
by Amanda Bartolotta at World Net Daily
‘These firms have learned to manipulate visa programs meant to fill rare skill gaps, turning them into a global labor pipeline that displaces American professionals and locks foreign workers into cycles of dependency’
From the outside, 9170 Irvine Center Drive is just another quiet office building in Irvine, California. But public records show it is the hub of a system that recruits workers overseas, then funnels them into U.S. jobs through visa dependency. For countless American families watching their wages fall and opportunities vanish, this isn’t some distant policy fight; it’s the hidden hiring machine determining whether an American worker gets a fair chance or never even enters the room.
This building is not unique. All across the country, the same pattern is unfolding. An entire industry, one most Americans have never heard of, is quietly rewriting the rules of the labor market. These aren’t tech companies in the traditional sense. They don’t sell innovation or software. They sell people. They profit by importing temporary, visa-dependent workers through loopholes in the U.S. immigration system.

Behind glossy websites and ordinary-looking job ads lies a vast, coordinated network stretching across the United States, Canada and India. What looks like routine consulting is, in reality, a sophisticated labor-broker operation engineered to move workers, money and paperwork across borders while pushing qualified American professionals aside in favor of cheaper, more controllable foreign replacements.
The network uncovered in Irvine is not an isolated case, it is simply one example of a much larger system operating in plain sight. As vast and shocking as this structure may appear, it represents only a single case in an industry that has quietly grown into countless similar operations nationwide. Some are even larger, more sophisticated and more deeply entrenched in federal contracting, Fortune 500 supply chains and the broader tech economy than most Americans would ever imagine.
What makes these networks so difficult for the public to recognize is that…
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