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The original was posted on /r/antiwork by /u/Choice-Act3739 on 2025-06-30 12:08:42+00:00.
Regulatory impact analyses completed by USCIS regularly consider two competing scenarios in which employers are or are not assumed to be able to find reasonable labor substitutes such as U.S. workers to perform work.
Treating each scenario as equally likely, USCIS would describe the impact of policies that result in increased labor supply as partly a transfer of wages from hypothetically willing and able U.S. workers whether actively seeking employment or not, to the foreign workers, and partly a benefit to employers or consumers from foreign workers performing work that otherwise could not be completed without significant training and search costs.
https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2024-29354/p-1198
it's actively making US citizens more poor, and they brush it off as a non-issue?
Umm excuse me? Should we not be appalled by this admission?
(For context, this was Biden's USCIS on January 17th 2025. But there's still plenty of the same people still there.)