He said we never had a problem producing engineering and science talent. Then he goes on to agree with me that less people are going that route now than used to. The lower wages are perhaps the cause, but the point remains that we are not producing talent in those areas, regardless of WHY that is. I wasn't confusing anything. I wasn't questioning the why of it. He created that argument to try and flip it around on me, even though that was not my contention. I'm not concerned with why we aren't producing them. Originally Posted by WombRaiderNo, the POINT is that the H1B visa program is causing the low wages. The low STEM enrollments is the secondary effect.
Take away the H1B visas and STEM salaries rise. And STEM enrollments rise also. See how that works?
You are pointing to a problem (low STEM enrollment) that the H1B visa program caused and using it as a justification for maintaining the H1B visa program.
Do you not see the illogic in that?