> 
> In Pharmacy is it is under the NY State Controlled Substances Act, Article
> 33,
> Chapter 11 of the Adminstration Rules and Reg, Subchapter J part 80,
> The Comprehessive Drug Abuse Prevention and Controll Act of 1970 - Public Law
> 
> 91-513        on the Federal Level
> 
> Article 137 of the NY State Education Law, section 6800-6827, and part 63 
> (which defines licensing and requirments).   Also section 130 of the
> Education Law, subartcle 2,3,4.  Regents Rules part 17,24,28,29,59 and
> more.
> 
> IT needs similar mandates for Certified Computer Information Analysts
> (CCIA).
> 
It would be great if laws and regulation could fix this, but it just moves the 
problem. If you believe that money is the root of power, and corporations have 
the money(power) to drive down costs through shipping jobs overseas, then why 
wouldn't they have the power to change the regulatory laws in their favor? The 
outsourcing of jobs will eventually balance out; however, by putting the laws in 
place, you'll be giving permanent tools to people to lower wages even more. 

When tax laws were enabled, they were only for the rich. Now, the rich pay very 
low taxes (via corporation laws) and the middle class worker pays almost %50 in 
taxes ( including property, sales, income, licenses, fees, etc. ).

The fact of the matter is that companies are finding a lot of value in Asian 
labor. In my experience, it isn't as high quality, but companies are saying in 
force price is more important than quality if the qaulity meets a threshold. 

Licenses, government regulation, and unions are attempts to change a trend. They 
won't work, and they'll put us in a worse spot than we started. If we want to 
increase our income, then we have to increase our value. 

Singer used to have a sewing machine in every house. Then, people stopped making 
their clothes in masses and started buying the very cheap mass produced 
clothing. Now Singer doesn't sell nearly as many sewing machines. They could 
have spent their energy making it illegal to mass produce clothing and to 
license clothing shops in order to make them much more expensive than making 
your own clothing. Instead, they focused their energy on finding other products 
to sell. They make airplane engines now. 

Unions, regulation, bans and penalties on job exports, licensing, etc. are all 
attempts to artificially inflate technologists value. Fight this because 
government regulation and bloat are the #1 hendrance to small business in 
America today. 

If you want to work for a living, find a way to increase your value to your 
company. Or go out on your own. Your worth at least twice as much as your 
employer is paying you. Otherwise, they wouldn't have hired you. If you need 
more money, do the same thing you're doing today, but run your own show. Don't 
buy into the doom and gloom.

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