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Nine Out of Every 10 Silicon Valley Jobs Pays Less Than In 1997, Report Finds (mercurynews.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Mercury News: Nine out of every 10 Silicon Valley jobs pays less now than when Netflix first launched in 1997, despite one of the nation's strongest economic booms and a historically low unemployment rate that outpaces the national average. While tech workers have thrived, employees in the middle of Silicon Valley's income ladder have been hit hardest as their inflation-adjusted wages declined between 12 and 14 percent over the past 20 years, according to a study from UC Santa Cruz's Everett Program for Technology and Social Change and the labor think tank Working Partnership USA, which examined the economic impact of technology companies.

Technology workers saw a median wage increase of 32 percent over the past 20 years, the study found. But Silicon Valley workers in virtually all other areas lost ground during that time. Across all jobs, wages for even the highest-paid 10 percent increased just under 1 percent, the study found. Meanwhile, the region's economy has been booming. Since 2001, the amount of money generated per Silicon Valley resident -- the area's per person GDP -- has grown 74 percent, the study found. That's more than five times faster than the equivalent national growth.
Also, a smaller percentage of wealth is going to workers. "In 2001, about 64 percent of the money generated in Silicon Valley went to workers," reports Mercury News. "By 2016, that was down to 60 percent. The drop translated to $9.6 billion -- about $8,480 in potential pay and benefits per worker -- that instead went to investors and owners, according to the study."

206 of 354 comments (clear)

  1. I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by grungeman · · Score: 5, Funny

    nuff said

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    Signature deleted by lameness filter.
    1. Re:I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by jythie · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yeah, gentrification is a major boon for landlords, and since they tend to live far away from the property they own, the rent paid doesn't really cycle back into the local economy very well.

    2. Re:I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by lgw · · Score: 1

      I think you've got that backwards. Slumlords live far away from their shitholes. Gentrification is driven by people who want to live somewhere despite the current neighbors, because the scenery is nice or the commute is short.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    3. Re: I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by Type44Q · · Score: 1

      Gentrification is driven by people who want to live somewhere...

      ... and often as not, they're renting at an astronomical rate and those rent checks are getting cashed nowhere near.

      Capiche??

    4. Re:I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by OneSmartFellow · · Score: 4, Informative

      Gentrification:  Turning a slum into a desirable area one house at a time.

    5. Re:I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by jythie · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, no. Closer to 'Gentrification : Hey, that is a really nice community you have there, I think we can get the owners to kick you out and give it to us'.

      All these gendrified areas tend to be places where the locals have built something appealing enough that wealthier people want it for themselves, now that it is built.

    6. Re:I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Walk the Tenderloin and tell me what wealthier people want that was built there. Is it the tents and sleeping bags on the corners? Or perhaps the piles of feces in doorways? The scattered needles under the trees? Oh, I know, the stolen grocery carts piled by the parking meters!

      The only good thing about the Tenderloin is that it is walking distance to a lot of the tech jobs in Civic Center and SOMA. Walk Nob Hill or Hayes Valley and compare...

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      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    7. Re: I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by lgw · · Score: 1

      That's typically only at the end of the process. Often, gentrification starts with houses, either homeowners doing high-budget remolding or a developer buying cheap and building. You'll also get condos early on. Apartments, especially renovating existing apartments, tend to come at the end, once all the risk has past. Apartment owners are a pretty risk-adverse lot - they're not going to throw money at something in the hopes that it might become valuable.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    8. Re:I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by djinn6 · · Score: 1

      If you liked living there, maybe you should've bought a house there.

    9. Re:I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by Solandri · · Score: 3, Interesting

      All these gendrified areas tend to be places where the locals have built something appealing enough that wealthier people want it for themselves, now that it is built.

      That's the key flaw in blaming it on the wealthy people. The locals willingly sold the properties to the wealthy people. If you sell something, of course you don't get a say in what happens to it anymore (political machinations to pass zoning ordinances and rent controls aside). If you don't like what they're gonna do after they buy it, don't sell it to them in the first place.

    10. Re: I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by Rob+Y. · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that Apartment owners have pesky tenants they have to throw out on the street before they can gentrify...

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      Posted from my Android phone. Oh, I can change this? There, that's better...
    11. Re:I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      they tend to live far away from the property they own

      What is the basis for this factoid? Do you have any evidence that landlords tend to live "far away" from their properties?

      That doesn't make sense, since it is much easier to manage property that is close by, nor has it been my experience as either a renter or rentee.

    12. Re:I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by Aighearach · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "Gentrification" is just an attempt to create a pejorative that describes what society actually wants to happen; desirable areas have increasing value.

      If you have no "gentrification" it means that everything is getting worse or staying the same, nothing is getting better. That isn't how progress works.

    13. Re: I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by Aighearach · · Score: 2

      In most places they can just pay the Sheriff to do the "throw out on the street" part, they don't even need to come to town to have that done.

      But OTOH, they do own the land.

      If you want to fight gentrification, the first thing to do is figure out what your position on "private property" is, and then get the necessary changes made to that system in the US. Then you can hope to fight gentrification. With current property rights, most land owners hear "gentrification" and think "increasing land value, yay!" And most middle class people hear, "That neighborhood is turning around, maybe we should try out that new restaurant over there?"

    14. Re:I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by Ryn · · Score: 1

      Stop voting for every proposition to build more bycicle lanes at $1,000,000 per mile.

    15. Re:I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by jemmyw · · Score: 1

      That's not really true in most cases. The locals may not have owned in the first place, were renting at a reasonable price and were forced out by price rises. Also people are being forced out by tax rises - wealthy people buy the houses around you, house prices go up, your taxes go up, you're forced to sell because you can no longer afford the tax.

    16. Re: I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by astrofurter · · Score: 1

      I'm gonna say it's the gorgeous 1920s-era beaux arts apartment buildings and the walking distance proximity to the financial district that people want.

    17. Re:I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by hackertourist · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No, that's not all it is. Gentrification happens when house values increase at a (much) higher rate than inflation. Houses become less affordable, meaning another area is created where people with lower incomes can't live.

      Gentrification has other drawbacks too, as seen in e.g. San Francisco. Rich people move in, and start using their financial and political clout to shape the neighborhood to their wishes at the expense of the pre-gentrification inhabitants. Sometimes at the expense of the city as a whole too (e.g. the impossibility of building higher-density housing in SF).

    18. Re: I bet "landlord" isn't one of them by lgw · · Score: 1

      Most places just raise rents once they're sure there will be takers. As new rent money proves itself, they spend to make the place nicer so they can raise rents more, and repeat. It would be quite risky to throw everyone out, spend millions improving the place, then hope that you can rent for twice what you used to - easy to lose everything by just being wring on the timing, and needless.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  2. All a scam by jbmartin6 · · Score: 2
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    1. Re:All a scam by Major+Blud · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I hate being a grammar nazi, but that article in the link looks like it was written by a third grader. There's enough misspellings to make an editor want to kill himself.

      “High prices, which out to be a cost of doing business for them, are actually a key revenue driver,”

      "is telling clients that the start-up economy is has turned into a sophisticated"

      Makes it hard to take seriously.

      --
      If you post as Anonymous Coward, don't expect a reply.
    2. Re:All a scam by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Sounds like they attended the 4chan School of Economics.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  3. Tell me again how controlling immigration is bad ? by Crashmarik · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I never get tired of hearing people say that stuff.

  4. Why do they reference Netflix when it covers all by pgmrdlm · · Score: 1

    Look at the first paragraph of the article.
    Nine out of every 10 Silicon Valley jobs pays less now than when Netflix first launched in 1997, despite one of the nationâ(TM)s strongest economic booms and a historically low unemployment rate that outpaces the national average.

    But if you read further down in the article, it references other companies.
    Benner said big technology companies like Google and Facebook are so dominant in their respective markets that they have been able to direct a larger share of revenues to investors and some top employees.

    --
    Anonymous comments are as pathetic as the anonymous "sources" that contaminate gutless journalism from the New York Time
  5. Lessons learned the hard way... by Pollux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I know there are a lot of "elementary rules" when it comes to running a business. "Location, location, location", "law of supply and demand", etc. But one corporations in today's day and age just don't seem to get is this one:

    Invest in your employees, and your employees invest in you.

    Modern corporations continue to fester this flawed mentality that every employee is just a cog in the machine; if one breaks, replace it with another. But humans aren't machinery. We have this subconscious that interferes with our ability to work at a constant rate of speed and productivity; it requires sleep for one thing, and it distracts our ability to focus continuously due to emotions which interrupt our concentration. Emotions, including feeling jaded by our employer who decided to give all the new employees a raise, but cut veteran employee bonuses and benefits. Or feeling depressed, because your employer is continually threaten to cut your position and move it to another part of the country if you fail to meet your quota. Et cetera, et cetera.

    Most employers have forgotten now that when employees feel -valued-, their emotion doesn't impede their production, but rather boosts it.

    1. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by El+Cubano · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Modern corporations continue to fester this flawed mentality that every employee is just a cog in the machine; if one breaks, replace it with another. But humans aren't machinery.

      Not just modern companies. In a graduate software engineering class I took (mumble mumble) years ago we had a rather vigorous discussion about people versus process. That is, if you have a sufficiently sophisticated and well implemented process, do the people matter that much? And the reverse, if you have sufficiently excellent people, does the process matter that much?

      Big companies seem to tilt heavily toward the process side, while small companies and especially start ups seem to tilt heavily toward the people side. Interestingly, start up that get big enough eventually succumb to the sirens of process over people.

      Sadly, none of this is new, nor does it show any real signs of changing.

    2. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by kilfarsnar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Employers are not there to coddle employees or provide mental health services to them. It is not a charity and it is most certainly not a hospital or some type of support system. Employers are there to earn a profit on someone's investment, and that is their sole and only function. If you need a support animal to function or constant ego stroking to feel important, consider that perhaps you belong in academia not the private sector.

      Honestly, the idea that corporations exist solely to make a profit is part of what leads to this psychopathy. Corporations should exist to serve the public through the goods and services they can provide, making a profit in the process. If they exist solely to make a profit, or generate value for their shareholders, then they really serve no purpose.

