Archive for the ‘Immigration Reform’ Category

The ‘American Dream Tax’ and the Quiet Suffering of Immigrant Wives – Ms. Magazine

The staticky sound of hate through a landline, shards of broken glass on the pavement, jagged Camry windows gleaming bright under the harsh sun: This is how Hasan Minhaj describes the American dream tax. The hate crime his family experienced in the wake of Sept. 11 is a testament to the fact that becoming American comes at a steep price.

But while the violence and stereotypes all immigrants face have become increasingly well-documented in recent years, we have overlooked the fact that this issue is heavily gendered. The price paid by immigrant women is much steeper. The American immigration system is plagued by systemic gender inequalityamong its many other faultsand reform is long overdue.

The passage of civil rights legislation throughout the past few decades has eased sex-based employment discrimination. American women today can find the work they want and achieve financial independence. Yet without their husbands consent, it is almost impossible for women on some visas to obtain the work authorization required to find a job legally.

Without work authorization, these women are deprived of Social Security numbers, making it much more difficult to open bank accounts, build credit history, or even get drivers licenses. The restriction of these fundamental freedoms result in barriers to autonomy that permanent residents and citizens do not face.

The very existence of some women in the United States is completely dependent on their husband. Upon divorce or the death of their spouse, they will find themselves deported.

The root cause of these issues is embedded into U.S. immigration law: the distinction between primary and dependent visa holders. Like many of the other failings in U.S. legislation and policy, the text of the law appears to be gender-neutral on the surface. The outcome is anything but equal.

Data from the USCIS shows that a staggering 93 percent of the 136,393 H-4 visa holders are women. The H-4 dependent visa is meant for spouses and children, and serves as the counterpart to the H-1B primary visa. Since the majority of dependent visa holders are women, it follows that women disproportionately suffer from the discrimination leveled at dependent visa holders.

Although there is a lack of data illustrating the gender disparities for less common visas, theres good reason to believe similar inequities exist for other employment based visas. Karen Panetta, a professor of computer engineering from Tufts University, explained that prospective employers of high-skilled immigrant workerslargely those in the STEM sectortend to favor men. And a job offer from a willing employer is the path towards primary visa holder status. This bias towards men when handing out job offers is a key reason behind the stark gender divide.

Furthermore, gender norms from the countries immigrants come from can shape the roles that household members assume upon coming to the U.S. Immigrants increasingly hail from countries that have an uneven gender split in labor force participation, with lower rates of women that work. Men are assumed to be the rightful breadwinners. So, when it comes to deciding which spouses career to sacrifice, the woman is first on the chopping block.

But if these underlying causes explain part of the inequality immigrant women experience, U.S. immigration law actively aids and abets this injustice. Dependent immigrants who are not yet eligible to apply for a green card are banned from working entirely. Others are forced to apply for an Employment Authorization Document(EAD), a process that takes up to a year, costs 410 dollars, and requires access to documents that primary visa holderstheir spouseoften gatekeep. Its not surprising the H-4 dependent visa has earned itself the nickname of the involuntary housewife visa.

Indeed, the future of dependent visa holders is almost completely reliant on whether or not they stay married. In the eyes of U.S. immigration law, spouses are essentially equivalent to children. These spouses have about as much control over their legal status in the country as a 12-year-old. Their life is one of borrowed legality, their status something that can be revoked and manipulated by the primary visa holder.

These conditions often breed violence and abuse within households, including both physical and emotional abuse. Yet again, the dependent status of these women create skewed power dynamics and render them unable to speak out. There is a severe lack of data on the intimate partner violence experienced by immigrant women, but both Asian American domestic violence organizations and Asian women themselves have repeatedly cited immigration restrictions as a key contributor to the violence in their community.

Through my past experience working with dependent visa holders, I know that these issues experienced by women are not individual; they are systemic and widespread. The careless rules crafted by legislators decades ago have birthed indignities that persist today.

The next time comprehensive immigration reform is passed (if there is a next time), we must remove the barriers to employment and an independent existence currently holding these women down. Immigrant women are paying more than their fair share of the American dream tax.

