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lazzurs | 7 months ago
I am good at what I do, have done public speaking at major conferences on what I do but no degree and so assume that i've no chance of ever getting into the USA. Currently a UK citizen living in Ireland.
lazzurs | 7 months ago
I am good at what I do, have done public speaking at major conferences on what I do but no degree and so assume that i've no chance of ever getting into the USA. Currently a UK citizen living in Ireland.
proberts|7 months ago
niteshpant|7 months ago
morpheuskafka|7 months ago
If you are starting your own business, the treaty investor visa could also be a good route. It doesn't require as much investment as the investor green card; it is a nonimmigrant visa similar to the O-1.
fooker|7 months ago
The issue is it's a bit subjective, a lawyer writes down how you qualify and some random government employee has to believe what the lawyer wrote.
If you receive a RFE or rejection, all your dealings with USCIS will face extra scrutiny in future. So it's a bit of a gamble.
sjtgraham|7 months ago
RFE's and rejections don't cause problems by themselves. A denial can cause problems if the reason for denial is fraud or misrepresentation.
TheJoeMan|7 months ago
gregsadetsky|7 months ago
[0] https://www.uscis.gov/forms/all-forms/how-do-i-request-premi...
sjtgraham|7 months ago
mertleee|7 months ago
I still fail to understand how Dwarkesh Patel managed to "self-sponsor" an O-1 with a... tech podcast...
crowcroft|7 months ago
asadm|7 months ago
all visas are just about fulfilling the legal criteria. if you do that, you get the visa. same is true for extraordinary alien ones.