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
    3. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Why invest at the personal level in H1Bs when their birth-rate (and graduation rate) out paces job growth in the STEM field? I tell you, loyalty is only a paycheck away. Actually, I'm rather shocked 'coffin homes' haven't been a big hit in the valley yet like they are in Japan and HK. That's a motherfucker money maker!!!! You want to talk about packing bodies in planes, nothing beats the revenue per square foot as a coffin home!

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    4. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you deliberately break a machine that you bought for a lot of money by skimping on cheap maintenance, you're too dumb to deserve profits.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    5. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by thegarbz · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There's a reason for that. People are fundamentally fallible, processes are designed to overcome these problems.

    6. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Employers are not there to coddle employees or provide mental health services to them. It is not a charity and it is most certainly not a hospital or some type of support system. Employers are there to earn a profit on someone's investment, and that is their sole and only function. If you need a support animal to function or constant ego stroking to feel important, consider that perhaps you belong in academia not the private sector.

      So tell me, how much of your bullshit rant applies to the executives who also serve the exact same function for investors?

      Yeah, I thought so. Now shut the fuck up. This isn't about coddling the pathetic generations who demand that shit. This is about treating employees with respect and decency, which only ignorant slaves would not value.

    7. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by pauljlucas · · Score: 1

      When a company starts out, if it's really lucky, it'll have a few really talented people. As the company scales up, finding more really talented people to meet the scaling becomes impossible, so they company is forced to hire somewhat talented people. The company has to put procecesses in place to mitigate the somewhat talented people doing dumb things.

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    8. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by Zak3056 · · Score: 2

      Big companies seem to tilt heavily toward the process side, while small companies and especially start ups seem to tilt heavily toward the people side. Interestingly, start up that get big enough eventually succumb to the sirens of process over people.

      It's not really that interesting.

      When a company is small, "key people" have huge impact--they will literally make or break the business. As a company grows, key people have less of an impact (because the amount of work that they do shrinks relative to the whole amount of work) and the need for consistency drives the company from "El Cubano will have it done by monday" to "All work needs to be executed according to the standard, which is defined by process X."

      Small organizations that are defined by process will die because they will be suffocated by bureaucratic friction, and large organizations that are NOT defined by process will die because they will lack the ability to execute.

      --
      What part of "shall not be infringed" is so hard to understand?
    9. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by jythie · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem with lessons is not everyone learns the same one. Investors discovered they can still make good short term profits by treating employees like cogs, and a whole host of new tools and practices have been developed to optimize this. The people making the most power over the situation DID learn their lesson and are applying it.

    10. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by jythie · · Score: 4, Insightful

      *nod* people tend to forget : there is no fundamental right for corporations to exist, they are a thing because states and societies decided they were a net benefit to the whole and built a legal framework for them to exist within. That framework could go away if society decides corporations were a net loss.

    11. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by DigiShaman · · Score: 1
      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    12. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by mikael · · Score: 1

      Starts up are primarily concerned in building a big blob of technology that they can sell to a corporation and get bought out. That requires technical skills and design. As they get larger, there is more maintenance work and less design work, Once they get bought out, the corporation will impose formal project management structures like architects, project manager, team leaders, tech leads, all to make sure there isn't any code regression with bugs. The original founders and engineers will leave to found new startups.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    13. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by apoc.famine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Interestingly, start up that get big enough eventually succumb to the sirens of process over people.

      Succumb? No. They realize that relying on individuals is how you go out of business. Processes are stable, and they can undergo a continuous improvement cycle to ensure that they are serving the business well. People aren't necessarily stable, and they can disappear at any time. Or you can find that their skillset no longer is sufficient to support your business.

      We all have worked with "that guy" who was foundational to the company. That guy with the institutional knowledge that the company couldn't operate without. The few times I've seen that guy go, it was massively disruptive to the company.

      Larger companies understand this and design processes to prevent individuals leaving from massively disrupting the company. Smaller companies often don't understand this, and they need to learn that painful and expensive lesson a few times before they truly do.

      I'm all for hiring great people. I'm absolutely not for leaning on them so much that everything collapses when they leave. To prevent that you need processes to capture institutional knowledge and ensure that numerous people have the ability to do subsets of each other's jobs, so that one person leaving doesn't result in a giant hole in what the business can accomplish the next day.

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    14. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by sweet+'n+sour · · Score: 1

      >> Corporations should exist to serve the public through the goods and services they can provide, making a profit in the process. If they exist solely to make a profit, or generate value for their shareholders, then they really serve no purpose.

      This reminds me of Geroge Carlin's "Stuff" skit:
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

      One could just as easily argue that for the majority of cases making "goods and services" serve no purpose either. "Serve the public" means a lot of different things to different people.

    15. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Processes are fundamentally fallible as well. They tend to be much less flexible when dealing with unexpected situations than people are.

    16. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Which is how you get companies that are scrum but _not_ agile.

      Agile is a manifesto. It explicitly says 'people over process'. 99% of the time, scrum is a rigid process for half assed staff.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    17. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      Everybody good and experienced has seen it happen from the inside. The senior managers can't turn down any growth, so they hire seat warmers, completely fucking the teams. It all starts when they hire 'professional HR', that's the kiss of death.

      The growth in business doesn't continue, but staff growth sure does. Soon the technical debt is unsupportable, the original good people are gone and the staff are all gaming some stupid metric.

      My take: Keep growth at a level you can staff for without serious compromise. Unless you can get acquired in the next two years, then fuck those chumps, hire the seat warmers while looking for your next opportunity.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    18. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Hotel!=home.

      I'll grant the Japanese and Chinese can and do live in tiny places, but the coffin model is for sleeping off a bender, after missing the last train.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    19. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by Guybrush_T · · Score: 1

      You sound like a socialist.

      Which is supposed to prove him wrong ?

      No one even said that it was a mistake or a bad thing, this is just reflecting on the moral contract between people and companies and how it can make our society stable.

      Without that balance, you can expect the system to change. Quickly.

    20. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by Solandri · · Score: 1

      Not just modern companies. In a graduate software engineering class I took (mumble mumble) years ago we had a rather vigorous discussion about people versus process. That is, if you have a sufficiently sophisticated and well implemented process, do the people matter that much? And the reverse, if you have sufficiently excellent people, does the process matter that much?

      If the job is mind-numbingly simple, then the people are no more than cogs, and the process is what's important. Given enough technology, the people could be replaced with robots.

      If the job requires abstract and creative thought, then it can't be solved by an algorithmic process, and it's the people who are important. Even with magical levels of technology, a person will still be needed to do the job because it requires abstract reasoning to make the necessary decisions.

      That's why there's little point lamenting the manufacturing jobs which got shipped overseas. For the most part they were the former type. If they hadn't gone overseas, they would've eventually been eliminated by automation (many already would have been if the unions hadn't opposed automation in the 1980s and 1990s). What's important for the future of the job market is to cultivate the latter type of jobs, and to educate the population to be able to perform those jobs. e.g. Instead of assembling and welding car parts, a person is needed who can design, troubleshoot, and/or repair a robot which assembles and welds car parts.

    21. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but if you're only staying for a year or so as an H1B, who gives a fuck, right? Think of all that money you'll save on living, then sock the rest away and send it back overseas when you return.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    22. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      The American way is to bunk up 6-8 deep in a 2 bedroom apartment.

      Alternatively there are landlords that do the illegally small closet sized rooms with no fire exit, subdivided house for full apartment price thing. But the Chinese aren't stupid, they figure that out pretty fast.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    23. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by mikael · · Score: 1

      Nakagin capsule tower:

      https://www.atlasobscura.com/p...

      Every apartment is just enough space for a bed, desk, shelves, shower, microwave cooker and shower/toilet cubicle. Some places may just have a communal shower/toilet and kitchen facilities. France has "studettes".

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    24. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Never use them, unless you want your boss in your business.

      Also beware 'self insurance'. Pick another option, even if the copay is higher.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    25. Re: Lessons learned the hard way... by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      They serve you! The customer.

      Did you give a damn at all about the lady serving you food in the company cafeteria today? Did it cross your mind? No?

      Then why should your boss or employer care about you either?

      There purpose is to make the customer happy. Companies exist to make you happy when you pay them. That is the goal but since your company pays you your job is to make their customers or boss happy. They have no obligation back until you pay them back.

      That is the cold hard truth.

    26. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

      You sound like a socialist. Companies exist to make good and services someone else is willing to pay for and the bi-product is profit. They are not there for the good of the community.

      How is that not exactly what I said? A community is just a group of people who interact with each other. They are being served by corporations. No socialism necessary. I do however think socialism is appropriate in certain circumstances, where the private sector cannot make a profit providing a necessary service, or where centralized control is needed. Fire brigades come to mind.

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
    27. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

      >> Corporations should exist to serve the public through the goods and services they can provide, making a profit in the process. If they exist solely to make a profit, or generate value for their shareholders, then they really serve no purpose. This reminds me of Geroge Carlin's "Stuff" skit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... One could just as easily argue that for the majority of cases making "goods and services" serve no purpose either. "Serve the public" means a lot of different things to different people.

      George Carlin was a genius. I certainly agree that our society's needs are overfilled in the aggregate.

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
    28. Re:Lessons learned the hard way... by Micah+NC · · Score: 1

      Fundamental just means you can build on it. Perhaps you meant intrinsic right?

      Couldn't the legal power of all legal rights go away if enough people give up on them?

  6. That's not the point by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The rest of the world has done fantastically well since then. You have to get your head around the ideas that are in play here. American elites decided to ruin our middle and working classes for the benefit of hostile people in distant lands. NAFTA, the Iraq war, TPP, they are not running things for the benefit of their own people. Heck, they don't even consider that they have anything in common with us. They are "citizens of the world" and anyone who says Americans are getting screwed is immediately labeled a Nazi and ignored. When you look at the actual goals of our elites, they are accomplishing them. It's just that they decided that they were going to ruin us to achieve them. It's working well so far.

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    1. Re:That's not the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's just that they decided that they were going to ruin us to achieve them. It's working well so far.

