âIf itâs just about tech wanting to hire more people, not as impressiveâ commented one of Mark Zuckerbergâs 18 million Facebook followers. âItâs definitely not just about tech immigrationâ Zuckerberg shot back in the comment thread for a video heâd posted from his political advocacy group FWD.us. Replying to average joes and reporters alike, Zuckerberg took a step towards clearing up confusion about his recent lobbying efforts.
âThe bigger problem weâre trying to address is ensuring the 11 million undocumented folks living in this country now and similar folks in the future are treated fairlyâ, Zuckerberg concluded his response to Jeff Walsh, a man from Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania with just 56 followers and who previously claimed to have been on a âFacebook detoxâ.
Public figures typically donât respond to the reams of Facebook comments they get on their posts, but Zuckerberg seemed determined to show Facebook is a conversation, not a broadcast medium. The exchanges comes as Zuckerberg and FWD.us have been working towards comprehensive immigration and education reform that they say could boost the American economy.
The group has taken flack for buying ads supporting conservative politicians that back immigration and education reform, but also the Keystone XL pipeline and drilling in the Alaskan Wildlife Refuge that eco-friendly liberals denounce. Some prominent members including Teslaâs Elon Musk left the group over the issue. Others have speculated that FWD.usâ A-List lineup of founders and funders which include Googleâs Eric Schmidt, Microsoftâs Steve Ballmer, Yahooâs Marissa Mayer, Y Combinatorâs Paul Graham, and  Zyngaâs Mark Pincus are backing immigration reform for their own benefit â" they want to import more highly-skilled foreign engineers.
Zuckerberg tried to tackle both of these issues on his wall. The discussion started when Zuckerberg posted this video with the description, âDrawing on our history as a nation of immigrants, âEmmaâ is the new ad from FWD.us showing how passing reform is our chance to keep America a magnet for the worldâs brightest and hardest working people.â
Despite the hostile tone of some responses, Zuckerberg remained calm. Dietmar Hochmuth called him out saying ââAmerica a magnet for the worldâs brightest and hardest working people.â â" Please letâs not overdo! This is BSing. Why do think that other people are working less bright and hard?â Zuckerberg explained â, my point was that we should make America a place that attracts the smartest and hardest working people to come here, not that we have them already. I was definitely not saying that all of the smartest and hardest working people are in this country â" that would be crazy.â
 of the Naval Academy asked, âHow about supporting reforms that allow people a real path to permanent residency, rather than more H1B indentured guest worker visas?â Zuckerberg replied âthis group is focused on getting full comprehensive immigration reform passed. H1Bs are just one part of that, but theyâre far from the full solution.â
The most serious exchange came when TechCrunchâs own politics writer Gregory Ferenstein took the opportunity to address Zuckerberg directly:
âComprehensive immigration reform still treats immigrants like second-class citizens. Unions want a mandatory wait period for American companies before they can hire a foreign worker, even if he or she is the most qualified. What is FWD doing to address this? Also, many of us love FWDâs mission, but we were disappointed in the political tactics. Ignoring these criticisms seems like the opposite of the kind of transparency you advocate for. Please give us clarity on what makes FWD unique from a normal political lobby and why you think their political strategy still upholds your values.â
Zuckerberg touted FWDâs bipartisan approach:
âWeâre pushing for all the issues you mention. In terms of transparency, I think weâve been way more transparent than other political groups I can think of in terms of disclosing which ads we run, who our funders are, what our platform is and what tactics weâll use. I think whatâs going on is that some folks are upset that weâre supporting politicians who have other views they donât agree with â" even though weâve been quite clear that weâre going to support people in both parties who have the courage to support immigration reform and stick their necks out to do so. That approach â" of actually trying to work with people on both sides â" is what makes us unique. It may sound crazy, but most political groups donât do it. And without bringing people in different parties and with different views together, meaningful reform will never happen.â
Time will tell whether playing politics gets immigration reform passed, burns the public opinion of FWD.us members, or both. Just by conversing with people directly, though, Zuckerberg and FWD are doing something different. Many citizens feel so disconnected from their elected officials that such raw discourse with a prominent figure now involved in politics might seem quite refreshing.
[Image Credit: Jeff Chiu / AP]
February 1, 2004
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Facebook is the worldâs largest social network, with over 1 billion monthly active users. Facebook was founded by Mark Zuckerberg in February 2004, initially as an exclusive network for Harvard students. It was a huge hit: in 2 weeks, half of the schools in the Boston area began demanding a Facebook network. Zuckerberg immediately recruited his friends Dustin Moskovitz, Chris Hughes, and Eduardo Saverin to help build Facebook, and within four months, Facebook added 30 more college networks. The original...
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