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The U.S. is under no obligation to provide dozens of different visas for every conceivable circumstance to prospective immigrants from all corners of the world. And we don’t have to explain why we’re no longer making certain visas available. That decision would fall under the category of “we used to do it—but now we don’t.” Here are a few visas that no one stateside will miss when they are gone And remember—should these visas go away, the added bonus is that the family members who inevitably follow behind the original visa recipient will stay behind. Here’s my list; it could easily be longer.
Sorry, the jig is up on this one. I’ve been exposing K-1 fraud since 2002. In the intervening years, Internet scamming has grown to previously unimaginable levels. The only people who benefit from the K-1 visa: the “fiancée” who gets on the path to U.S. citizenship, her extended family, Internet matchmakers, immigration lawyers who push the papers through and (maybe) the loving husband— unless she dumps him first. You say you can’t find your dream girl? Try harder. According to the U.S. Census, 50 million single women are out there. Or go to Shaker Heights to find Marlena. She’s cute and eager to hook up with you.
This visa is a bad joke. Anyone who is a “minister” and has been a member of a religious denomination for a minimum of two years can qualify. No matter what religion claims to need church workers, translators, preachers or personnel to function in any other “religious capacity”—a requirement of the loosely-written R guidelines— can recruit them from the next town or the adjacent state. Three years ago in my hometown of Lodi, CA, we had two untoward R visa Imams who were at the center of a FBI terrorist investigation. They’re back in Pakistan now—from whence they should never have come.
Another unfunny joke—which Rob Sanchez wrote about when he introduced readers to Dorsimar, whose “extraordinary ability” was to remove her clothes for money. You say you’re a legitimate talent? God bless you, then. We’ll catch your act over there—wherever that is—or buy your DVDs.
T is for trafficking and U is for abused women living in “immigrant homes” who may one day testify against the traffickers who got them into the country. The fraud potential in these two visas is unlimited. But what should keep the unscrupulous from going for the T visa since, as Thomas Allen wrote in his 2004 column: “For the lucky recipients, T visas are a wonderful deal. According to the DOJ, T-visa holders are eligible for all forms of public assistance (cash, housing, medical care, etc.) as well as job training, federal Office of Refugee Resettlement micro loans, and Federal match grant goodies—which can include cars—and an uncountable host of federal grants.” The U visa is equally rewarding. In her column last year, Brenda Walker chronicled the riches that await those savvy enough to play the visa system for all that its worth. I could name several other visas that should go out the window—Marlena’s M-1 is one. But I’m sure you get my point. Just remember: CIS’s Seminara and I are talking about legal immigration. No one in his right mind could support the blatant rip-off of American generosity that Congress misguidedly continues to offer to the world. Here’s a closing note I know will interest you. I asked Seminara if his remarkable study generated any media inquiries. Seminara said that he appeared on several conservative talk radio programs. But the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and other MainStream Media heavyweights have yet to call. However, CNN Tonight—hosted by Lou Dobbs— taped a 30-minute segment. Seminara told me that he was disappointed that his appearance was edited down to a snippet of only few seconds, which included the extraneous subject of passport outsourcing. With visa fraud raging, legal immigration has emerged as a bigger peril to American sovereignty than illegal immigration. The latter has strong laws in place to correct it. And a strong grassroots rebellion has scored several major victories against the alien invasion in the last several years. But our challenge with legal immigration is that Congress, more or less under the radar, keeps making it easier. We need to mount an equally vigorous defense against mass legal immigration. We need to achieve the same success that we have in our opposition to illegal immigration. Joe Guzzardi [e-mail him] is the Editor of VDARE.COM Letters to the Editor. In addition, he is an English teacher at the Lodi Adult School and has been writing a weekly newspaper column since 1988. This column is exclusive to VDARE.COM. |
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