      Americans ruined themselves by voting hard right parties into office, the fact that someone like you claims elites sold you out when you gullibly believed in republican and democrats corporate bullshit tells us all we need to know. Nothing short of a movement of working folk from below would ever get the elites to look out for you. Your one of the most ignorant people on slashdot. A delusional right wing retard who doesn't seem to get, the more hard right you become, the more you are screwing yourself, right wing ideology is the ideology of elites and big business. But you are so drowning in your own idiocy and dunning krueger that you can't tell which end is up down there.

      Americans learned nothing from their own history, the new deal was probably the best thing to ever happen to americans, and the next generations afterward gullibly believed whatever corporate right wing talking points your media and talk radio hosts in spades because they don't read nor study history.

      When the banks got bailed out you voted republicans back into office a giant wtf, americans are pretty much shit for brains. You had your banks bailed out in front of your eyes and yet you still vote for the arms of big business. The demopublican duo.

    2. Re:That's not the point by Major+Blud · · Score: 1

      Your one of the most ignorant people on slashdot. /

      You don't have any room to talk, Mr. Anonymous Coward. I've seen the vile, disgusting, hateful ignorance that you've posted on this site.

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      If you post as Anonymous Coward, don't expect a reply.
    3. Re:That's not the point by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This makes no sense, what motivation would "American elites" have for benefiting "hostile people in distant lands"?

      No, businesses did it to benefit themselves of course. It's been happening since about 1980, productivity has continued to rise but wages have not kept pace. Combined with tech being a relatively young industry which is still rapidly evolving (meaning that once rare skills are now more common, and things like Javascript frameworks on machines with 8GB of RAM dramatically lowered the bar to entry) and you have your explanation.

      Speaking of political extremists, take a look at your own language. You probably didn't intend it, but you are echoing some very unpleasant people with those phrases.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    4. Re:That's not the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The rest of the world has done fantastically well since then.

      Whut?!

      Where the fuck you get that idea? Unless you mean China, where wages have gone up (and stagnated since) the rest of the developed world has exactly the same problem. Salaries have stagnated and purchasing power of the workers has been steadily rolling back, the top 1% gets all the economic gains, competition for jobs has increased significantly, "gig economy" and total instability in people's lives is the norm...

      Its a problem brought on by neoliberal/neocon elite policies of "globalization" and its a (surprise!) global issue and the same Ponzi scheme has been put in effect everywhere it gains the 1% more wealth.

    5. Re:That's not the point by lgw · · Score: 1

      No, businesses did it to benefit themselves of course. It's been happening since about 1980,

      That's true. But it's also been happening since about 1580, and the early trading companies were brutal. Heck, the first recorded "corporation" was about 580.

      You probably didn't intend it, but you are echoing some very unpleasant people with those phrases.

      There's no one less pleasant than a communist, and you sound like those people often.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    6. Re:That's not the point by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      What exactly are "the elites"? I keep hearing this title being used, but so far nobody could explain what exactly that's supposed to mean.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    7. Re:That's not the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      American elites decided to ruin our middle and working classes...

      I agree with you up until right there... (currently white) American elites have always played off the middle, lower classes and racial and ethnic groups off against one another in order to stay in power. Now they also include foreign immigrants in that power play. Divide and conquer.

      And it appears to be much the same in many other countries where some groups are used as scary foils by the elite in order to keep their allied groups in line.

      Less expensive Chinese workers were used to destroy US manufacturing jobs and the unions. Indian VISA IT workers were used to suppress IT wages. Blacks have been historically used in the big cities to scare the White middle class. Now the Democratic Party elite use the white lower class to scare blacks and try to scare other minorities to keep them on side. The whole system of elite power, worldwide, is a shell game of divide and conquer tactics.

    8. Re:That's not the point by christophla · · Score: 1

      While both side know they are getting "fucked in the ass", it's the conservatives that actually seem to enjoy it.

    9. Re:That's not the point by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1
      The fact that American elites don't consider themselves American. They are "citizens of the world" and have nothing in common with us. Why would they want to benefit us deplorables? They despise us. To the elites, we the people are nothing but biomass. This is true not just here in America, but throughout the entire Western world these days. Our elites hate our working class. Of the six American counties with the highest average income, five are in the DC beltway. Here's a good piece that addresses the issue: The Revolt of the Elites: Have they canceled their allegiance to America?

      When confronted with resistance to these initiatives, members of today's elite betray the venomous hatred that lies not far beneath the smiling face of upper-middle-class benevolence. They find it hard to understand why their hygienic conception of life fails to command universal enthusiasm. In the United States, "Middle America" - a term that has both geographical and social implications - has come to symbolize everything that stands in the way of progress: "family values," mindless patriotism, religious fundamentalism, racism, homophobia, retrograde views of women. Middle Americans, as they appear to the makers of educated opinion, are hopelessly dowdy, unfashionable, and provincial.

      In the borderless global economy, money has lost its links to nationality. David Rieff, who spent several months in Los Angeles collecting material for his book Los Angeles: Capital of the Third World, reports that "at least two or three times a weekâ¦I could depend on hearing someone say that the future 'belonged' to the Pacific Rim." The movement of money and population across national borders has transformed the "whole idea of place," according to Rieff. The privileged classes in Los Angeles feel more kinship with their counterparts in Japan, Singapore, and Korea than with most of their own countrymen.

      Voters Aren't More Polarized than Ever, Only Pols and Media Are - Stanford political scientist says it's media and political elites who live in ideological bubbles, not regular Americans.

      In his latest book, Unstable Majorities: Polarization, Party Sorting, and Political Stalemate, Fiorina argues that Americans actually agree with each other on fundamental issues such as immigration, marriage equality, and pot legalization. The polarization we hear about is mostly restricted to political activists and media elites who mistake their own extreme views for those of the common people.

      "Everybody worries about the average American being ensconced in a filter bubble," says Fiorina. "Most of the research suggests it's the elites who are in these filter bubbles...and have this biased view of the world."

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    10. Re:That's not the point by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Hmm.... There's nothing about "elites" in Kernighan & Ritchie, the recent whitepaper from Schneier doesn't shed any light on them either ... I turned to the bible for some insight and I found something about the "elites" in there, but mostly in the context of battles... is this some kind of military thing?

      Are you against our brave fighting men and women? Why do you slander them? What kind of anti-patriotic yellow belly are you?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    11. Re:That's not the point by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      People who make decisions about our lives. If you're not a decision maker, you're one of us. Read this essay and tell me if you sympathize more with them, or with the American people.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    12. Re:That's not the point by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Elites basically came up with this: labor is commoditized as mobile capital is free to roam the globe for the lowest cost labor. In contrast, labor is far less mobile, and unable to shift as fluidly and frictionlessly as capital to exploit scarcities and opportunities.

      Neoliberalism--the opening of markets and borders--enables capital to effortlessly crush labor. Our elites, in embracing globalism, have institutionalized a system that shreds the scarcity value of domestic labor in favor of lower cost foreign labor that serves capital's desire for lower costs.

      For someone who is professional class, someone who has a nice income and who does NOT make their income from labor but from providing intellectual services (doctors, lawyers, teachers, white collar work in general) then moving production overseas is overall a plus. THEIR job is usually not threatened by factories closing and jobs being exported overseas and their costs go down as labor wages go down due to cheap crap from China. In other words, globalization leads to a net INCREASE in take home pay for the professional and upper classes. (Always has)

      However, if you are an average working class American, then your incomes and your throats are being cut by the huge influx of new, cheap junk. Working class jobs are being destroyed by low income labor at one end and automation at the other, leaving working class voters angry and broke and with no place to go.

      That's where the backlash is coming from, and that's why so many upper income people can't see any problem with it. It's the old old problem of the landed gentry and the nobility looking down their noses at all of those stinking deplorable peasants, all over again.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    13. Re:That's not the point by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      As broad as you define that, this includes your parents and your children. Maybe even your friends.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    14. Re:That's not the point by rsilvergun · · Score: 2

      American elites decided to ruin our middle and working classes for the benefit of themselves.

      FTFY.

      Things did NOT get better in Mexico with NAFTA. Our cheap corn imports wrecked their economy and the low paying manufacturing jobs are poisoning them. Meanwhile our drug war has made a mess of their country and their neighbor's countries.

      China didn't get better because of us, they industrialized. Industrialization and the modernization that goes with it is overall a good thing. But the relentless drive for cheap consumer goods is preventing their working class from organizing and demanding better wages. America has become dependent on cheap Chinese goods for our own economic security because it's the only thing offsetting the constant drop in wages TFA is talking about.

      The solution isn't isolationism or trade wars. It's Unionization & worker solidarity across borders. Demand a higher standard of living for the Mexicans and the Chinese and it'll raise yours too. You're trapped in a race to the bottom. The only winning move is not to play.

      --
      Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    15. Re: That's not the point by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      Never thought that liberty prime would post on slashdot.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    16. Re: That's not the point by lgw · · Score: 1

      Never thought that liberty prime would post on slashdot.

      Hah, nice reference.

      Conservatism: The fear that somewhere, somehow, someone you think is your inferior is being treated as your equal.

      I don't know any conservatives that believe anyone is an "inferior", but lots of people are "idiots". Cultures and economic systems OTOH are often judged as inferior on the basis that they consistently produce shitholes, but that doesn't attach to the people from those cultures (though if they can't see the causal connection, they're "idiots", but still not "inferior").

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    17. Re:That's not the point by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Mexican inflation adjusted per capita income went from (about) $6k to $10k in 20 years, the previous doubling took about 35.

      No developed nation has farmers working 10 acre plots. Those were bad jobs and were going away.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    18. Re:That's not the point by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      Why are you attempting to cover for the rich and powerful? Aren't you on the far left? These people are your enemies, no?

      Eh, who am I kidding - your enemies are the working class. Same as the elites. No wonder take their side and defend them in public.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    19. Re:That's not the point by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      There's no one less pleasant than a communist, and you sound like those people often.

      There's always nazis. Oh, wait, you knew that, that's who you're defending.

      Americans once had a choice which of those were worse. We joined with the Communists and killed lots of nazis.

      Apparently, we left a few.

    20. Re:That's not the point by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      Mexico insists NAFTA is good for them, who are you to tell them they can't have it?

