Commentary - Monday, November 3, 2025
By Jared Culver, Legal Analyst
A common refrain from amnesty advocates and legal immigration apologists is that their policy will protect the illegal population and allow them to avoid the exploitation that comes from lurking in the shadows of the black market in labor. Some call this “dignity” or any other euphemism they can muster to avoid the “A-word,” but the chilling facts of our legal immigration system debunk the fantasy that legal equals safe and non-exploitative. The truth is that the legal immigration system is producing the same exploitation as the black market in labor, including wage theft, violence, discrimination, and slavery. While it is true that our legal immigration system has extensive regulations enforced by three separate Federal Departments on paper, the reality on the ground is that inmates run the asylum, and oversight is largely a fiction. Thus, in the real world, amnesty brings illegal workers out of the shadows and into the fire.
H-2A: Gold Standard Slavery Visa
Mike Rios, a Department of Labor (DOL) regional agricultural enforcement coordinator, was quoted in a caustic report on H-2A labor abuses as saying H-2A recruiters operated like traffickers:
“Unfortunately, recruiters take advantage of the most needy, the desperate, the ones who will give someone almost anything they own … for the opportunity to work in the U.S.,” said Rios, noting that in some cases, workers have given recruiters the deeds to their homes.”
Members of Congress smeared Mr. Rios for daring to speak the truth about the rot in the H-2A program. Senators Cassidy and Budd wrote to the DOL Secretary complaining about Rios telling the truth, as did Rep. Kevin Kiley and Rep. Virginia Foxx.
The gist of these letters, trying to fire an honest government employee, was to point to the regulations on paper. After all, how could the H-2A program be abused when page after page of regulations barring exploitation are located in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR)? In other words, do not dare believe your eyes when you can be comforted by the words on the page.
Explaining the disparity between the real world and the regulations is simple enough. The DOL set a record for the lowest number of investigations closed on farms in 2022. No matter how extensive the regulations are, there is no one enforcing the law in the real world.
Joe Martinez, leader of a nonprofit labor recruitment agency called CIERTO, wrote in the Sacramento Bee:
“One woman I met assumed she would need to pay us a bribe to avoid being trafficked or abused. She had 60,000 pesos (about $3,000) hidden in her bag, believing she had to pay to stay safe. She had heard of women being trafficked if they didn’t pay. Her own brother, who had worked in the U.S. under H-2A visas, had always paid to avoid problems. When we told her there were no fees, she cried.”
There is not enough space to list all the examples of abuse in H-2A, but here is a short list:
“Nearly 40 men from Mexico with H-2A visas were packed into the back of a truck and driven for hours – without a single rest stop – to a farm somewhere in the rural southeast. Some got sick along the way. Upon arrival, all were told they would not get fed - ever - until they handed over their passports. It got worse. The $9 an hour in their contracts turned out to be $3 per crate filled. The housing they were promised turned out to be roach-infested trailers with a dozen men packed into each and no running water. The men had spent hard-earned money for the opportunity to work but realized they weren’t safe. Several snuck away on foot, walking several days on end and sleeping in fields until they finally found a place they could call for help.”
H-1B: Exploitation Even in the Upper Echelons
Speaking of Americans being forced to train their foreign replacements, the most famous examples of that shameful practice are in the H-1B visa category. The stories of abuse of our immigration system are tragic to hear: “I just couldn’t believe they could fly people in to sit at our desks and take over our jobs exactly,” said one former worker, an American in his 40s who remains unemployed since his last day at Disney on Jan. 30. “It was so humiliating to train somebody else to take over your job. I still can’t grasp it.”
In addition to being forced to train their cheaper replacements, American workers are systemically shut out of the workforce altogether, as extensive discrimination has been discovered against American workers in the hiring process:
For further proof of the abuse of the legal immigration system, tech companies broke records with H-1B applications at the same time as mass layoffs. Microsoft is the latest company to engage in a layoff spree while simultaneously applying for thousands of H-1B aliens. Do companies break the law desperately seeking to avoid hiring Americans out of altruism? Is it really the case that Americans are just terrible workers and thus companies have to circumvent the law to hire the Einsteins in H-1B? The wage theft suggests otherwise, as Bloomberg reported in June 2025 that H-1B workers were tens of thousands of dollars cheaper than an American applicant. Plainly, the search for an ever larger profit margin is the motive.
