Comment by returningfory2

Comment by returningfory2 2 days ago

5 replies

The German person you link to was attempting to enter the US to work as a tattoo artist which is not allowed under tourist visa programs. I actually think the law should be more flexible and this kind of casual work should be allowed. However the law as it currently stands doesn't allow it and they were "correctly" denied entry.

The reason this person wasn't put on a "quick flight home" is because they (along with the British person) were detained at a land port of entry so there's no option to send them straight back.

In general, I think two things are simultaneously true. One is that Trump is cracking down on immigration. The second is that the media are suddenly reporting on a lot of cases -- like the German and British women -- that aren't actually new but were happening under Biden. It's just now the media has an angle and narrative such that these cases are deemed report worthy.

999900000999 2 days ago

These are at most trivial civil matters.

The net effect is your talking about putting non criminals in detention facilities rife with human rights violations.

As a hypothetical, if you can visit two countries and one offers the risk of indefinite detainment , which is roughly dependent on how behind the customs officials are on their quotas. Or another country that at most will just send you home, I think most will pick the country that just sends people home.

  • returningfory2 2 days ago

    What process would you design for handling people who are denied entry at a land port of entry?

    • 999900000999 2 days ago

      They can figure out a way to get people to Venezuela faster than due process, they can figure out a way to get a British nanny back to London without detaining her indefinitely.

      They could of had her home within 48 hours.

    • dudefeliciano a day ago

      how about denying them entry, and turning them back to the country they were entring from (Mexico in your example), so that they can fly back home from there?

      • returningfory2 a day ago

        That sounds reasonable, though I’ve read online that Mexico generally refuses to take them back.