    21. Re:That's not the point by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      So why aren't you on the side of the working class against the powerful? Instead you're siding with the powerful and calling the little people deplorable. I'm not into hatred. I'm baffled as fuck by the far left who - a few years ago - were all about the working class, but who have since then morphed into fulltime anti-working class hatred and sympathy for privileged elites.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    22. Re:That's not the point by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Nah, I just ridicule people who have a vague hatred for "the elites" without even understanding what's going on. But as long as you have an enemy, the day has structure, I know.

      10-minutes-hate over already or should I come back in 15?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    23. Re:That's not the point by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      So, I notice you didn't address the far left's virulent hatred of the working class - the same working class they supposedly stood for since there was a far left in the first place. What happened? How'd you switch and end up on the side of the wealthy and powerful oppressors?

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    24. Re:That's not the point by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      So, because I don't take sides with A, I have to take sides with B? Because I don't like Trump, I automatically adore Hillary, and because I don't like Hillary, I must fellate Trump at every opportunity?

      Did it ever occur to you that BOTH options are junk?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    25. Re:That's not the point by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      So how about those working class Americans? The far left's reason for being? Unions, right? Power to the people, comrades? Why'd you turn your back on them and start supporting the wealthy and powerful? Genuinely curious.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    26. Re:That's not the point by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I was asking you to provide examples for "the elites". Are you that deluded already that asking you for your position is an attack to it, worse, that a mere question means that I have to support the other side of the argument?

      Yes, it was provocative, yes, it was worded so that you have to defend your position. Is your position so weak that even daring to ask you to defend it makes it crumble to the point where you assume that anyone asking you to bring forth solid arguments for your position (i.e. INVITING you to talk about it) makes it shake at its core?

      Then I wish someone else would defend it, because it's mine.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    27. Re:That's not the point by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      You just keep avoiding the issue, which makes me think you don't have an answer. Why have the far left abandoned the American working class? It's changed to vitriolic hatred when just a short while ago the far left practically worshiped workers.

      Elites are people who make decisions about your life. Powerful people. If you don't know what they are, please educate yourself. I mean, come on a few short years ago the far left wanted to string up elites from the lampposts. Did we forget Occupy Wall Street? You're not shaking anyone's argument to the core by asking questions you could easily answer with duckduckgo. Here, I did your homework for you, I won't do it next time.

      https://www.telesurenglish.net/opinion/Donald-Trump-and-the-Vicious-Culture-of-Neoliberal-Mass-Idiocy-20161008-0001.html

      https://www.counterpunch.org/2016/10/14/the-ruling-classs-hatred-of-trump-is-different-than-yours/

      https://billmoyers.com/story/takes-ruling-class-village-staff-white-house/

      https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0399170685/counterpunchmaga>

      https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/will-questions-about-conflict-of-interest-hurt-the-clinton-campaign

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    28. Re:That's not the point by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      The far left abandoned the workers because the workers have abandoned it. They found a new darling in refugees and other underprivileged people... whether they are underprivileged or not.

      The workers moved on and became increasingly nationalist and protectionist, essentially what the middle classes did when they started to get a share of the cake after the bourgeoisie revolutions of the 1700s (USA) and 1800s (Europe). Same now. As soon as they had something to lose, the interest in revolution waned.

      And the reason why I keep pestering you for a definition of "the elites" is simple: I have heard too many already. I can't simply take one and run with it. I've heard literally everything. Including that now feminist YouTubers are "the elite" because they get to influence what gets taught at universities.

      If you use a badly defined word like "the elites" or "terrorism", please define it. So I know what you want to use it for.

      Although... I am still waiting for someone using "the elites" to make compelling arguments for, well, pretty much anything.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    29. Re:That's not the point by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      They? What's this they? You're on the far left, my friend. Were you not aware of that?

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    30. Re:That's not the point by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I mostly stopped caring at some point. There's just too much stupidity on both ends of the spectrum today, I just sit back, relax and watch the world burn.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  7. Population growth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In that time period, SV has also added half a million people (2.5M -> 3M). It could be that those new residents represent an influx of lower-paid workers (remember, the SF boom happened after 2000). So it would be useful to know how the makeup of jobs has changed. If tech jobs are a lower percentage of total employment now than in 1997 (an increase in lower-paid jobs "diluting" the tech salaries), then it would appear that wages are declining in real terms.

    A better study would consider whether the pay of specific job types has changed since 1997.

  8. Re: Netflix launched in 1997? by Wallace487 · · Score: 3, Informative

    I can't tell if you're joking, but Netflix started as DVD rental by mail service. It was several years before they added a streaming component.

  9. H1-B by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    No need to ask the why. Between the constant flow of H1-B workers and the court documented collusion between companies to suppress wages by not poaching/trying to hire talent from each other how could anybody be surprised by this?

    1. Re:H1-B by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Informative

      RTFA. This is not caused by H1-Bs. Salaries for tech workers have gone up, and according to TFA they are "thriving". Tech salaries are up 32% after adjusting for inflation.

      What TFA is talking about is everyone else. People that work in Sunnyvale grocery stores, or San Jose car dealerships, or Palo Alto restaurants. It is workers in the non-tech economy that are doing poorly, and those people aren't competing with H1-Bs.

  10. Bastille Day by AndyKron · · Score: 3, Insightful

    At some point all of this is going to come to a head. Like Bastille Day.

    1. Re:Bastille Day by strikethree · · Score: 1

      come to a head. Like Bastille Day.

      I see what you did there. ;)

      --
      "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
    2. Re:Bastille Day by drsquare · · Score: 1

      What, you're going to start cutting heads off because you're only making 100k and not 200k like in the dot com bubble? Revolutions don't happen because people can only afford three cars on the driveway.

  11. Not surprise... by PortHaven · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Corporate America is endeavoring to lead us into neo-Feudalism.

    1. Re:Not surprise... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You may entertain that, but I think you will find that the answer is life will be worst living as a serf.

      Societies that have a ruling class and a vast rabble of serfs and a small cadre of middle management always fail to innovate or renew themselves. Everything is oriented to maintaining the status quo. An excellent example would be Qing dynasty China and its dealings with the western counties. Under systems like that, it becomes harder to be the outsider who creates and develops new ideas and products because may disturb the wealth going to the ruling class. Want an examplf that? How about the U.S. coal company owners trying to force coal use on electricity companies? Everything else seem to be cleaner and more efficient fuel for generating electricity (each with its own issues of course), but coal will be forced upon them by government fiat if need be.

      Also, demands for change can build up and cause massive "dam bursts" like the Chinese civil war called the Taiping Rebellion which make things worse.

      With representation democracy, markets and some progressive policies, a society can innovate and continuously renew itself.

    2. Re:Not surprise... by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      Good job AC's accuse me of ignorance when I specifically cite European serfdom. Given examples from Eastern Europe (different region) and China (different region and radically different culture). Fail and Double fail.

      To round it out both the Chinese Civil war and the October revolution resulted in systems of governance that were arguable worse than the previous condition of serfdom for large parts of the population. Triple Fail! Even if those political systems don't resemble our own.

      I stand by my comments European Feudalism is far from the worst of systems that have been implemented. Secondly provided you are the very bottom rung on the later doing labor but some type of artisan, merchant, skilled worker doing things for the Lord you might very well be better off than those occupying similar positions in our society. On the other hand if you are sweeping the floors today in our society, serfdom will probably be worse for you.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    3. Re:Not surprise... by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Check your facts, Peter the Great ended serfdom in Russia.

      The poor before and especially after the revolution dreamed of such a cushy deal.

      Serfs were attached to the land and produced almost no economic surplus. Which is what the broken stat you started the argument with reflects.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  12. Re:Go complain... by PortHaven · · Score: 1

    Why?

    They don't listen. We don't have the $$$ to make them listen to us.

  13. DotCom hysteria? by slashcross · · Score: 2

    So tech workers now, who are very numerous, are making less then tech workers during the peak of the DotCom hysteria, when they were quite scarce? Shocking.

    --
    Slashdot your i and slashcross your t.
  14. 1997 - Peak Y2K by anvilmark · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Businesses were throwing wheel-barrels of money at Y2K conversions at that point.

    1. Re:1997 - Peak Y2K by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Well, not really. I was well into a 15+ year career back then. I started at a new company just after the 1996 Olympics finished up. In 1997 it was on the company mind to start testing if things were going to break starting at Y2k, but all out rewrites of software didn't start happening until the start of 1999.

      Oh, and I am only now starting to make the kind of money that I did in the late 1990's, almost another 20 years later. Within a month of September 2001 entire IT departments were being laid off at lots of companies. I went 9 months in 2002 without a single call back on a computer job. I took other retail jobs at 1/3 of what I was making just to survive. Finally in early 2005 I got a call for a computer job and took it at less than 1/2 of what I was making in the 1990's.

      It has taken until now to claw my way back to making the money I did in the 90's.

  15. It isn't just Sillicon valley by Hasaf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Real wages have been down for decades, and no, the Trump tax cut didn't change that https://www.bls.gov/news.relea...

    I have an MBA and I cannot afford to pay for the house I grew up in. My father paid for it on a single wage and hadn't finished college. It is easy to see where the culprits are: a high reliance on imports for manufactured goods and a significantly large share of earnings being diverted away from labour and going to the highest earners.

    1. Re:It isn't just Sillicon valley by cayenne8 · · Score: 2

      I have an MBA and I cannot afford to pay for the house I grew up in. My father paid for it on a single wage and hadn't finished college.

      Shouldn't said house be paid off by now.....?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    2. Re:It isn't just Sillicon valley by supercell · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Your father paid for it on a single income, because before the 1970's, not every woman was compelled to work.

      When you effectively double the labor force, without increasing demand for large goods (homes, cars, appliances, etc), inflation skyrockets (1970/80's). Now most every household requires two incomes. Nice job feminist.

    3. Re:It isn't just Sillicon valley by dasunt · · Score: 2

      I have an MBA and I cannot afford to pay for the house I grew up in. My father paid for it on a single wage and hadn't finished college. It is easy to see where the culprits are: a high reliance on imports for manufactured goods and a significantly large share of earnings being diverted away from labour and going to the highest earners.

