Tall tale or no, a vitriol-laden Craiglist post in which a disgruntled programmer confesses to sabotaging production code in retaliation for what s/he perceives to be a management-orchestrated movement of jobs to India provides for deeply entertaining reading if not further illumination of mounting tensions in the American IT workplace as the immigration reform bill continues to be debated on the Senate floor. [Added after original post: Craigslist has since taken down the original post. kevsedg at reddit has posted it verbatim here.]In a narrative worthy of InfoWorld’s popular More Stupider User Tricks or Off the Record series, Craiglist poster pers-347610578@craigslist.org describes a salacious revenge story wherein training one’s Indian replacement transforms into an opportunity to stick it to the man by way of error introduction and altered passwords on the eve of jumping ship for another employer. All hope for sabotage circumvention rests on “Pradeep,” the anonymous poster’s aforementioned replacement-in-training. The “$11k/year” L2 visa holder has until next week to complete pers-347610578@craigslist.org’s introduced-error Easter egg hunt and save his sponsor company’s bottom line. Certainly, “douchebag” — the poster’s now former boss — hopes “Pradeep” is up to the task, as some of the commenters over at reddit suggest he likely is. And with three visa-holding co-worker roommates to call on for input this weekend, “Pradeep” might just pull off what could assuredly amount to a Bollywood flipside of Office Space before returning to India to “get a 50% raise with all the American experience he got here,” as the Craiglist poster him/herself puts it.Riveting, yes, but the underlying sentiment is one that continues to plague the U.S. IT industry. In a sneak preview of statistics from our upcoming InfoWorld Compensation Survey, 23 percent of IT workers consider offshoring as a threat to their job security. Moreover, the trend of shipping jobs overseas remains ongoing, as 53 percent of companies will tap offshore resources in the next 12 months, up from 47 percent in 2006 and 39 percent in 2005. Technology Industry