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miscaccount | 3 years ago
What about people who are already here for decades ?
Some don't understand the complexity of the system and think their case will be different
miscaccount | 3 years ago
What about people who are already here for decades ?
Some don't understand the complexity of the system and think their case will be different
22SAS|3 years ago
They need to understand that immigration is a privilege and not a right. If it were a right, then could have successfully sued the US government in a court of law and gotten their green cards ages ago. They forget that and start crying when faced with long wait times. The US didn't invite them , they made the decision to come here.
matthewdgreen|3 years ago
ETA: I am not saying the H1B program is that, just responding to the sentiments up above.
miscaccount|3 years ago
However it's not good for a nation to discriminate people from certain countries worse than they treat people from rest of the world.
No system is perfect, and we go through iterations of refining the laws/solutions.
What most people are calling out is this discrimination in a peaceful manner and asking for a change.
Without people asking for change, nothing would have changed in history. The entire labor rights and freedom from slavery were as a result of people asking for a change and to be treated equally on the same set of standards.
American culture(as i understand) is based on concept that anyone can raise up and become successful based on ones own merit. The current legal immigration system for Indians fails to provide it.
And people are currently pointing out the flaw in the system.
miscaccount|3 years ago
i have to disagree with you on this.
USA did invite them here and provided a dual intent visa(H1b).
Every H1b visa holder did go to embassy and got interviewed by US Visa officer.
so USA very well knew the people who were invited to work in USA can become a US citizen eventually.