      Why do manufacturing imports make the middle class poorer?

      I know it's a popular idea that exports make us strong, imports make us rich, but that basically boils down to mercantilism. Mercantilism sounds good (we're richer off if other nations gives us gold in order to buy our goods), but as Adam Smith himself pointed out, that's confusing money with wealth.

    4. Re:It isn't just Sillicon valley by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Why do manufacturing imports make the middle class poorer?

      Because the imports replaced high-paying factory jobs making the same stuff. The jobs that replaced them pay far less. And below the savings from the availability of cheaper goods.

    5. Re:It isn't just Sillicon valley by apoc.famine · · Score: 1

      Why do manufacturing imports make the middle class poorer?

      They don't by themselves.

      It doesn't make financial sense for us to spend $25k making a car that we could import for $20k. That's effectively subsidizing the people who make those cars here. Better would be those people engaged in a trade that we can do better/cheaper here. The issue is that for a large percent of the (former) middle class, we haven't figured out what that trade is, if there even is one.

      For awhile, we were transitioning jobs into technology and automation. The major issue with this is that when technological advances allow you to automate everything that your average middle class or lower individual can do, there's nothing for them to do. We're seemingly changing most low-skill jobs into service industry jobs now, which have historically not been good paying jobs. Even if we push through a very big minimum wage increase, $15/hr waiting tables isn't going to replace $30/hr assembly line jobs.

      The issue isn't importing a lot of goods. It's not replacing the good paying jobs lost by switching to the cheaper product.

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    6. Re:It isn't just Sillicon valley by dasunt · · Score: 1

      Because the imports replaced high-paying factory jobs making the same stuff.

      Manufacturing output has grown over time in the US. The amount of employees has decreased as technology made each employee more efficient. So those jobs went away. Did the increase in economic efficiency make the middle class poorer? Would we be better off as Luddites?

    7. Re:It isn't just Sillicon valley by burningcpu · · Score: 1

      It likely was, and then when his father passed, the house sold at market value and the return distributed among the beneficiaries.

      GP would need to secure a loan sufficient to cover the full market value.

    8. Re:It isn't just Sillicon valley by burningcpu · · Score: 1

      Manufacturing is a helluva lot more than assembling widgets.

      Manufacturing requires a support apparatus of shipping, accountants, lawyers, fast foot joints to feed the workers, etc.

      Loss of manufacturing means loss of these jobs. Further, industry follows industry. As an example -

      The solvents manufacturer I worked for employed hundreds of engineers, scientists and other technical folk. Many of these jobs are now overseas, because of this network effect. Production of goods that used our solvents as raw materials migrated to Asia, and our customers demanded the cost savings associated with local production.

    9. Re:It isn't just Sillicon valley by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Manufacturing output has grown over time in the US. The amount of employees has decreased as technology made each employee more efficient.

      We did this, and we offshored a lot of manufacturing. This isn't an either-or situation.

      Did the increase in economic efficiency make the middle class poorer?

      Yes. Because the productivity gain was not reflected in higher wages.

  16. And some friends wonder by ReneR · · Score: 2

    why I don't work at Apple, ;-) Loving living in cheap Berlin, Germany ,-)

    1. Re:And some friends wonder by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This.

      I now make about 2/3 of what I could earn in that Silly Valley. But I paid about 100k for my house and have living expenses of roughly 1000 bucks a month.

      In other words, I have more money left at the end of the month. Despite our crazy high "socialist" taxes.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  17. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The kind of immigration that brings in people with high level skills -is- very much controlled.

    How many 'illegal aliens' so you think work at Silicon Valley tech companies?

  18. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's got very little to do with immigration, and everything to do with development work getting easier and more common as a profession. Back in 1997 it was much harder than it is today, with modern frameworks and sandboxes to play in like the browser. Back then web apps were CGI scripts written in C++, and Javascript was only two years old and far from widely supported or standardized.

    It would be strange if modern JS developers were getting paid as much as C++ people in 1997. There are far more JS developers, it's a far easier job. This is what happens as industries mature and the barriers to entry are lowered, and the skills required become more mainstream.

    Today if you want the big bucks you need rare skills, like embedded or AI research.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  19. Re:Obama by kilfarsnar · · Score: 5, Funny

    Competition is always good.

    Yep, that's why I'm sleeping with your wife! Step up your game, man!

    --
    "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  20. Re:I wonder how many Googlers, etc.? by alvinrod · · Score: 1

    Anyone who wants to is already capable of paying extra taxes. The government won’t stop you from paying more in the form of a gift to the treasury.

    Better yet, fund or start a charity with the money you are no longer having the government take. It will probably do a better job of using that money, and you don’t have to worry about any of it being wasted on government programs you don’t agree with.

  21. Re:uh.......quit. by fluffernutter · · Score: 2

    And when all companies decide unilaterally that they have a certain cap on what they will pay? Then what do you do.

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  22. probably because by fred6666 · · Score: 1

    Silicon valley was overpaid in 1997. We call that a correction. I bet outside Silicon Valley, tech workers are earning more.

  23. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by lgw · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When I worked in the valley, at a variety of places, there were never more than 5% of workers born in the US. 95% immigrants. Yeah, I think that affects wages just a little bit.

    And don't forget, in the late 1990s you had "webmasters" and "HTML developers" who were fare less skilled than JS guys.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  24. Tell me again how UNIONS are bad ? by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is why you unionize. So workers get a larger share of the profits.

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    1. Re:Tell me again how UNIONS are bad ? by jythie · · Score: 2

      The problem with unions is they make it hard to sell out your fellow workers, so as long as you richly reward a few you can point to unions and say 'see, you all have a chance at this brass ring, but the union would take that away!' and people will avoid them in the hopes they can make a little more than others.

    2. Re:Tell me again how UNIONS are bad ? by skaralic · · Score: 1

      This is why you unionize. So workers get a larger share of the profits.

      It's not that simple. Watch Milton Friedman discussing unions, it is very insightful: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    3. Re:Tell me again how UNIONS are bad ? by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      While that is the reason people hate unions, its a double-lie. First, most people won't get the brass ring, so they lie to those people. Second, if you want, a union can support the brass ring methodology. It just lets people agree that 80 hr weeks are unacceptable in seeking that ring.

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    4. Re:Tell me again how UNIONS are bad ? by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      Care to summarize? Cause "watch this video" isn't really acceptable as a forum response. At least by itself. IF you said "here's a video that goes further" I would understand.

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  25. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by alvinrod · · Score: 2

    It’s kind of funny to read about how the U.S. is dying when you still have loads of people trying to come here. All the funnier is that it’s often from of the same places where they implemented systems to try to solve that supposed greed reigns supreme problem you think the west has.

    Tech jobs have seen wages grow, which suggests the problem is likely related in some way to an influx of low skill labor that will work cheap or even under the table for below minimum wage. This concern is hardly a red herring.

  26. It was the .COM economy. by jellomizer · · Score: 2

    The late 1990's was full of stupid.
    What was the real driving force was the Y2K scare. The Year 2000 was approaching. A lot of businesses running mainframes which were decades old had the choice, of updating their software to handle the 4 digit years, get new systems, or both.
    BY the late 1990's with the 486 and the Pentium Chip in place as a solid 32 bit platform their decade(s) old mainframes needed to be upgraded anyways, and might as well go with the cheap Desktop systems which were arguable more powerful (in many aspects) and being cheaper then a Dumb Terminal, they could get more of them.
    So A bunch of Companies and people were getting new computers having new computers all in the same same time. With everyone getting a new computer and finally upgrading their Old Apple II, Commodore 64, and IBM XT (And compatibles) (The big names in America) They now were on the Same OS (windows), with similar hardware, which supported TCP/IP and modem speeds exceeding the 14.4k with was enough to browse the internet with small pictures. This got people hooking onto the Internet. Often with Services such as AOL.

    Now with the Consumers and Businesses all on similar protocols. Businesses could actually use the internet for commerce. So other then hiring tech workers to fix Y2k and get the new systems working for business, they were also trying to find people who could manage this new World Wide Web Thing.
    So there was a shortage of Tech Workers, Companies bent over backwards to keep them hired, even if they couldn't afford it, because they hoped to get a strong foothold before they had to pay all the bills. Also a lot of these tech guys were starting their own businesses because it was so easy to get customers at the time. So there was a High Demand and Low supply. Thus high paying jobs. Like over 50k a year for a Microsoft Front Page web designer.

    Now what happened?
    The Clinton Administration seeing the low supply and high demand decided to open the H1B for more tech workers. While with hind sight this was a bad idea, but at the time, it seemed the only logical thing to do. Because there was so much demand that such shortage in tech workers could bring the economy to a halt, Especially if y2k turned out so bad.
    So this increased supply, then after y2k people got all their new systems and everything was upgraded. So the economy Upgrade Schedule was in sync. and from 2002-2006 the Tech bubble popped. Demand dropped with extra supply from the H1B. Companies tried to save money, by prolonging their upgrades, and Trying to outsource all IT work with very cheap labor. Around the 2005-2010 time frame, Outsourcing had stabilized, realizing that outsourcing wasn't as cheap as it seemed, and also a lot of jobs didn't scale well. So the Tech industry recovered a bit, Then the great Recession of 2008 hit. While Tech workers were effected less then other sectors, it was still hit. The Recovery wasn't really in effect until around 2012. However now a few Tech Giants had firmly gained Ground, Apple, Amazon, Facebook, Google, and Microsoft. The big guys now hold a lot of the keys, and with Cloud being popular method of deployment The demand for the Little guy Tech worker was needed less and less. So while it is better then after the Tech Bubble pop, it isn't like it was during peak bubble of 1997.

    --
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  27. H1-B by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Obvious

  28. They don't need to invest in you by rsilvergun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    they've got the H1-B program. They can pit you against workers from around the globe. Workers who trained themselves. Billions of them. So many that a few are bound to work out. Plus they can work them 80+ hours a week and not worry about burnout since there's a 100+ guys right behind them and behind those 100 guys is you.

