America’s Software Sanctions Itself
Walk through the halls of Silicon Valley—Google, Microsoft, Meta, pick any building—and you’ll hear it. Accents blending. Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Urdu, Gujarati, sometimes even Bengali. The U.S. tech industry doesn’t just have Indian talent sprinkled in; it runs on it.
And now Washington wants to make visas harder, more expensive, more political. Here’s the irony: in sanctioning India’s tech workers, America may actually be sanctioning itself.
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The Quiet Dependency No One Likes to Admit
Since the 1990s dot-com boom, Indian engineers have poured into the U.S. through the H-1B visa program. They became the backbone of Silicon Valley’s coding armies.
Nearly 75% of all H-1B visas go to Indian nationals.
U.S. companies like Infosys, TCS, and Wipro feed entire pipelines of talent to American firms.
Even CEOs—Satya Nadella (Microsoft), Sundar Pichai (Google)—are living proof of this migration.
Strip that away and what’s left? A software empire without the empire builders.
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Politics vs. Productivity
Trump’s new visa fee hikes and restrictions are sold as protection for American jobs. But let’s be honest. Most U.S. graduates aren’t lining up to take these roles—especially not at the same wages or with the same grueling hours.
So companies face a choice:
Pay more for fewer local workers, risking slower growth.
Or outsource abroad, sending entire projects to Bangalore or Hyderabad instead of San Jose.
Either way, America loses the thing it claims to protect: control.
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A Double-Edged Sword
Here’s the weird twist. Every time Washington clamps down, it accelerates the very trend it fears—tech work moving offshore. Instead of an Indian engineer in Seattle, you get ten of them coding from India, managed remotely.
And when that happens, the U.S. doesn’t just lose cheap labor. It loses innovation, collaboration, the daily mix of ideas that made its software culture powerful.
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Who Really Gets Hurt?
Not just the Indians who dream of California. Not just the corporations with billion-dollar contracts. It’s the ordinary American worker too.
Think of the Uber driver whose app stops updating. The small business owner who can’t get a glitch fixed because the coding team is short-staffed. The ripple effects are invisible—until they aren’t.
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The truth is uncomfortable: America’s software runs on India’s brainpower. Pretend otherwise, and you risk cutting the power to your own servers. Maybe that’s the real sanction nobody’s talking about.

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