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Yeah and the special one for Cuba? But we all know why that one exists. I was actually going to do my research on the special treatment of Cubans as against Haitians in the U.S immigration policy. The differences were/are quite glaring despite the fact that many people (now) consider most of these people (Cubans) to be economic migrants (but, then again how can one separate the economic from the political?).archigabe wrote:I think there are some glaring biases with regards to eligible nationalities. The FAQ states that nations which have sent more than 50,000 immigrants in the past 5 years are not eligible. Then why is Ireland still on the eligible nations list when the Irish government accepts that there are atleast 50,000 illegal irish immigrants in the U.S. Obviously there are even more legal irish who are in the U.S...
Because it's nothing to do with how many illegals are in the U.S.archigabe wrote:I think there are some glaring biases with regards to eligible nationalities. The FAQ states that nations which have sent more than 50,000 immigrants in the past 5 years are not eligible. Then why is Ireland still on the eligible nations list when the Irish government accepts that there are atleast 50,000 illegal irish immigrants in the U.S. Obviously there are even more legal irish who are in the U.S...
Nearly 10,000 people from countries designated as sponsors of terrorism have entered the United States under an immigration diversity program with relatively few restrictions, a report released on Friday said.The report quoted a U.S. security officer in Turkey as saying it would be possible for Iranian intelligence officers to pose as applicants and not be detected if their identities were not already known to U.S. intelligence.