Well this a mechanical engineering grad who was brought to the U.S. by his parents when he was 12 years old. He is illegal and after graduating he turned himself in and went back to Mexico to try to become legal.
His initial application was denied and it will be a year before he can appeal.
I just don't understand why we should be wasting his talent
while his wife, who is a born U.S. citizen and kids will probably be on government assistance, when he could just work in the U.S. and pay taxes and contribute to society.
Engineering grad returns to Mexico, now waits to become legal - CNN
So he came here illegally as a teen, stayed here illegally, went to school and college as an illegal, married a US citizen, had a baby, and now years later has decided he should get a social security number (which means he didn't have one and hasn't been paying taxes for years) and for some reason we won't approve his application?
This isn't some genius working on the Manhattan project, it's a guy with a bachelor's degree from a state college flip flopping across the Arizona/Mexico border as it will benefit him.
God forbid his US citizen wife get a job so the US taxpayers don't have to support her.
I disagree with this. Engineers are paid better here and the quality of living is better. The tech industry was worried about this ten years ago, it didn't turn out to be the case. We also thought we had a problem with foriegn consultants and offshored jobs. Turns out these workers don't have the skills or work ethic american workers do. The whole issue has basically been a wash for the tech industry.
There has been a big shift in the last couple of years - more are returning to India and China because they can get better jobs w/ more advancement potential and they don't have high hopes for the US economy.
The US still pays better and they like it here better, but are choosing Asia over the US.