The radical left-wing New York Times has hit a new low in their hatred for American workers, publishing yet another puff piece sympathizing with foreign college graduates who exploit the controversial H-1B visa program to steal white-collar jobs that rightfully belong to American citizens.
While millions of U.S. college graduates struggle with crushing student debt and a competitive job market, the Times chooses to shed crocodile tears for foreign nationals who game our immigration system to undercut American wages and opportunities. This is the same newspaper that spent years attacking President Trump's America First agenda – and now we see exactly whose side they're really on.
The H-1B program has become nothing short of legalized labor trafficking, allowing corporations to import cheaper foreign workers instead of hiring qualified Americans or investing in training programs for U.S. citizens. Tech giants and consulting firms have turned this visa category into their personal profit machine, displacing American workers while claiming they can't find "qualified" candidates.
Corporate Media Sides With Globalists
This latest propaganda piece from the Times perfectly illustrates how corporate media serves as the mouthpiece for globalist interests. Instead of investigating how American families are being destroyed by these policies, they're running interference for the very system that's hollowing out our middle class.
"The New York Times has made it crystal clear they care more about foreign workers than the American people who built this country," said one immigration policy expert.
President Trump's second-term agenda includes major reforms to guest worker programs that prioritize American workers first. The establishment media's predictable meltdown over protecting our own citizens shows exactly why Trump's victory was so crucial for working families.
Patriots across the country are watching as the mask slips further off these so-called "news" organizations. When will the Times start advocating for the Americans who actually pay their salaries through subscriptions and advertising?