U.S. democracy is at a dangerous inflection pointfrom the demise of abortion rights, to a lack of pay equity and parental leave, to skyrocketing maternal mortality, and attacks on trans health. Left unchecked, these crises will lead to wider gaps in political participation and representation. For 50 years, Ms. has been forging feminist journalismreporting, rebelling and truth-telling from the front-lines, championing the Equal Rights Amendment, and centering the stories of those most impacted. With all thats at stake for equality, we are redoubling our commitment for the next 50 years. In turn, we need your help, Support Ms. today with a donationany amount that is meaningful to you. For as little as $5 each month, youll receive the print magazine along with our e-newsletters, action alerts, and invitations to Ms. Studios events and podcasts. We are grateful for your loyalty and ferocity.

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The 'American Dream Tax' and the Quiet Suffering of Immigrant Wives - Ms. Magazine

As We Commemorate the 21st Anniversary of 9/11, Important Lessons are Being Forgotten, Warns FAIR – StreetInsider.com

WASHINGTON, Sept. 11, 2022 /PRNewswire/ --The following statement was issued by Dan Stein, president of the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) on the 21st anniversary of the attacks of 9/11:

"On this September 11, it is important to note that the Biden administration has forgotten nearly every lesson learned on that tragic day. By loosening immigration inspections, border controls, document security, interior enforcement, and screening standards, America is no longer secure.

"The threat of state-sponsored radical Islamic terrorism is still a very clear and present danger, as we have been reminded in just the last few months. The stabbing of Salman Rushdie, the plot to kidnap former National Security Adviser John Bolton, and the attempted assassination of an Iranian dissident in Brooklyn remind us that our enemies understand our vulnerabilities and are prepared exploit them.

"As we remember the lives of the 2,977 people who were slaughtered 21 years ago, in part due to lax immigration enforcement policies, we must also recognize the even more massive loss of life going on right now as a result of the Biden administration's deliberate sabotage of border enforcement. Last year, under President Biden's watch, 36 times as many Americans, 107,622, died of drug overdoses including 71,238 from the fentanyl that is pouring across a wide-open border.

"If we owe anything to those who died on this day 21 years ago, their families, first responders who rushed to the scenes of devastation at the Pentagon and World Trade Center, as well as the men and women who fought and died in Iraq and Afghanistan, it is to make sure that such events are never repeated on U.S. soil. Sadly, on September 11, 2022, it seems that many of the lessons of 9/11 are being forgotten."

ABOUT FAIR

Founded in 1979, FAIR is the country's largest immigration reform group. With over 3 million members and supporters nationwide, FAIR fights for immigration policies that serve national interests, not special interests. FAIR believes that immigration reform must enhance national security, improve the economy, protect jobs, preserve our environment, and establish a rule of law that is recognized and enforced.

Contact: Ron Kovach, Email: [emailprotected]

View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/as-we-commemorate-the-21st-anniversary-of-911-important-lessons-are-being-forgotten-warns-fair-301621590.html

SOURCE Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR)

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As We Commemorate the 21st Anniversary of 9/11, Important Lessons are Being Forgotten, Warns FAIR - StreetInsider.com

Illegal immigrants who entered US since Biden took office to cost taxpayers $20+ billion a year: analysis – Fox News

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FIRST ON FOX: The number of illegal immigrants who entered the U.S. since President Biden took office will cost the U.S. taxpayer over $20 billion each year, according to a new analysis by a hawkish immigration group.

The study by the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR), which advocates for lower levels of immigration overall, calculates that the illegal immigrants who have entered the U.S. since Jan. 2021 will add an extra $20.4 billion burden a year, in addition to the $140 billion existing illegal immigrants already cost.

The analysis is based on an estimated 1.3 million released into the U.S. by immigration officials, as well as approximately one million "gotaways" -- or illegal immigrants who have slipped past overwhelmed agents. FAIR calculates that each illegal immigrants costs $9,232 a year to support.

The U.S. has been in the midst of a massive border crisis since early 2021, with more than 1.7 million migrant encounters in FY 2021, and more than two million in FY 2022 so far. While many of those encounters are repeat encounters, and nearly half are removed under Title 42 public health protections, a considerable number are released into the U.S. for asylum hearings.

NUMBER OF ILLEGAL MIGRANTS WHO ENTERED US SINCE BIDEN TOOK OFFICE APPROACHING TWO MILLION

Migrants get off bus Wednesday morning in New York City. (Fox News)

DHS sources told Fox News that there have been more than 500,000 "gotaways" into the U.S. this fiscal year until July, making at least 900,000 gotaways in FY 21 and 22.

