nostalgicstory>
Confederates in the Attic by Tony Horwitz
https://files.catbox.moe/0j4s4e.epub
https://files.catbox.moe/hj4ct5.pdf
I've been trying out this new (to me) file sharing site...
https://catbox.moe/
It works well on my end, but I don't know how user friendly it is for non-linux users. For all I know it might be unusable on a windows box or all muddled up with ads or something. I like how easy it is, and that it opens .pdf files in the browser. (Unfortunately, it renames the files to an random string of letters. Oh well.) If it is problematic for you guys I'll use something else.
Like Mega.nz...
https://tinyurl.com/3kdka79u
https://tinyurl.com/ysk4tswh
Happy Tuesday! ☮️
Moderator
Tuesday - January 14th 2025 9:22AM MST
PS: I won't pay to read the WSJ., SafeNow, but thanks for that part of the definition. I suppose we ought to know this stuff here.
(Ahaaa, "War" Street Journal - almost missed that.)
I appreciate the book club entry, Mr. Smith.
(Ahaaa, "War" Street Journal - almost missed that.)
I appreciate the book club entry, Mr. Smith.
Hail
Tuesday - January 14th 2025 6:24AM MST
PS
H-1B is, or may be, a good example of why the Right's coalition, "even under Trump," is unstable and ineffective at reversing Third Worlization, but has plenty of demagogues who pop up, grab fame and cash, and either disappear or drift along doing the same-old tricks for years (Blompf counting among the latter type, I will believe until proven wrong).
To simplify:
--- Who benefits: Big Business, short-term profits.
--- Who is hurt: White Middle-America little-guy.
--- What gets done to reverse the problem: Nothing, even by supposedly pro-"White Middle America" politicos.
Why?
H-1B is, or may be, a good example of why the Right's coalition, "even under Trump," is unstable and ineffective at reversing Third Worlization, but has plenty of demagogues who pop up, grab fame and cash, and either disappear or drift along doing the same-old tricks for years (Blompf counting among the latter type, I will believe until proven wrong).
To simplify:
--- Who benefits: Big Business, short-term profits.
--- Who is hurt: White Middle-America little-guy.
--- What gets done to reverse the problem: Nothing, even by supposedly pro-"White Middle America" politicos.
Why?
Peak Stupidity Book Club
Monday - January 13th 2025 10:13PM MST
PS: Good evening, Mr. SafeNow,
I hope you're enjoying a wonderful evening!
Biden, Trump and the Meaning of Stupidity
https://archive.ph/nmrpD
The Basic Laws of Human Stupidity
by Carlo M. Cipolla (3.1mb .pdf)
https://files.catbox.moe/bq6w2z.pdf
Cheers! ☮️
I hope you're enjoying a wonderful evening!
Biden, Trump and the Meaning of Stupidity
https://archive.ph/nmrpD
The Basic Laws of Human Stupidity
by Carlo M. Cipolla (3.1mb .pdf)
https://files.catbox.moe/bq6w2z.pdf
Cheers! ☮️
SafeNow
Monday - January 13th 2025 5:49PM MST
PS
In today’s War Street Journal, an op ed column by Barton Swain is entirely devoted to the topic of what constitutes “stupidity.” Swain tracks a 1976 book on stupidity by an Italian historical economist named Cipolla. Cipolla, writes Swain, tells his readers that “the defining trait of a stupid person is that he gains nothing while obliging the other to take a loss.” Swain argues that Trump does not fit this definition of stupidity, whereas Biden is “a perfect specimen.”
In today’s War Street Journal, an op ed column by Barton Swain is entirely devoted to the topic of what constitutes “stupidity.” Swain tracks a 1976 book on stupidity by an Italian historical economist named Cipolla. Cipolla, writes Swain, tells his readers that “the defining trait of a stupid person is that he gains nothing while obliging the other to take a loss.” Swain argues that Trump does not fit this definition of stupidity, whereas Biden is “a perfect specimen.”
Moderator
Sunday - January 12th 2025 4:01PM MST
PS: At least we don't have fire to worry about... knock on fuel... but tornados, who knows. It's all about the Climate Calamity these days.
