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@@@@@@@@@@@@abuse of immigration law@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ - thurkee
#31
Right to vote.
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#32
To change.
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#33
To enforce US law.
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#34
To change----yes we can
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#35
u did not respond to my query
still waiting
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#36
Please make necessary adjustment to the following letter and send it to your local makers.

To: U.S. Lawmakers
DOL (Department of Labor) has clear regulations that US citizens and
permanent residents are to be considered for vacant positions before
such vacancies are offered to applicants from abroad.

In most fields, obtaining an H1B and J visa is a very difficult
process and stringent conditions apply before an H1B and J petition is
approved. In medicine it is just the opposite.

Administrators of hospital residency programs, in contravention of DOL
rules and regulations, are routinely offering vacant positions to
foreign medical graduates (FMGs) not living in the US without first
attempting to fill such vacancies with qualified candidates residing
within US borders.

Hospital residency positions, including internships, are filled
through a centralized electronic application system. Anyone, anywhere
in the world with internet access can use this system to apply for
hospital residency positions. This allows applicants from abroad to
apply at the same time as US citizens and permanent residents.
Since the number of applicants from abroad far outnumber US citizens
and permanent residents applying for each vacancy, qualified US
citizens and permanent residents are frequently never interviewed for
some positions which ultimately are given to non-resident foreign
applicants who are then supplied with H1B and J visas enabling them to
work as physicians in the US.

Hospitals are therefore determining who receive visas. Screening of
these H1B and J recipients is minimal at best as hospitals are
virtually unfettered in sponsoring H1B visas for candidates they hire
from abroad.

Hospitals receive federal, city and state funds from tax dollars, yet
citizens and permanent residents residing in the US who contribute
these tax dollars are being outnumbered and ignored.

There are currently thousands of unemployed, qualified graduates of
foreign medical schools; both US citizens and permanent residents;
residing in the US capable of filling these vacancies.

Only after all US citizens and permanent residents who apply are found
not suitable, should programs be free to hire non-resident applicants.
To interview and subsequently employ non-resident applicants without
first interviewing US citizens and permanent resident applicants in
order to ascertain their suitability, is utter disregard for US labor
laws.

This practice is dangerous in that doctors provided with H1B and J
visas in this manner are not screened as thoroughly as other
prospective immigrants are. This practice must be stopped outright.

Please take action and help safeguard the health and safety of our communities.
I ask your help to ensure that:
1.Current laws are respected and enforced.
2.Applicants are appropriately screened before being provided with H1B
and J visas.
3.Regulations stipulating that vacant positions be offered to
qualified US citizens and permanent residents before attempting to
fill such vacancies with applicants from abroad are complied with.

There are already thousands of qualified, unemployed foreign medical
graduates residing in the USA capable of filling these vacancies. Why
take this unnecessary risk?
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#37
well done
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#38
Again, enforcemnet of the immigration law is the issue. I do not want to bring in myself sot hat it doeus not cloud the larger interest of USA i.e. enforcemnet of our immugration law. You want to make me an issue becuase as far as the issue is concerned you have nothing to say.
LONG LIVE AMERICA
LONG LIVE US IMMIGRATION DEPT
LONG LIVE US SENATE
LOGN LIVE US HOUSE OF REP.
LONG LIVE US JOBS
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#39
Obama warns economy likely to get worse

CHICAGO - President-elect Barack Obama on Monday unveiled his economic team and warned that "the economy is likely to get worse before it gets better."

Obama said that recent news "has made it even more clear that we are facing an economic crisis of historic proportions." Offering a grim prediction, he added, that "most experts now believe that we could lose millions of jobs next year."

What's ahead?
Obama's team will confront an economic crisis that continues to deepen in spite of hundreds of billions of dollars in federal emergency spending in recent weeks.

"The stakes are high," said Julian Zelizer, professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University. "This is a really dangerous moment ... for the economy. It™s almost as if no one™s in control. Now people are looking to (Obama) to find out at least what™s going to happen in the next few months, if not the next few weeks."

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#40
Its better to give residency to better qualified docs that have millians of patients at risk --- My last post on this silly thread by people who have nothing better to do and write pages and pages of nonsense.
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