... might bring in the kids but it will take 5 or 6 years to get a flow started.  Hopefully, we'll get the kind of people who want to produce something useful for their country but expect and demand just compensation ...

Sadly, me thinks you are exuberantly optimistic about the time line.

You and I are roughly the same age ... products of the Sputnik age.

When the Ruskies got into space first, our hubristic government went ballistic (pun intended). They launched a massive science, science, science campaign in all the schools.  

It worked. 15 years after Kennedy's Moon-in-this-Decade speech, I graduated with an engineering degree. Probably you followed a similar trajectory (pun intended).

Realize that it took about 10-15 years, not 5-6 years. Kids do not just accidentally stumble into college level engineering programs. They have to be cultivated from early on.

Our current government is doing nothing to interest kids and their parents (it starts at home) to enter science & engineering programs. They are doing the exact opposite. They are "outsourcing".

But then again, the people running our government are "the smartest guys in the room".

You're right, Step Back.  It will take getting to kids at an early age to fill the pipeline with prepared engineering and science students.

I used 5 to 6 years to START since the opportunities have to be apparent to the high school juniors and seniors to even start to apply to engineering schools then 4 or 5 years in college to enter the job market.  There are few in high school who have the preparation to make that decision - but some.  That's the earliest we can see a change in job seekers and then it builds from there.  Of course, we might see a few stick to it who would otherwise change majors or some give up poli sci or "communications" for electrical engineering (OK, very, very few.)

Also agreed that our government and business "community" is looking to outsourcing instead of developing American kids.  That will continue to depress salaries and compensation and hence economic motivation.  Plus, the perks - Every Friday, they GIVE me a free donut.

For my three grown sons, I couldn't advocate engineering or science to them.  Today, their average income is higher than mine - they are all salesmen.

I'd summarize this as an example of how the elites have failed our nation over the last decades.  Overtolerance quickly turns to victimization.