Moderator
Sunday - January 12th 2025 4:00PM MST
PS: Adam, I started reading "Confederates in the Attic" by Tony Horwitz. https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/38855.Confederates_in_the_Attic
I'd put it down for probably a year now, because it started to seem like it was going to be one-sided. Reviews say it's not, so I might pick it back up. I bring up this book because near the beginning, the author of this non-fiction book joins up with some Civil War re-enactors. These people do it as volunteers, and I don't think it sits well with some of the wives.
I suppose the paid guys work at some of the National Parks or National Battlefields. I would not mind at all taking a long road trip some day to visit some of the big ones. I just hate the woke stuff you read on signs and in the museums/gift stores.
Yes, it's gotten cold at home. Interestingly, I have some friend staying at one place, and he didn't notice that one toilet had been running. Even though the water is cheap there (wish we had a well, but we don't know yet about the place), it ran up $150 extra! That said, some insulation came down from underneath, something I noticed when I first wanted to see where the "leak" was - the meter had turned over a lot, and I didn't yet check that toilet in the bathroom nobody went in.
That insulation just happened to fall off from an area where a bunch of pipes converged. It's nice I can see that stuff, but I could see that freezing up quickly. So, his having not noticed the toilet running may have saved us from a busted pipe, as nobody was there for a long while. Yes, of course he's going to run some water on the cold nights, but the whole thing was uncanny. (I think it was animals that jumped up into one small opening where I fixed some leak, and then they would have immediately fallen through and made that mess.)
However, as we both agreed
I'd put it down for probably a year now, because it started to seem like it was going to be one-sided. Reviews say it's not, so I might pick it back up. I bring up this book because near the beginning, the author of this non-fiction book joins up with some Civil War re-enactors. These people do it as volunteers, and I don't think it sits well with some of the wives.
I suppose the paid guys work at some of the National Parks or National Battlefields. I would not mind at all taking a long road trip some day to visit some of the big ones. I just hate the woke stuff you read on signs and in the museums/gift stores.
Yes, it's gotten cold at home. Interestingly, I have some friend staying at one place, and he didn't notice that one toilet had been running. Even though the water is cheap there (wish we had a well, but we don't know yet about the place), it ran up $150 extra! That said, some insulation came down from underneath, something I noticed when I first wanted to see where the "leak" was - the meter had turned over a lot, and I didn't yet check that toilet in the bathroom nobody went in.
That insulation just happened to fall off from an area where a bunch of pipes converged. It's nice I can see that stuff, but I could see that freezing up quickly. So, his having not noticed the toilet running may have saved us from a busted pipe, as nobody was there for a long while. Yes, of course he's going to run some water on the cold nights, but the whole thing was uncanny. (I think it was animals that jumped up into one small opening where I fixed some leak, and then they would have immediately fallen through and made that mess.)
However, as we both agreed
Adam Smith
Sunday - January 12th 2025 10:46AM MST
PS: Good morning, Mr. Moderator!
𝐶𝑜𝑙𝑑 𝑒𝑛𝑜𝑢𝑔ℎ 𝑓𝑜𝑟 𝑦𝑎'?
Oh yes. Cold enough, indeed. They say we were about 16° last night. Fortunately we didn't lose power so we stayed nice and comfy on our two day snow day vacation. Even Baby Girl's apartment stayed right around 70° where it belongs. It is nice and sunny now. I'd imagine the rest of the ice and snow will melt today.
How was the weather your way? I assume you got a little snow and/or ice with perhaps some power outages. (But it looks like you still have power or you wouldn't be commenting.)
I didn't really pay any attention to the weather at Harts Field, but I'm not surprised that they had some trouble. It doesn't take much snow and ice to paralyze travel around here. (Though I would think that as important as Harts Field is they would have more deicing equipment, even if they don't often use it.) I read today that they had a full ground stop and canceled 1400 flights on Friday. That sounds like a lot, but they apparently average 2100 flights and 286,000 passengers a day.