    This is what happens when workers get too confident in their abilities to start to think they can make it on their own. A single employee can't effectively negotiate with a mega corporation unless that employee is in the top 10% of geniuses, and, well, the reality is 90% of us aren't. If we were we'd know that, because 100-10=90...

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    1. Re:They don't need to invest in you by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      Billions of them?

      I've migrated for work myself, as well as working in my country of citizenship. Never really felt I was competing with these billions of self taught people... It was always down to my skills being a good fit for the company and us agreeing on a salary.

      I don't think I'm exceptional, not in the top 10% of geniuses. The UK's immigration system is apparently too lax. I compete directly with people from eastern Europe, Poles and Bulgarians and Romanians who thanks to freedom of movement don't even need to apply for a visa, they just book a cheap flight.

      Managers don't just want the cheapest though, they want someone good. If they get someone not so good it ends up reflecting badly on them.

      If there is an issue in SV it sounds like it's because there are too many people in SV. I think US employment laws are partly to blame too. In Europe it's much harder to fire people so there is more effort put in to hiring someone good in the first place, and not just getting the cheapest warm body.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    2. Re:They don't need to invest in you by mikael · · Score: 1

      But those H1B visa guys burn themselves out as well due to lack of knowledge. I know a company that did custom systems. They had a project that needed a vendor or customer splash screen that needed to appear upon power on. The task was split up into several parts using Agile methodology (#1 = display the splash screen, #2 provide a menu to select the splash screen, #3 write the selection to the display routine). Well, the boot loader took 50 milliseconds, the specification called for 15 milliseconds, so they put the vendor splash screen into the boot loader, which could only be updated by SD card. That guy gets a big round of applause for showing ingenuity. The GUI guy merrily went on with creating the menu selection screen. He gets a big round of applause for having a flashy menu interface. The third guy gets the last and final task of writing the selection from the GUI menu into the boot loader. Can't be done in software, so obviously he's no good at the job and gets fired.

      Avoid those corporations and set yourself up as a independent software provider.

      --
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  29. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Can you give some examples of companies that have 95% immigrant worker populations?

    I've heard his claim made about companies like Google and Intel, but their own stats paint a very different picture.

    --
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  30. Hardcore conservatives didn't want a bailout by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Hardcore conservatives didn't want a bank bailout. The banks had made bad some decisions, which came back to bite them. Irresponsible companies deserve to bankrupt. The House Republicans vetoed the first bailout. Then the media started its panic and W said, "It's gonna blow." Banks spread their money across DC, and the second time, the bailout passed with BIPARTISAN support.

  31. Not surprising by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    A huge problem is the H1B program. These ppl come over and are pretty much slaves to the companies. We need to kill the H1B program with 50k/year, and instead add 25-40k in greencards, but only for needed job. This way, we address the jobs, but still force competition into the job market.

    --
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    1. Re:Not surprising by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      so what? Kill the program and move the ppl over to greencards. It will do far more for America since H1Bs go home.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  32. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    I never get tired of hearing people say that stuff.

    Well there's an invasion coming, apparently. Or at least there was before the mid-terms. I guess they got tired and gave up.

  33. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by lgw · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The big companies seem to be more like 80% (talking about developers, not employees). Not going to give my job history on slashdot, but one small company I worked at had, before I was hired, no native-born tech people of any kind, excepting the VP of development. At the time they got bought they had 30 US employees and about 100 in India (devs etc, not talking about support), and 2 of us were born in the US (plus one technical non-dev). The acquiring company forced out everyone senior who wasn't Indian in the most blatant racism I've yet seen. Even the Nepalese guy got pressured out.

    In the large company I worked at before that the numebrs were about the same: 30/100 US/India split, with 2 US-born devs (plus 2 managers).

    When I worked at Amazon (which was Seattle, not Silly Valley) our group of 50 or so needed 3 people who could get top secret clearance. Problem was, we only had 3 devs who were born in the US, and I wasn't interested. Amazingly, the "we're trying to recruit US citizens, we just can't find qualified people" hiring process suddenly found another 3 qualified US devs over the next 6 months. Amazing coincidence, really.

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  34. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Itâ(TM)s kind of funny to read about how the U.S. is dying when you still have loads of people trying to come here.

    Its a relativity problem. You see, if the whole continent is sinking into the sea, people clamour to the high land, even though its also doomed and sinking just as fast. Eventually everyone ends up crammed on the highest peak when that finally goes under.

    You are watching people running for the highest hill and construing it as a sign of that hill's innate supremacy over the low-lands. The flood won't be nearly so impressed when it gets there.

    In other terms: the US has accumulated an undue share of global wealth (by a myriad of reasons, prominently featuring luck, malignancy, savagery, brutality and kleptocracy, which would take ages to go over) and therefore looks like the tallest peak where to shelter from the global disaster. Also many, if not most migrants only care about their next meal and long-term planning does not figure much in their actions.

    The collapse of the economic house of cards, Ponzi scheme, or whatever name you give to the scam is in fact imminent and global. All the metrics you care to look into point firmly to a crisis of massive proportions that will hit hardest in the places which consider themselves most lofty and untouchable. As such catastrophes usually do.

    Or to put it yet another way, hordes of people were immigrating to the US on the very Wednesday right before the Black Thursday too.

  35. Re:Why do they reference Netflix when it covers al by pauljlucas · · Score: 2

    I would assume they referenced Netflix to give the reader a sense of time. It's like saying "Company X, founded when Hayes was President, ..."

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  36. Re:hb1 visa by pgmrdlm · · Score: 1

    This is the best link I can find. It is from the year 2000 through 2016. The link will pull a pdf file, but there are graphics showing applied for and also filled. https://www.google.com/url?sa=...

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    Anonymous comments are as pathetic as the anonymous "sources" that contaminate gutless journalism from the New York Time
  37. By 2032 90% of Americans will have no wealth by SysEngineer · · Score: 1

    Right now 50% of Americans have no wealth! Using data from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and using Jupyter notebook and numpy to create a regression plot, you can see where America is headed. Credit Suisse data agrees with the plot.

  38. Re:hb1 visa by pgmrdlm · · Score: 1

    Look for this heading: Evolution of the H-1B: Latest Trends in a ... - Migration Policy Institute Sorry, I need to go to a stupid meeting or I would try to give you a better link.

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  39. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by DarkOx · · Score: 1

    Right and there was basically no tooling for JS either back then. To write in you had to know it. Not fumble your way thru with intelisense. Also you had be very aware of browser eccentricities and often implement mirror functionality in vbscript.

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  40. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1, Informative

    Interesting, because Amazon's numbers from 2014 suggest that 60% of their employees are "white". That of course includes people at all levels. Managers are 73% white.

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/r...

    So either it's a problem very specific to development, which isn't born out in more detailed numbers we have from other companies, or you were extremely unlucky.

    Excuse me for being skeptical, but I hear these 90%+ claims and never see a shred of evidence of it being true anywhere. When I ask people get evasive or the available evidence doesn't back them up.

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  41. Pick a more meaningful span of time .... by King_TJ · · Score: 1

    As others already pointed out, comparisons between pay today and in 1997 will be skewed because the late 90's was when investors were foolishing throwing money at every tech startup with a flashy name, creating an unsustainable tech bubble that burst a few years later on. You also had all of the Y2K crisis fears emerging, so again, a one-time panic mode that caused a flurry of spending to update major systems or do rewrites on older code.

    I mean ... I was working in I.T. as a PC "support specialist" for a metal finishing business in the midwest at that time, and I had friends who never even held a corporate I.T. job before, but who did a lot of freelance web page design for spare cash who ran off to California to get high paying jobs with companies like Excite.
    Fast-forwarding a few years? They came back to the midwest, unable to make it with the high cost of living and lack of available jobs..... (But hey, I guess they had a good run there for a short time.)

    I propose someone compare pay between now and a more reasonable time in the past, after I.T. settled down a bit ..... Maybe 2004? Then see how it compares.

  42. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yes, it's a problem specific to development. They don't hire H1B's as managers.

  43. Not just Silicon Valley... by rnturn · · Score: 1

    Salaries and contract rates are down in the Midwest, too. I can't recall how times I've been contacted by recruiters hawking contracts that are paying rates that would have been nice in the early '90s but are a joke with today's cost of living. Even contracts for periods for very short term (2-3 months) stints are paying crap rates. To be fair, the recruiters know that the compensation being offered by many employers today is a joke but also know that submitting someone at a higher salary/rate won't even get that candidate a phone screen. And that doesn't even take into account the abuse of contract-to-hire where the employer has no intention of ever converting a contractor into an FTE.

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  44. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

    It's worth noting that Google and companies like it have offices all over the world, and lots of their workers will move to the USA for promotions or to do other jobs, but they were employees to begin with. I know that people working at the Google office in Montreal decided to make the jump to the main campus at some point for various reasons, so even if there are a high number of immigrant workers, it's not like they were just scooped up off the street in India or China or something. These people aren't working for peanuts; I hardly think they're driving wages down.

  45. Re:Why do they reference Netflix when it covers al by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    Benner said big technology companies like Google and Facebook are so dominant in their respective markets that they have been able to direct a larger share of revenues to investors and some top employees.

    Google and Facebook do not pay a dividend, so unless he's talking about stock buybacks - investors aren't getting a share of revenue.

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  46. If you can get that machine cheaply for for free by rsilvergun · · Score: 2

    subsidized by somebody else then no, you're not dumb. You're doing something perfectly rational. I think the phrase is "tragedy of the commons" but I could be wrong.

    Workers are now paying for their own educations thanks to massive cuts to state and federal college funding.

    Also, cheap work visas let you get workers trained overseas. These workers are either trained by their governments or (again) often on their own time/dime because of the intensely competitive economies they come from. India is especially bad about this as they've got a massive educated class and not nearly enough to do with them.

    What I'm saying is that workers have been made into disposable commodities. But pride keeps us from facing that harsh reality head on and taking the steps needed to mitigate the damage (read: Unionize and solidarity).

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  47. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by plopez · · Score: 1

    What's wrong with trying to get a fair share? Also consider that the American dream is expensive; a house, 2 cars, properly funding retirement, college for the children, good health care etc. are all expensive.