FAIR, which calls for stricter border controls as part of a range of broader immigration reforms, laid out the money the estimated $20.4 billion could be spent on instead -- including providing every homeless veteran in the U.S. $50K a year for the next 10 years.

The money, the analysis says, could also hire 330,000 teachers, fund and expand the National School Lunch Program, provide Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits to more than 7 million extra families or provide every family earning less than $50K a year a $410 grocery voucher.

It could also construct the entire wall at the southern border -- a project that began under the Trump administration.

KAMALA HARRIS DECLARES BORDER IS SECURE AS THOUSANDS OF ILLEGALS FLOOD INTO US EVERY DAY

"Even in an age in which trillion dollar spending packages and are considered modest, the additional $20.4 billion the Biden Border Crisis has heaped onto the backs of American taxpayers is still staggering," Dan Stein, president of FAIR, said in a statement. "$20.4 billion could address some very important needs of the American public, instead of covering the costs of the surge of illegal migration triggered by this administrations policies."

The analysis comes amid continued conservative and Republican criticism of the Biden administrations border policies -- which they have blamed for fueling the crisis by encouraging migrants to make the journey north. They argue that the policies have made it easier for migrants to enter the U.S. and be released, while simultaneously reducing interior enforcement.

The Biden administration has stressed that it is seeking to solve the "root causes" of the crisis, like poverty, violence and corruption in Central America. It has touted additional funding for Homeland Security as well as a recent anti-smuggling operation, while claiming its interior enforcement focuses on immediate threats to public safety and national security.

Vice President Kamala Harris, who is leading diplomatic outreach to combat root causes, defended the Biden administrations policies on Sunday -- and claimed that the border is "secure," while calling for amnesty for millions of illegal immigrants.

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"I think that there is no question that we have to do what the president and I asked Congress to do, the first request we made: pass a bill to create a pathway to citizenship," Harris said on "Meet the Press." "The border is secure, but we also have a broken immigration system, in particular, over the last four years before we came in, and it needs to be fixed."

Fox News Jessica Chasmar contributed to this report.

Adam Shaw is a politics reporter for Fox News Digital, with a focus on immigration. He can be reached at adam.shaw2@fox.com or on Twitter: @AdamShawNY

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Illegal immigrants who entered US since Biden took office to cost taxpayers $20+ billion a year: analysis - Fox News

As We Commemorate the 21st Anniversary of 9/11, Important Lessons are Being Forgotten, Warns FAIR – PR Newswire

WASHINGTON, Sept. 11, 2022 /PRNewswire/ --The following statement was issued by Dan Stein, president of the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) on the 21st anniversary of the attacks of 9/11:

"On this September 11, it is important to note that the Biden administration has forgotten nearly every lesson learned on that tragic day. By loosening immigration inspections, border controls, document security, interior enforcement, and screening standards, America is no longer secure.

"The threat of state-sponsored radical Islamic terrorism is still a very clear and present danger, as we have been reminded in just the last few months. The stabbing of Salman Rushdie, the plot to kidnap former National Security Adviser John Bolton, and the attempted assassination of an Iranian dissident in Brooklyn remind us that our enemies understand our vulnerabilities and are prepared exploit them.

"As we remember the lives of the 2,977 people who were slaughtered 21 years ago, in part due to lax immigration enforcement policies, we must also recognize the even more massive loss of life going on right now as a result of the Biden administration's deliberate sabotage of border enforcement. Last year, under President Biden's watch, 36 times as many Americans, 107,622, died of drug overdoses including 71,238 from the fentanyl that is pouring across a wide-open border.

"If we owe anything to those who died on this day 21 years ago, their families, first responders who rushed to the scenes of devastation at the Pentagon and World Trade Center, as well as the men and women who fought and died in Iraq and Afghanistan, it is to make sure that such events are never repeated on U.S. soil. Sadly, on September 11, 2022, it seems that many of the lessons of 9/11 are being forgotten."

ABOUT FAIR

Founded in 1979, FAIR is the country's largest immigration reform group. With over 3 million members and supporters nationwide, FAIR fights for immigration policies that serve national interests, not special interests. FAIR believes that immigration reform must enhance national security, improve the economy, protect jobs, preserve our environment, and establish a rule of law that is recognized and enforced.