The discount doesn’t start at H-1B for many companies, as they begin by hiring the aliens when they are recent college graduates. They do this through an illegal program called Optional Practical Training (OPT). Through a loophole in the law, alien graduates from colleges and universities can work while being exempt from payroll taxes that fund Social Security and Medicare, known as FICA taxes. American graduates simply cannot compete with the thousands of dollars in discounts for foreign graduates, just as they cannot compete with the discount Bloomberg exposed for H-1B employees. Tech companies first hire the aliens as FICA discounts and then can sponsor them for H-1B and ultimately sponsor them for legal permanent residence (LPR). Ironically, stapling a green card to an alien’s diploma would render them less able to compete with H-1B job applicants, and the cycle continues.
It is not just tech companies abusing H-1B, and the employers are not content just to pay foreign workers less while shutting American workers out:
Federal Oversight Overwhelmed
Exploitation is baked into the legal immigration cake. And yet the system keeps rolling in with extraordinarily high approval rates. Despite all the discrimination and wage theft in H-1B, approval rates have been over 90 percent from FY19-FY23. H-2A, while experiencing the cascade of abuses documented above, has quadrupled in usage from about 74,000 aliens in FY13 to 310,000 in FY23. Keeping in mind that the abuse was extensive long before the H-2A explosion in usage and recalling in 2022 that DOL had set a record for the lowest closed investigations, one can only shudder at what is happening on farms right now.
And this lack of real oversight and investigation of the legal immigration system is not tied only to H-1B and H-2A. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has abdicated its enforcement responsibilities across the board on a systemic basis across legal categories. The Government Accountability Office (GAO) is a good chronicler of their dereliction of duty:
In addition to GAO reviews, the Fraud Detection and National Security Directorate (FDNS) of United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) reviewed the Special Immigrant Juvenile program in 2025 and released a report describing how both the program has grown exponentially in numbers while no subsequent fraud protection measures were implemented. This resulted in criminal gang infiltration and exploitation of the program while DHS slept. FDNS found:
“Due to the unique nature of the SIJ classification, coupled with the problematic adjudicative history of the program, an alien can obtain an SIJ predicate order by fraud with relative ease.”
Though DHS was aware of this problem and the gangs exploiting it, nothing was done to remedy a clear national security and public safety concern. As you can see above, fraud assessments, much less fraud prevention, are low priorities for DHS and the legal immigration system overall.
If you need more proof, look at the H-1B Debarment list for employers, which includes only six companies, none of which are companies that have been found to have abused the program named above in this article. The Permanent Labor Certification Debarment list includes only three employers despite ProPublica finding companies openly admitting to hiding listings from Americans. Despite extensive H-2A violations found across the industry, including common debt bondage practices similar to illegal traffickers, the H-2A temporary debarment list has fewer than 100 employers, as the program is exploding in usage, and investigations are minimal.
So we return to the amnesty advocate and legal immigration expansionist’s argument that we need to legalize the illegal workforce to protect them from exploitation. Right now, across the legal immigration landscape, it is clear that we, first and foremost, need to prioritize restoring integrity to the fraudulent and decrepit system. The Federal government is demonstrably unable to provide adequate oversight and enforcement at the current rates of legal immigration. In this environment, the foxes are left in charge of the henhouse to the detriment of foreign and American workers alike.
The common theme across the reviews is that the government is using the exponential growth in immigration applications/petitions as an excuse to prioritize speedy resolution over careful review and vetting. In the rush to push paper forward, the responsibility for oversight, vetting, and enforcement has been cast aside. Yet, when the allegations of abuse rise like tsunami waves, the immigration apologists rush to point to the copious amounts of rules in the Code of Federal Regulations. These individuals are uninformed or being deceptive, as the record of review for these programs is extensive and damning. The oversight for legal immigration is essentially the same as the black market in labor. Both impoverish all workers for the benefit of the few unscrupulous employers. Anyone painting a flood of foreign labor in that system as pro-worker has some serious explaining to do.
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