What's up with this though...
https://www.cnn.com/2025/01/10/travel/delta-evacuation-atlanta-airport/index.html
Anglin's numbers were only slightly different than yours, Mr. Hail's or Jared Taylor's. Quite a bit higher than the cap that doesn't really exist but otherwise in harmony with what you guys are saying.
This here is mostly off topic, but I love the headline...
https://archive.is/N5sXA
I too figure that the Old Slave Mart has much to do with tourism. Mrs. Smith says that it's like the old money Charlestonians (the wealthy people who live south of Broad) are caught in some alternate time line. They still glorify the so called civil war around there. Perhaps there is money to be made selling civil war nostalgia and sweetgrass baskets.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/324665544003
(Not your average priced sweetgrass basket.)
https://www.battlefields.org/sites/default/files/atoms/files/blue-gray-and-green-brochure_0.pdf
https://www.battlefields.org/sites/default/files/atoms/files/blue-gray-and-green-2013.pdf
https://hobblecreek.us/blog/entry/reinventing-civil-war-reenactment
https://cwmemory.com/2009/11/20/250000-for-a-reenactment/
Apparently civil war reenactments are big business. Seems odd to me though. Imagine dressing up in anachronistic wool costumes to go parade around in the hot southern sun only to lose the battle. Again. Year after year. Maybe they only reenact the battles that they won.(?) But someone has to dress up as the losing side. Can you have a battle reenactment without an opposing regiment? That wouldn't seem right.
https://www.ziprecruiter.com/Salaries/Historical-Reenactor-Salary
$86,335 per year is the average salary for a Historical Reenactor?
https://www.backstage.com/magazine/article/living-history-jobs-for-actors-76084/
Well, I guess if they're going to pay some unqualified DEI hire $750,000 a year to be LA's water czar then $86k per year is a bargain for a Historical Reenactor. (Talk about a bullshit job.)
https://twitter.com/CollinRugg/status/1877880626600386641
https://twitter.com/NotRioFromBar/status/1877370994932814164
I think the LA fire response is an interesting glimpse into our brave new DEI fueled incompetence crisis future. They say that about 100 fire trucks (1/5th of the fleet) were out of service because they didn't hire enough mechanics to keep the machines maintained. Meanwhile, about 200 of the approximately 1,000 fire hydrants in Pacific Palisades were non-functioning. Which probably doesn't matter all that much because the 117 million gallon Santa Ynez Reservoir had no water in it. (Even working hydrants won't work if there is no water in the lines.)
And all this in a highly taxed, supposedly upper class, zip code with some of the highest priced real estate around. It would be hilarious if it were not so utterly stupid and destructive. As the competence crisis starts kicking into high gear people should realize that they simply cannot rely on "government" services like fire, water or electricity that won't start enormous fires. (Without White men, who will keep the lights on? Who will keep the water flowing?)
Will the normies ever wake up? Seems unlikely. If events like this LA fire don't get people to notice how wasteful and incompetent these people are then I suppose nothing will.
https://www.firehouse.com/apparatus/type/pumper/news/21267741/los-angeles-fire-department-unveils-electric-fire-truck-at-open-house
Happy Sunday! ☮️
𝐶𝑜𝑙𝑑 𝑒𝑛𝑜𝑢𝑔ℎ 𝑓𝑜𝑟 𝑦𝑎'?
Oh yes. Cold enough, indeed. They say we were about 16° last night. Fortunately we didn't lose power so we stayed nice and comfy on our two day snow day vacation. Even Baby Girl's apartment stayed right around 70° where it belongs. It is nice and sunny now. I'd imagine the rest of the ice and snow will melt today.
How was the weather your way? I assume you got a little snow and/or ice with perhaps some power outages. (But it looks like you still have power or you wouldn't be commenting.)
I didn't really pay any attention to the weather at Harts Field, but I'm not surprised that they had some trouble. It doesn't take much snow and ice to paralyze travel around here. (Though I would think that as important as Harts Field is they would have more deicing equipment, even if they don't often use it.) I read today that they had a full ground stop and canceled 1400 flights on Friday. That sounds like a lot, but they apparently average 2100 flights and 286,000 passengers a day.
