Seven-year-old schoolgirl stumps Michelle Obama with immigration googly

London, May 21 (ANI): US First Lady, Michelle Obama was put in a spot when a seven-year-old girl asked whether her mother, an illegal immigrant would be deported by the Obama administration.

The incident occurred during a visit by the First Lady to the New Hampshire Estates Elementary School just outside Washington, when the little girl told the her that her mother believed “President Barack Obama was taking everybody away that doesn”t have papers”.

When Michelle Obama responded that “this was something we have to work on”, the girl replied: “But my mum doesn”t have papers.”

Michelle Obama replied: “We have to fix that. And everybody”s got to work together in Congress to make sure that that happens.”

The seemingly innocuous question has cast the spotlight on the Obama administration’s immigration policies

According to The Telegraph, Obama supports the idea of granting the country”s estimated 12 million illegal immigrants, mostly from Mexico, a “path to citizenship”. (ANI)

Visa rules hinder US firms from hiring the best

MOUNTAIN VIEW (CALIFORNIA): Where’s Sanjay? The question comes from one of dozens of engineers around a crowded conference table at Google. They
have gathered to discuss how to build easy-to-use maps that could turn hundreds of millions of mobile phones into digital Sherpas — guiding travelers to businesses, restaurants and landmarks. “His plane gets in at 9.30,” the group’s manager responds.

Google is based here in Silicon Valley. But Sanjay Mavinkurve, one of the key engineers on this project, is not. Mavinkurve, a 28-year-old Indian immigrant who helped lay the foundation for Facebook while a student at Harvard, instead works out of a Google sales office in Toronto, a lone engineer among marketers. He has a visa to work in US, but his wife, Samvita Padukone, does not. So he moved to Canada. “Every American I’ve talked to says: ‘Dude, it’s ridiculous that we’re not doing everything we can to keep you in the country. We need people like you!’ ” he said.

Immigrants like Mavinkurve are the lifeblood of Google and Silicon Valley, where half the engineers were born overseas, up from 10% in 1970. Google and other big companies say the Chinese, Indian, Russian and other immigrant technologists have transformed the industry, creating wealth and jobs. Just over half the companies founded in Silicon Valley from the mid-1990s to the mid-2000s had founders born abroad.

But executives say that byzantine and increasingly restrictive visa and immigration rules have imperiled their ability to hire more of the world’s best engineers. Mavinkurve’s case exemplifies how immigration policies can chase away a potential entrepreneur who aspires to create wealth here. His case highlights the technology industry’s point that the US will struggle to compete if it cannot more easily hire foreign-born engineers.

India will emerge as world’s technological leader, say Americans

Washington, March 4 (ANI): A survey of U.S. public opinion has revealed that half of Americans expect India, China, Japan or Europe to emerge as the world’s technological leader in the future.

Duke’s Pratt School of Engineering commissioned the survey, which was titled “Americans’ Attitudes Toward Engineering and Engineering Challenges.”

Americans with more education are even less optimistic about the likelihood the United States will be the world’s technological leader in the 21st century.

China was cited by 20 percent of all the respondents as being most likely to assume this position, followed by Japan and Europe at 10 percent each, and India at 4 percent.

Americans were just as likely to say their country’s ability to compete technologically over the past century has worsened as to say it has improved.

Among those who see a decline in America’s ability to compete technologically, 55 percent say the situation is temporary and 39 percent say it is long term.

“Americans understand that innovation is critical to their future, but also recognize that our country’s continued leadership isn’t assured just because we invented everything from the airplane to the personal computer,” said Thomas Katsouleas, dean of the Pratt School.

In response to a list of major engineering challenges facing the world, those surveyed gave highest priority to developing better medicines, providing clean water around the world and developing environmentally friendly power sources.

They gave less priority to securing cyberspace against attacks or to restoring and improving deteriorating urban infrastructures.

The respondents said the best ways to improve U.S. global competitiveness are with more training for workers, improved K-12 math and science teaching, and tougher standards for public school teachers and students.

They were much less likely to endorse tax breaks for business and investment, or new immigration policies to attract foreign engineers and other technical experts.

A majority of the respondents – 58 percent – said engineering is losing out to other professions when it comes to young people choosing careers.

They said this is happening because engineering does not pay as much as other fields, requires extensive schooling and is seen as being difficult.

“Not as glamorous” was cited least often among seven possible answers in explaining why engineering has been a less attractive career choice. (ANI)