    --
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  48. Fear works by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    more than anything. Before Y2K you had the cold war keeping jobs from going overseas and from cheap work visas flooding tech. That kept wages high.

    I'm not saying we should go back to isolationism and xenophobia. I don't think we could if we wanted to, cat's out of the bag on that. And it wasn't good for the 30% of the population that wasn't white (just ask a black person over 60 what life was like 40 years ago, bonus points if they're from the South).

    The solution, at least for America, is more social services. Medicare for All, jobs guarantees, etc, etc. Right now nobody's getting any benefit from the global economy unless they're in the top 15% or so (e.g. rich enough to invest in the stock market). For everyone else globalization hasn't got us anything but cheap TVs and Playstations. If the tax dollars those immigrants paid gave me healthcare, schools, jobs, roads, etc, etc we'd have a lot less friction.

    Of course, somebody is profiting from that...

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  49. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by lgw · · Score: 1

    Don't conflate "white" with US-born. I've worked with plenty of good people from Canada, Israel, and Russia (and South Africa: BTW I don't advise telling them they're not "African-American"), and OTOH good American-born Chinese, and Canadian-born Chinese for that matter, and pretty much any other mix of race vs nationality that's around.

    Believe it or not, "immigrant" is not a code word for "non-White", and race is a poor proxy for immigration status.

    I only have anecdotes, of course, but I worked at 6 companies in Silly Valley and Seattle, so it's a reasonable sample. Of those, only Microsoft was more than 20% native-born.

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  50. They aren't talking about tech workers by magzteel · · Score: 2

    No point in thrashing about H1-B's. From TFA

    "Technology workers saw a median wage increase of 32 percent over the past 20 years, the study found. But Silicon Valley workers in virtually all other areas lost ground during that time. Across all jobs, wages for even the highest-paid 10 percent increased just under 1 percent, the study found."

  51. Um, I hope the workers are smart enough to invest by filesiteguy · · Score: 1

    If I were a smart worker bee, I'd be investing in stocks like crazy. Of course, that may all come crashing down when the current real estate bubble pops.

  52. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by lgw · · Score: 1

    Not really an amazing coincidence. They probably lowered their expectations until they found anyone.

    No, they merely stopped over-sampling immigrants at the start of the funnel. Amazon has a very strict process to avoid filling reqs by lowering expectations, the strictest of any place I've heard of. Every hire must be approved by an interviewer unrelated to the hiring team who's only job is to make sure the team doesn't lower the bar to get someone mediocre instead of an empty seat.

    It's the only bit of Amazon culture that's positive IMO: there's never any sense that any of your peers were let in to meet some quota. They work their e.g. gender hiring targets at the front of the process, not the hiring decision.

    --
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  53. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by lgw · · Score: 1

    JS dev was certainly a dark art back in the day, and far more skill required than today. However, "web developers" who had read one book on the internet were a very common thing (and actually employed all over, before the bust). It was a very different world, looking back, given it's only 20 years ago.

    --
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  54. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

    Okay, so you are saying that at least 35% were white but not born US citizens, likely much higher given that as you say some of the non-white employees were likely US born.

    This is just taking us even further from the published stats, which are legally mandated with consequences for them being inaccurate.

    --
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  55. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by guruevi · · Score: 2

    Employees, not contractors. Contractors are not Human Resources, they're literally counted as an expense like a computer or a software license subscription.

    That's why companies love contractors, they don't have to do a bunch of paperwork like pension funding or worry about compliance to various frameworks. When it comes to liability it's a "third party vendor" to blame and it doesn't count towards your H1B and other statistics.

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  56. The plural of anecdote is not data by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    Sorry to be so harsh, but it's worth saying. Yes, there are bad workers coming here on Visa contracts. But in aggregate they're just fine. They also work longer hours and, since they're contractors, companies don't worry about burning them out. They also don't have to worry about them Unionizing and they have tremendous leverage of the employee since they can fire them at any time and send them back to their native country, usually with a large pay cut when they go back.

    If these workers were a bad deal for companies then that would show up in the market. Companies that didn't use them would have poorer results and eventually the programs would wither and die. That is the exact opposite of what happens. Every year companies demand the caps be increased (and some, like Hillary Clinton, wanted no caps whatsoever). The companies that rely on them are some of the most profitable in human history.

    The H1-B visa program works great for companies. But not so much for American workers. I think if we had more social programs and less dog-eat-dog capitalism that wouldn't be the case (e.g. if the average American worker got some sort of benefit from all that cheap labor), but as it stands it's a raw deal.

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    1. Re:The plural of anecdote is not data by Pulzar · · Score: 1

      They also work longer hours and, since they're contractors, companies don't worry about burning them out. They also don't have to worry about them Unionizing and they have tremendous leverage of the employee since they can fire them at any time and send them back to their native country, usually with a large pay cut when they go back.

      H1-Bs are not necessarily contractors, in fact I'd be surprised if you found many at all that are, outside of some of those "loophole" places like Tata Consultancy -- and, in those cases, you're not sponsoring those contractors yourself anyway.

      In addition, if you fire an H1-B, they still have 60 days to find a new job. In SV, that's really not much of a problem these days. It's an inconvenience, for sure, but not one over which you're going to tolerate bad work environment for.

      --
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  57. I don't think gentrification is the problem by rsilvergun · · Score: 1, Informative

    the problem is rent seeking. Owning property is traditionally how working class Americans build wealth. You own your house and don't pay rent. Then you can take the money you save on rent and invest it in education, if not for yourself then your kids. This is how things worked for the boomers, but they seem to have broken that for Gen X.

    The boomers gave up their pensions for the promise of big cash payouts tax cuts and deregulation. The didn't get the tax cuts, and the deregulation tanked the economy and destroyed what little they had in their 401ks. They're taking their limited savings and buying houses to rent to Gen Xers and Millennials. Those Gen Xers & Millennials have even less money since they didn't have the 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s to build wealth like the boomers did. We got wiped out by the 2000 crash and outsourcing bonanza that shifted trillions to the 1%.

    The Millennials have it especially bad. Us GenXers at least had the tail end of the .com boom and housing booms to store a little away. Those poor bastards walked out of college with $100k+ in debt into the worst economy since the 1930s. They tried to protest at that "Occupy Wall Street" thing and were shut down by the FBI & provisions in the patriot act. Man, what a world.

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    1. Re:I don't think gentrification is the problem by Bengie · · Score: 2

      and destroyed what little they had in their 401ks

      401ks rarely get destroyed, just temporarily devalued. Eventually the market corrects itself and you're back to normal. Unless you decided to sell low and cash out during a crash, which is stupid. The value of my 401k nearly doubled during the 2008 crash, just by using the general "index" investment options. Market crashes are rare opportunities to buy really low.

    2. Re:I don't think gentrification is the problem by Rob+Y. · · Score: 1

      That might be true - and the same could be said for housing in desirable areas that dipped in value during the recession. But it doesn't negate the argument that overvalued assets either crash or stop growing at some point. If you apply simple maxims like "the stock market always outperforms other investments over time", or "real estate allows you to live rent-free while your home increases in value", you're fine - until you're not. These maxims are based on past performance, and we've never had a baby boom followed by a much smaller cohort. We may see some firsts in the coming decades. Of course, if you live long enough and stay invested...

      Funny how some of the same people that make the argument for the stock market will be able to handle the retirement of the boomers will scream about how that same retirement is sure to bankrupt Social Security. Personally, I think it's all going to be a relative blip that tapers off as the boomers die. But try to get a "Social Security is doomed" type to address the death of the boomers and see how far that gets you...

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    3. Re:I don't think gentrification is the problem by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

      deregulation tanked the economy and destroyed what little they had in their 401ks.

      This is the exact opposite of what actually happened. If you kept your 401k you benefited from climbing valuations, record corporate profits, and the highest overall P/E in history.

      The problem in our economy is that owners of capital (such as people with 401k accounts) are getting a bigger and bigger slice of GDP, while labor's share is shrinking.

      The only way your 401k could have been "destroyed" is if you invested it all in Venezuelan bonds.

    4. Re:I don't think gentrification is the problem by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      The only way your 401k could have been "destroyed" is if you invested it all in Venezuelan bonds.

      Not true; selling low is the most common way to "destroy" an investment account. The incorrect part isn't that the account was destroyed; the lie is usually in who is responsible, and what actions they took that caused it.

  58. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 2

    It's got very little to do with immigration, and everything to do with development work getting easier and more common as a profession.

    If it had nothing to do with immigration, companies wouldn't work so hard to bring in cheaper employees from abroad. But they do.

    If it had nothing to do with immigration, nobody would squawk when we said "OK, we have enough now. We don't need anymore H1Bs, etc." But they do squawk.

  59. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by lgw · · Score: 1

    I rather suspect those stats are for "workers", not "developers", which especially for Amazon measures something different.

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  60. No by rsilvergun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    because they won't release those stats. They use contractors to hide it. The published stats are for FTEs. A huge part of the reason to use contractor firms for that is to hide those stats.

    Anecdotally the last 4 places I've worked at are pushing 80%.

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    1. Re:No by swillden · · Score: 1

      because they won't release those stats. They use contractors to hide it. The published stats are for FTEs. A huge part of the reason to use contractor firms for that is to hide those stats. Anecdotally the last 4 places I've worked at are pushing 80%.

      From what I can see at Google there are almost no contractors doing engineering work. I'd be surprised if it was even 1%.

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    2. Re: No by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      Yeah like Google is a realistic average employer.

    3. Re: No by swillden · · Score: 1

      Yeah like Google is a realistic average employer.

      Read the thread, starting with AmiMoJo's post.

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    4. Re: No by astrofurter · · Score: 1

      I'm curious then why I get at least one recruiter per month - for years and years - soliciting me to work as a contractor for Big Brother Google.

      Usually those solicitations advertise openness to H1-B unwelcome-guest workers. Though I've never actually followed up on one, so I can't say to what extent they discriminate against American citizens.

    5. Re: No by swillden · · Score: 1

      I'm curious then why I get at least one recruiter per month - for years and years - soliciting me to work as a contractor for Big Brother Google.

      Me, too. Do they give you any information about what part of Google?