What's up with this though...
https://www.cnn.com/2025/01/10/travel/delta-evacuation-atlanta-airport/index.html
Anglin's numbers were only slightly different than yours, Mr. Hail's or Jared Taylor's. Quite a bit higher than the cap that doesn't really exist but otherwise in harmony with what you guys are saying.
This here is mostly off topic, but I love the headline...
https://archive.is/N5sXA
I too figure that the Old Slave Mart has much to do with tourism. Mrs. Smith says that it's like the old money Charlestonians (the wealthy people who live south of Broad) are caught in some alternate time line. They still glorify the so called civil war around there. Perhaps there is money to be made selling civil war nostalgia and sweetgrass baskets.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/324665544003
(Not your average priced sweetgrass basket.)
https://www.battlefields.org/sites/default/files/atoms/files/blue-gray-and-green-brochure_0.pdf
https://www.battlefields.org/sites/default/files/atoms/files/blue-gray-and-green-2013.pdf
https://hobblecreek.us/blog/entry/reinventing-civil-war-reenactment
https://cwmemory.com/2009/11/20/250000-for-a-reenactment/
Apparently civil war reenactments are big business. Seems odd to me though. Imagine dressing up in anachronistic wool costumes to go parade around in the hot southern sun only to lose the battle. Again. Year after year. Maybe they only reenact the battles that they won.(?) But someone has to dress up as the losing side. Can you have a battle reenactment without an opposing regiment? That wouldn't seem right.
https://www.ziprecruiter.com/Salaries/Historical-Reenactor-Salary
$86,335 per year is the average salary for a Historical Reenactor?
https://www.backstage.com/magazine/article/living-history-jobs-for-actors-76084/
Well, I guess if they're going to pay some unqualified DEI hire $750,000 a year to be LA's water czar then $86k per year is a bargain for a Historical Reenactor. (Talk about a bullshit job.)
https://twitter.com/CollinRugg/status/1877880626600386641
https://twitter.com/NotRioFromBar/status/1877370994932814164
I think the LA fire response is an interesting glimpse into our brave new DEI fueled incompetence crisis future. They say that about 100 fire trucks (1/5th of the fleet) were out of service because they didn't hire enough mechanics to keep the machines maintained. Meanwhile, about 200 of the approximately 1,000 fire hydrants in Pacific Palisades were non-functioning. Which probably doesn't matter all that much because the 117 million gallon Santa Ynez Reservoir had no water in it. (Even working hydrants won't work if there is no water in the lines.)
And all this in a highly taxed, supposedly upper class, zip code with some of the highest priced real estate around. It would be hilarious if it were not so utterly stupid and destructive. As the competence crisis starts kicking into high gear people should realize that they simply cannot rely on "government" services like fire, water or electricity that won't start enormous fires. (Without White men, who will keep the lights on? Who will keep the water flowing?)
Will the normies ever wake up? Seems unlikely. If events like this LA fire don't get people to notice how wasteful and incompetent these people are then I suppose nothing will.
https://www.firehouse.com/apparatus/type/pumper/news/21267741/los-angeles-fire-department-unveils-electric-fire-truck-at-open-house
Happy Sunday! ☮️
Moderator
Saturday - January 11th 2025 11:56PM MST
PS: Oh, you wrote than Andrew Anglin's numbers were different too, right. I'll check out his post.and the chart or graph.
It sounds like Atlanta Hartsfield, just down the hill from you, had a very rough time yesterday and maybe some today too (catching up). That's very rare.
It sounds like Atlanta Hartsfield, just down the hill from you, had a very rough time yesterday and maybe some today too (catching up). That's very rare.
Moderator
Saturday - January 11th 2025 11:53PM MST
PS: "I'm a little surprised that they didn't shut it down, but I hear it was an important part of Charleston society." I hear, no really, I FIGURE, that it still goes by the name and has not been torn down just due to $$ from tourists. (Not the slave market per se, but "will meet you at the slave market" and the shops around.) Keeping the name is probably about the bucks, not the history, IMO.
