Permanent Resident Vs Citizen

When I came back to the USA after 8 months in Australia in 1989, the customers officer told me that I could lose my green card for being out of the country for so long. Frightened, I immediately set about becoming a US citizen. It was the first time I realized the dramatic difference in rights between permanent resident (established in 1981) and citizen.

A lot of people who sound like they are experts have been proclaiming there’s no practical difference between American permanent residency and citizenship. They’re wrong. That many of the differences fall into a grey area does not make them unreal.

If the Secretary of State decides you are a national security risk, he can deport you even if you are a permanent resident. He can’t do this to you if you are a citizen.

The elite news media portrays Mahmoud Khalil and his ilk who are in danger of deportation as free speech martyrs for supporting Palestine. Trump-friendly media portray them as terror supporters. Either way, I don’t see how America is hurt by their absence. In theory, I don’t like deporting non-citizens for their speech, but if they’re a disruptive force who are supporting illegal behavior on college campuses (such as taking over buildings, denying access to facilities to Zionists and the like), if they are not a clear benefit for America, I’m fine with deporting them.

Many advanced economies may well have benefitted from Muslim immigration, but I’m not aware of anyone making that case. Someone needs to make that case.

Is there clear evidence that Muslim immigration is a net benefit to advanced economies? Which countries show the clearest net benefit from Muslim immigration? In which countries are Muslims paying far more in taxes than they are taking out in welfare payments and other social services? Which countries have become more Muslim and more free and more prosperous and more advanced and more innovative?

The Washington Post reports:

A few weeks ago, New York immigration lawyer Pouyan Darian sought to reassure lawful permanent residents that it was safe to travel outside the United States without jeopardizing their status under the Trump administration. With rare exceptions, he said in a viral YouTube video, those with green cards have the “absolute right” to reenter the country.

Darian is rethinking his advice. Several recent federal enforcement actions against green-card holders have gained widespread notoriety and cast a cloud of fear and anxiety over many of the nation’s estimated 12.8 million lawful permanent residents whose legal rights to live and work in the country once gave them confidence that they were immune from President Donald Trump’s mass deportation campaign.

The number of confirmed detentions appears limited to a handful of highly publicized incidents, including the arrests of a pair of campus activists in New York, a German national returning to New England from an overseas trip, and a Filipina woman in Seattle who has lived in the United States for three decades.

But those apprehensions along with reports — including a viral Tik Tok video — of legal permanent residents being interrogated at U.S. airport checkpoints and pressured to sign forms renouncing their status have fanned rumors on social media, prompted green-card holders to cancel travel plans and generated a flood of frantic calls to immigration attorneys.

Darian says his counsel to clients has “absolutely changed” and he is now telling them to consider holding off on traveling because “you are subjecting yourself to scrutiny when you attempt to reenter the United States.”

“I didn’t expect them to go after green-card holders,” he said in an interview. He posted a new video on Wednesday warning that the Trump administration is going to begin focusing on permanent residents.

About Luke Ford

I've written five books (see Amazon.com). My work has been covered in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and on 60 Minutes. I teach Alexander Technique in Beverly Hills (Alexander90210.com).
This entry was posted in America. Bookmark the permalink.