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  61. I've had recruiters tell me outright by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    they won't hire me for programming gigs. One guy said the Indians were "Java Savants". It was mostly the new guys who didn't realize they were committing a crime. I've also seen job postings specifically asking for H1-Bs (posted where the other H1-Bs were to see it and pass it along back home).

    My State doesn't really have a labor department and with a Whitehouse packed full of ex-Goldman Sachs employees I haven't bothered to report it. I'm not so naive that I think anything is going to be done. I've been showing up at my state's primary elections to try and get folks like this in office since they refuse corporate PAC money. I figure that's a good place to start, no more politicians who get bought off.

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    1. Re:I've had recruiters tell me outright by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      I highly doubt that you're from a State without a strong labor department, and where there are so many tech jobs that you're competing with H1-Bs.

      Maybe you just interview poorly?

  62. A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away... by Crash+Dummy+Redux · · Score: 1

    I was making minimum wage ($5 per hour IIRC) as a dishwasher in 1997. If I was still a dishwasher, I would be making 3X as much at minimum wage.

  63. Not really by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    the ruling class have the Military. They'll send drone strikes and bomb you into pulp. Best case scenario you become like Afghanistan; a small group of terrorists pushed into the land nobody wants and occasionally coming down to blow up a school bus or something. Worst case the Military "joins" your revolution and you get Juntu and a change of masters for the worse.

    If you want to stop this now's the time. Do it before turning to violence. Violence just plain doesn't work. You lose out to the "King Rat". The most violent of the violent. That's what happened with Mao & Stalin.

    Vote. Especially in your primary. Look for candidates who refuse corporate PAC money (google "Our Revolution" and "Justice Democrats", sorry, but I don't think you'll find a GOP equivalent, yes, this is a partisan issue now...). Demand vote by mail if you don't already have it. Demand an end to voter suppression. If you're going to take back the country now's the time.

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  64. Re:MAGA by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    NPC is just millenial for 'herp derp'. Nothing new about it, except the unhinged reaction it gets from derpers.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  65. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    The whole thing is a cherry pick. What was happening in 1997 in SI valley? (First dotcom boom, seat warmers made six figures.)

    Compare todays pay to 2001 and you get a very different answer.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  66. Re:Timing by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    You answer your own question. They cherry picked the start year.

    --
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  67. Wealth inequality by k6mfw · · Score: 1

    It's been said California pioneers many things that other states later follow. And we see all these new companies in new buildings developing new technologies but surrounded by tent cities and people living in RVs and cars on the streets. Will this become the norm of 21st century living standards? So far it seems ***nobody*** has any idea how to deal with this imbalance. There may be articles about homeless and certain charity drives but nobody knows how to deal with large companies buying up portions of cities and accumulating billions more.

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  68. That screed of yours recalls a Heinlein quote by Crashmarik · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In other terms: the US has accumulated an undue share of global wealth (by a myriad of reasons, prominently featuring luck, malignancy, savagery, brutality and kleptocracy, which would take ages to go over) and therefore looks like the tallest peak where to shelter from the global disaster. Also many, if not most migrants only care about their next meal and long-term planning does not figure much in their actions.

    VS Heinlein

    “Throughout history, poverty is the normal condition of man. Advances which permit this norm to be exceeded — here and there, now and then — are the work of an extremely small minority, frequently despised, often condemned, and almost always opposed by all right-thinking people. Whenever this tiny minority is kept from creating, or (as sometimes happens) is driven out of a society, the people then slip back into abject poverty.

    Robert A Heinlein

    You are right about something. The U.S. is dangerously close to allowing that kind of bad luck here, and if we go it will be the collapse of Rome all over again.

  69. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by mobby_6kl · · Score: 1

    Way to make it about yourself! The article isn't about Indians on H1-Bs taking your coding jerbs but about non-tech salaries for people living in the Valley (as in the physical place) not keeping up or even falling over time.

  70. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by mobby_6kl · · Score: 1

    It's bad because it's usually pushed by xenophobic morons such as yourself based on no evidence whatsoever.

  71. Depends on who manages your 401k by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    my Dad got screwed by his. Had to go back to work when the market crash took his retirement out. That's kind of the problem with 401ks. The stock market is too cyclic to rely on for retirement. The creator of the things himself said that. 401k was a tool for high income earners (think $300k+/yr in 2018 dollars) to save a little extra. It was never supposed to be a primary retirement tool; it got turned into one when the rich stole our pensions.

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    1. Re:Depends on who manages your 401k by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      You dad wasn't paying attention. When you are retired or nearly, you keep a small % in stocks.

      Not paying attention must run in families.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    2. Re:Depends on who manages your 401k by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      When a market crash "[takes] [somebody's] retirement out," what that actually translates to is, the person say the talking head on the TV saying, "Oh, noes! The market went down! Sell! Sell! Sell! That's what you do, right, buy high, sell low? OK it is very low now, so SELL SELL SELL" and the idiot got on the phone and sold it all for pennies on the dollar.

      The people like you who repeat it are often just ignorant and credulous, so when grampy says he got "screwed" you usually just assume, hey, grampy is a good guy he wouldn't screw himself and lie about it, right? So he must be a victim, not just an idiot blaming somebody else.

      Those talking heads aren't as stupid as they pretend to be, the rich are busy buying, buying, buying.

      401k is a nice idea if you believe that the average human is rational. But they're not; they're easily misled. And retirees are often already confused on their own, before the newsvertainment even starts targeting them. It is way better to just tax them and provide a pension.

  72. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 2

    Don't conflate "white" with US-born.

    ... and don't conflate "brown" with foreign.

    Santa Clara County was one of the main areas settled by refugees from the Vietnam War. That was over 40 years ago. Those refugees now have US-born adult children and grandchildren. So that Vietnamese guy in the next cubicle is most likely a native born US citizen.

    Santa Clara County has a Chinese community that dates back to the construction of the Union Pacific Railroad, and a Hispanic community that goes back centuries before that.

  73. Elites by eaglesrule · · Score: 1
    1. Re:Elites by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Yup, sounds like my parents. Granted, dad more pressed the bars than barred the presses, but still...

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  74. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by lgw · · Score: 1

    To grossly simplify it: because taxes.

    Meh. I hate taxes as much as the next 3 guys, but it's more than that. Look at medical care: almost 20% of workers in the US work in health care and related fields, vs almost no one in many countries. No matter how you slice it, that's going to make living here a lot more expensive. Of course, we get something for that. (Now, if we had single-payer, all that cost would in fact be "taxes", but that's sort of beside the point: 20% is 20% regardless).

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  75. You'd get fired for that by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    which is why you won't see much talk about this outside of forums like /. Even talking about it is heavily discouraged. It doesn't help that you're inevitably lumped in with racists. If anything I really, really wish racism would go away so we could have an honest discussion about immigration and it's impact on wages.

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    1. Re:You'd get fired for that by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      You sound like your starting to understand what we think of you?

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    2. Re:You'd get fired for that by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      Growing a neckbeard doesn't automatically mean it is wise to start talking about yourself in the plural.

    3. Re:You'd get fired for that by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Nah, you just ignore evidence that contradicts your views when I offer it. At least be honest with yourself about it.

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  76. Silicon valley Attracted talent by aberglas · · Score: 1

    When I was at Oracle in the 2000s, for tech staff, about 15% would have been from the Bay Area, 25% from elsewhere in the US, 30% white from other western countries, 25% Indian, 5% misc and 0% Hispanic.

    The US's ability to import talent was what made it great. It was a brain drain from other countries.

    Interesting that although almost half the general population was Hispanic, 0 of them were in tech, despite often being third generation. It is hard to get ahead if you start at the bottom.

    1. Re: Silicon valley Attracted talent by astrofurter · · Score: 1

      "Interesting that although almost half the general population was Hispanic, 0 of them were in tech, despite often being third generation."

      There is a term for this phenomenon: "California Apartheid".

  77. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    It was always one days worth of fence jumpers made into a big deal by the media on both sides.

    --
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  78. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by Local+ID10T · · Score: 1

    Okay, so you are saying that at least 35% were white but not born US citizens, likely much higher given that as you say some of the non-white employees were likely US born.

    This is just taking us even further from the published stats, which are legally mandated with consequences for them being inaccurate.

    Most Indians self-report as Caucasian.

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  79. fake news by astrofurter · · Score: 1

    "Tech salaries are up 32% after adjusting for inflation."

    Obvious fake news. Everyone knows Silicon Valley tech worker nominal wages have been stagnant for 10+ years, while cost of living more than doubled.

  80. Re:Kick you out? by Aighearach · · Score: 1

    That happens all the time.

    The American principle is that when the government takes your neighborhood to build a park or stadium, they give you the fair market value for your land.

    In some countries, an old man can refuse to sell his land and stop an airport from extending the runway. That is not the US system. Never was. The Constitution covered this at the very beginning, and the system works well.

  81. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by Aighearach · · Score: 1

    They're still coming, but the court pointed out that if they get inside the country, Congress already said they can apply for refugee status.

    And Trump sent the military, but none of the jobs the military is allowed to do were needed. So now they're maybe going to have the military try to give them medical care instead.

    Because they don't want to look like they gave up.

    The funny part; half a million people illegally cross the border every month. The caravan that is "invading" consists of about 2000 people so poor and frightened that they traveled as a group for safety, instead of hiring gangs to smuggle them across. These are the ones that scare Orange Man and the Frog People the most.

  82. Re:hb1 visa by Aighearach · · Score: 1

    Never miss a stupid meeting. It only takes one smart thing to ruin all your progress. One day at a time.

  83. Re:If you can get that machine cheaply for for fre by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Really? Government teaches people the processes in my company now?

    Where do I sign up for that?

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  84. Re:hb1 visa by pgmrdlm · · Score: 1

    lol, thank you. That just made my day which has been going to hell in a basket. Between the gf and idiot co worker.

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  85. Re:Tell me again how controlling immigration is ba by drsquare · · Score: 1

    Software is a global industry. You can keep out foreign programmers, but you can't stop them programming, and their code is competing with yours.

  86. Re:If you can get that machine cheaply for for fre by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Come back when people become replaceable without training.

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