Yes, you nailed it on the guest summer vacation workers. These were European White people, making the situation wield indeed for where I live. No, it's not one of the worst of the programs, and even if they did stay, well, Europeans.... still, it's as if they want all Americans sitting on their asses on welfare, I dunno...
Yes, Jared Taylor's numbers are slightly different. There are quite a few things to consider, issuances last year does not = number of H1B workers right now, for example, and there are those similar visas... His total numbers were even higher than what I saw and higher than what Mr. Hail pasted in the other day.
Yes, you nailed it on the guest summer vacation workers. These were European White people, making the situation wield indeed for where I live. No, it's not one of the worst of the programs, and even if they did stay, well, Europeans.... still, it's as if they want all Americans sitting on their asses on welfare, I dunno...
Yes, Jared Taylor's numbers are slightly different. There are quite a few things to consider, issuances last year does not = number of H1B workers right now, for example, and there are those similar visas... His total numbers were even higher than what I saw and higher than what Mr. Hail pasted in the other day.
Adam Smith
Saturday - January 11th 2025 10:18PM MST
PS: Good evening, Achmed,
(Happy Snowday Weekend!)
The Old Slave Mart is open Monday through Saturday from 9am to 5pm. Closed on Sundays. I'm a little surprised that they didn't shut it down, but I hear it was an important part of Charleston society. Kinda like the Battery or the Citadel. Or even the Eliza Lucas foundation. But anyway...
Like so many other things these criminals do or say, the indentured servant program "cap" is totally bogus. They're not bringing in indentured servants to simply fill some temporary jobs because there aren't Americans willing or able to do them. Or because they are poaching a small number of very talented specialists or highly skilled people to come help <s>team America</s> the North American Economic Zone win the big sportsball tournament.
This truly is a way for the hostile over-class to replace Americans with pseudo-slaves while lowering wages for many (most?) Americans.
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A little side note. You mentioned the "temporary non-agricultural workers" and used foreigners running the rides at the State Fair as an example. And while in my own experience (25+ years ago) I never met a foreigner on a visa running rides at the fair (these jobs went to lower class White Americans and a whole lot of Mexicans) I did work with a few foreigners at the resort in Flamingo Florida (before the hurricane washed it away) who came here on temporary worker visas. (This was also 25+ years ago.)
The people I worked with at the lodge in the Everglades were all Canadians and Europeans. They came here to work for the summer at the restaurants and/or resorts in the National Parks mostly so they could travel and see America. These people were essentially tourists who were working low level jobs to help fund their extended vacations. I'd imagine there are places for these workers all through the hospitality industry.
I'm sure these jobs could go to Americans, and I'm sure these guest workers were not essential to the U.S. economy or to the vendors who run the resorts in the Parks. But I also don't see a problem with a few Canadians and Europeans taking a job like that so they can travel and see some of America. I'm sure all these people went home after a reasonable time working and traveling here. (Except one. He was a Canadian gentleman who was about 60 years of age who had lived in the states as a permanent resident for many years. I have a feeling Cal never moved back to Canada. He has likely died of old age by now.)
</sidenote>
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I know you're not really an Andrew Anglin fan, but he's done a pretty good job of documenting Leon Mush's plan to replace White Americans with H-1B indentured servants from •India.
https://www.unz.com/aanglin/hey-retard-there-is-no-cap-on-h-1b-in-2023-755020-people-were-brought-in-72-3-of-which-were-indians/
Anglin's numbers are slightly different than yours, Mr. Hail's and Jared Taylor's numbers, but they also seem legit. (For example, Jared Taylor said that 72.6% of the H1B visas are going to •Indians while Anglin figured it is 72.3%. He also uses your 750,000 number for the last couple years under the Dark Brandon regime.) I'm not sure where he is getting his numbers, but they do seem to be in harmony with yours.
https://dailystormer.in/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/10.24_h1b_fiscal_year-618x237.png
So, yeah. I guess that's about all I have to say about the indentured servant program tonight...
