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hat rage is in large part what pushed Trump into the White House, and for all the caterwauling about the Orange Dictator, the general feeling amongst the young white men is that Trump is a big softy, an out of touch boomer who doesn’t have the steel to do what’s necessary, but is tactically useful because he provides room to manoeuvre. It doesn’t help when Trump meets with Indian CEOs to discuss bringing in even more H1Bindians to deprive even more young white men of good jobs in the tech sector, particularly when the CEO in question was caught on camera straight-up ordering his minions to not hire white men.
LOL
Help! I'm stranded in the country of my citizenship!
Unpublished but finalized: DHS has quietly rewritten the H-1B lottery.
Before this rule even hits the Federal Register, here’s what actually changes … in plain English … based directly on the final rule text (2025-23853).
1. The H-1B lottery is no longer purely random
USCIS is replacing the random lottery with a wage-weighted selection system.
Registrations are still beneficiary-based, but higher wages now get better odds.
2. Wage level determines lottery odds
Each H-1B registration is entered into the selection pool based on the offered wage:
•Wage Level IV → entered 4 times
•Wage Level III → 3 times
•Wage Level II → 2 times
•Wage Level I → 1 time
Every worker is still counted once toward the cap, but higher wages dramatically increase selection probability.
3. Employers must disclose wage details up front
During registration, employers must now submit:
•The OEWS wage level
•The SOC code
•The area of intended employment
These same details must later match the filed petition exactly.
4. USCIS can deny or revoke petitions for manipulation
USCIS explicitly adds authority to:
•Deny amended or new petitions
•Revoke approvals
If the agency believes changes were made to game the lottery (job title, location, wage level, or entity swapping).
5. Entry-level and lower-wage H-1Bs are heavily disadvantaged
DHS estimates a sharp drop in Wage Level I selections.
The rule openly acknowledges that past abuse centered on:
•Lower-paid roles
•IT staffing and outsourcing firms
•Wage suppression of U.S. workers
This rule is designed to reverse that trend.
6. The cap size does not change
•65,000 regular cap
•20,000 advanced degree cap
What changes is who wins, not how many.
7. Effective timeline
•Final rule
•Effective for FY 2027 registration season
•Applies to all cap-subject registrations after the effective date
Bottom line
This rule:
•Explicitly admits the H-1B program has been abused
•Prioritizes higher wages over volume hiring
•Makes entry-level and low-wage H-1Bs far harder to secure
•Gives USCIS stronger enforcement tools
It does not end H-1Bs, but it fundamentally reshapes who benefits from them.
Curious what people think ….does this go far enough?
Unpublished but finalized: DHS has quietly rewritten the H-1B lottery.
Before this rule even hits the Federal Register, here’s what actually changes … in plain English … based directly on the final rule text (2025-23853).
1. The H-1B lottery is no longer purely random
USCIS is replacing the random lottery with a wage-weighted selection system.
Registrations are still beneficiary-based, but higher wages now get better odds.
2. Wage level determines lottery odds
Each H-1B registration is entered into the selection pool based on the offered wage:
•Wage Level IV → entered 4 times
•Wage Level III → 3 times
•Wage Level II → 2 times
•Wage Level I → 1 time
Every worker is still counted once toward the cap, but higher wages dramatically increase selection probability.
3. Employers must disclose wage details up front
During registration, employers must now submit:
•The OEWS wage level
•The SOC code
•The area of intended employment
These same details must later match the filed petition exactly.
4. USCIS can deny or revoke petitions for manipulation
USCIS explicitly adds authority to:
•Deny amended or new petitions
•Revoke approvals
If the agency believes changes were made to game the lottery (job title, location, wage level, or entity swapping).
5. Entry-level and lower-wage H-1Bs are heavily disadvantaged
DHS estimates a sharp drop in Wage Level I selections.
The rule openly acknowledges that past abuse centered on:
•Lower-paid roles
•IT staffing and outsourcing firms
•Wage suppression of U.S. workers
This rule is designed to reverse that trend.
6. The cap size does not change
•65,000 regular cap
•20,000 advanced degree cap
What changes is who wins, not how many.
7. Effective timeline
•Final rule
•Effective for FY 2027 registration season
•Applies to all cap-subject registrations after the effective date
Bottom line
This rule:
•Explicitly admits the H-1B program has been abused
•Prioritizes higher wages over volume hiring
•Makes entry-level and low-wage H-1Bs far harder to secure
•Gives USCIS stronger enforcement tools
It does not end H-1Bs, but it fundamentally reshapes who benefits from them.
Curious what people think ….does this go far enough?
https://x.com/SanDiegoKnight/status/2003500159288983785
Chamber of Commerce. Those are some of the worst people in America, can't find bigger group of jackasses if you looked for one. The Chamber will lecture all of us endlessly about “free markets,” but they panic at the idea of a tight labor market. When workers gain leverage, suddenly it’s a crisis to those jackasses. Suddenly we’re told the country must import more labor by any means necessary, because wages rising is apparently a threat to civilization. Mah markets, mah business needs. It’s about keeping labor disposable and wages low.

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