Contact: Ron Kovach, Email: [emailprotected]

SOURCE Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR)

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As We Commemorate the 21st Anniversary of 9/11, Important Lessons are Being Forgotten, Warns FAIR - PR Newswire

A Lehigh student’s guide to the midterm elections – The Brown and White

Midterm elections will take place on Tuesday, Nov. 8. In Pennsylvania, voters will elect a new governor, senator, 17 seats in the House of Representatives and various state-specific and local positions.

The candidates to replace Gov. Tom Wolf (D), who can not seek re-election due to his term ending, are Josh Shapiro (D) and Doug Mastriano (R).

A group of recent poll results organized by Ballotpedia has Shapiro with a couple-point lead over Mastriano, both of them mostly in the 40-percent range.

The candidates to replace Sen. Pat Toomey (R), who is not seeking re-election, are John Fetterman (D) and Mehmet Oz (R).

Fetterman currently serves as Lt. Gov. of Pennsylvania. His platform covers criminal justice reform, marijuana legalization, manufacturing in America, immigration reform and LGBTQIA+ rights.

Ozs platform includes energy independence, Second Amendment rights, health care, immigration and anti-abortion advocacy.

According to FiveThirtyEight, using a model that simulates the election 40,000 times, they generated a sample of 100 possible outcomes which has Fetterman favored to win 80 out of every 100 outcomes.

In the 7th Congressional District, which includes Northampton and Lehigh Counties, as well as parts of Monroe County, Rep. Susan Wild (D) is running for re-election against Lisa Scheller (R).

A campain sign promoting Doug Mastrian in the yard of a Bethlehem resident. Campaign signs around the city reflect differing opinions approaching the mid-term elections in November. (Siqi He/BW Staff)

Wild has focused on healthcare, bipartisanship, mental health advocacy, job creation and public safety.

Scheller focuses on healthcare, securing borders, education and job creation.

According to FiveThirtyEight, Scheller is slightly favored to win in the 7th District. Using the same model that generates 100 outcomes, Scheller is expected to win 55 in every 100 outcomes.

According to the Northampton County Elections Department, as of Sept. 8, there are 11,071 registered voters ages 18-22.

In 2018, 34 percent of Lehigh University students were registered to vote.

In a social media poll conducted byThe Brown and White of 38 Lehigh students, 89.5 percent were registered to vote, and 55.9 percent were registered in Pennsylvania. Of the 55.9 percent registered in Pennsylvania, 78.9 percent were not originally from Pennsylvania.

67.6 percent said they were planning to vote in the midterm election and 16.2 percent said they would possibly vote.

Cece Garvey, 25, is originally from Massachusetts. She said she registered as an independent to vote in her home state when she got her drivers license and will vote in the midterms using a mail-in ballot.

For future elections, Garvey said she may switch her registration to Pennsylvania.

Pennsylvania is a swing state, and I feel like my vote could have more of an impact that way, Garvey said.

Missy Connolly, 23, is originally from New Jersey and is registered to vote there as an independent. She said she plans to switch her registration to Pennsylvania for the midterm elections.

I only have one year left at Lehigh, but my roommate is vice president of the Lehigh College Democrats and has been walking around campus getting people to register to vote, Connolly said. She convinced me to switch my registration.

Sam Denison, 24, is originally from New York but is registered to vote in Pennsylvania. He is also an intern for Rep. Susan Wild, and president of the Lehigh College Democrats.

Denison said he wishes the university did more to encourage students to vote.

A Lets Go Brandon sign in the yard of a Bethlehem resident. The phrase has become popular in right-wing circles as a subtle way to insult President Joe Biden. (Siqi He/BW Staff)

The only thing the school does is from the Political Science Department, and the Political Science Department sends out three emails, Denison said. The registration deadline is approaching, the mail-in ballot deadline is approaching and (so) is Election Day. Thats all the school does, no matter if its a presidential (election) year, midterm or even just for municipal elections.

Both Connolly and Garvey agreed the university does not do much to promote voting and most of the efforts are student-run.

I think that giving us the day off on election day is a step in the right direction, Connolly said.

The first time Lehigh observed Civic Engagement Day was in 2021.

Denison said he has seen an increase in voter registration recently and is hopeful for the future.

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A Lehigh student's guide to the midterm elections - The Brown and White