As you might know, we had the first snow day that we've had in a few years. Just a couple inches of snow, but it is slick out there. I don't think it will melt until tomorrow afternoon. And it is going to be cold tonight. (Like 17º) I guess winter is here.
I've been paying some attention to the DEI incompetence crisis style response to the LA wildfires. Pretty wild what happened.
Thanks for the post.
I hope you have a great evening, Achmed! ☮️
(Happy Snowday Weekend!)
The Old Slave Mart is open Monday through Saturday from 9am to 5pm. Closed on Sundays. I'm a little surprised that they didn't shut it down, but I hear it was an important part of Charleston society. Kinda like the Battery or the Citadel. Or even the Eliza Lucas foundation. But anyway...
Like so many other things these criminals do or say, the indentured servant program "cap" is totally bogus. They're not bringing in indentured servants to simply fill some temporary jobs because there aren't Americans willing or able to do them. Or because they are poaching a small number of very talented specialists or highly skilled people to come help <s>team America</s> the North American Economic Zone win the big sportsball tournament.
This truly is a way for the hostile over-class to replace Americans with pseudo-slaves while lowering wages for many (most?) Americans.
---------
A little side note. You mentioned the "temporary non-agricultural workers" and used foreigners running the rides at the State Fair as an example. And while in my own experience (25+ years ago) I never met a foreigner on a visa running rides at the fair (these jobs went to lower class White Americans and a whole lot of Mexicans) I did work with a few foreigners at the resort in Flamingo Florida (before the hurricane washed it away) who came here on temporary worker visas. (This was also 25+ years ago.)
The people I worked with at the lodge in the Everglades were all Canadians and Europeans. They came here to work for the summer at the restaurants and/or resorts in the National Parks mostly so they could travel and see America. These people were essentially tourists who were working low level jobs to help fund their extended vacations. I'd imagine there are places for these workers all through the hospitality industry.
I'm sure these jobs could go to Americans, and I'm sure these guest workers were not essential to the U.S. economy or to the vendors who run the resorts in the Parks. But I also don't see a problem with a few Canadians and Europeans taking a job like that so they can travel and see some of America. I'm sure all these people went home after a reasonable time working and traveling here. (Except one. He was a Canadian gentleman who was about 60 years of age who had lived in the states as a permanent resident for many years. I have a feeling Cal never moved back to Canada. He has likely died of old age by now.)
</sidenote>
----------
I know you're not really an Andrew Anglin fan, but he's done a pretty good job of documenting Leon Mush's plan to replace White Americans with H-1B indentured servants from •India.
https://www.unz.com/aanglin/hey-retard-there-is-no-cap-on-h-1b-in-2023-755020-people-were-brought-in-72-3-of-which-were-indians/
Anglin's numbers are slightly different than yours, Mr. Hail's and Jared Taylor's numbers, but they also seem legit. (For example, Jared Taylor said that 72.6% of the H1B visas are going to •Indians while Anglin figured it is 72.3%. He also uses your 750,000 number for the last couple years under the Dark Brandon regime.) I'm not sure where he is getting his numbers, but they do seem to be in harmony with yours.
https://dailystormer.in/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/10.24_h1b_fiscal_year-618x237.png
So, yeah. I guess that's about all I have to say about the indentured servant program tonight...
As you might know, we had the first snow day that we've had in a few years. Just a couple inches of snow, but it is slick out there. I don't think it will melt until tomorrow afternoon. And it is going to be cold tonight. (Like 17º) I guess winter is here.
I've been paying some attention to the DEI incompetence crisis style response to the LA wildfires. Pretty wild what happened.
Thanks for the post.
I hope you have a great evening, Achmed! ☮️
Now, about Rush, I COULD have seen them some years earlier than the time you are referring to, but unfortunately it was a matter of time and "you're not gonna ride in a van with pot-smokers and drunk drivers to that show!" (Yeah, the $ too, though. $10.50 a ticket was out of our league. No, I didn't miss a decimal) Matter of fact, the first real well-known band rock show I was let to see was one we DID drive to in a van, and yeah, about the pot ...