One thing I have in common with journalist Andrew Sullivan is that we both chose to go through the lengthy process to become American citizens.
As he recently
told
Washington Post reporter Nick Miroff, the current insanity at the border makes legal immigrants like us âlook like patsies.â
When a staunch liberal, a reporter from the Post, and a Heritage Foundation research fellow all agree on something, it may be weâre onto the truth.
President Joe Biden just announced the addition of Cuba, Haiti, and Nicaragua to his âsuccessfulâ
Venezuela âparoleâ program
. As they watch Biden invent a completely newâand likely
unconstitutional
ââpathwayâ to facilitate illegal immigration, I wonder how the millions of Americans, their family members, and others patiently waiting in line for visas must feel.
Patsies? Suckers? Mugs, marks, or saps, maybe?
As someone who not only immigrated legally, but also worked thousands of visa cases as a consular officer, this administrationâs arrogant disregard for the law and precedent makes my blood boil.
Hereâs how visas work, in a nutshell: Consular officers will issue non-immigrant (temporary tourist, student, guest worker) visas to foreigners if we (1) are satisfied of their identity; (2) believe that they are not criminals or terrorists, and donât have a contagious disease; and (3) are convinced that they will return home when their temporary purpose ends.
(That last one is the hardest, because a good percentage of people in many countries canât show that they would return home without working illegally or overstaying, so their visas are denied.)
With a visa in their passport, foreigners can travel to a U.S. airport or border station, where Customs and Border Protection usually lets them in for the duration needed.
For immigrant (permanent) visas, the requirements are the same, minus the need to show intent to return home.
This arduous processâfilling out forms, an interview, and getting the visaâmust be done outside the U.S. and
can take weeks, months, or even years
. It costs $160 to apply for a temporary visa and more than $1,000 to get an immigrant visa.
The framework is spelled out in a
law
passed by Congress, which, under our Constitution, gets to determine who comes to our country and how.
I spent half my career maintaining the integrity of this legal immigration process, as thousands of State Department and Department of Homeland Security employees still do.
But our constitutional and equitableâif swampedâimmigration system is being sabotaged.
Bidenâs magical new âparoleâ programs function just like a visa, only quicker. As it appears so far, you apply on the new â
CBP One
â application from your phone, bypassing the interview, police and medical clearance, and filling out of forms.
Unlike a legal visa, it costs you nothing. You donât have to navigate jungles, the Darien Gap, or Mexican buses.
If your application is approved, you fly into the U.S. airport of your choice, state that you have a credible fear of persecution and that you want to file for asylum (you can find the right words online from helpful activists and nongovernmental organizations), and in you go.
Soon, youâll have a work permit valid for two years. You can put your kids in free school, get
free emergency medical care
, and sign up for
public benefits
.
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services and the immigration courts are so backed up, you might wait years for your case to work through, but your parole status is almost certain to be renewed, just like the âTemporaryâ Protected Status, which illegal aliens from some countries have been in for
decades
and counting.
There is always a wait for some immigrant (permanent) visas, which are limited by class (say, siblings of U.S. citizens) or by annual per-country cap. As for non-immigrant (temporary) visas, applicants could normally apply within a few weeks, but thanks to COVID, there are now
delays
in most categories.
Still, the reward of a legal visa was always worth the time, effort, and money, versus trying to sneak in illegally.
Bidenâs reckless experimentation puts that in doubt.
Not only is the DHS allowing in millions using a parole power intended for only a few individuals, but staff who should be working on legal petitions and credible asylum cases are being diverted to process illegal aliens at the border.
That ought to outrage all the American citizens who will now have to wait years longer for their relatives to immigrate here.
Long visitor-visa wait times are already a thorn in our relations with friendly countries by preventing family visits, hampering trade and investment, and stopping tourists from coming here to spend their money.
Bidenâs new program adds
30,000 a monthÂ
to the âparole-a-palooza,â and rumors are the White House is considering expanding it to more countries and even higher numbers as soon as they can build enough new tent-city
processing centers
to handle them.
All these people will ride for free
, as have the million-plus illegal aliens the DHS has already let into the country since Bidenâs inauguration.
Who pays for all this?
American
cities
and communities pay, in overcrowded schools, underfunded hospitals, higher
crime
, and drug overdoses from the
fentanyl
shipped over the border.
U.S. taxpayers payâthrough the DHS budget and Federal Emergency Management Agency grantsâfor the social services, cellphones, medical care, and bus and plane tickets for millions of indigent foreigners.
But that wonât be enough: Congress didnât give Biden all of the
additional $3.6 billion
he recently asked to feed the
Mayorkas Migration Machine
.
So, who will take up the slack? American families and employers who play fair, of course.
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services recently announced increases in fees for visa applications. U.S. citizens who want immigrant visas for their immediate relatives will have to pay 53% more for the paper application and 33% more for the online version.
A U.S. employer who wants to petition for a temporary foreign worker to gut fish will have to pay $1,080âup 135%. An opera house wanting to hire a singer for a production will have to pay $1,055, up 129%.
Some of this is to compensate for
inflation
, but the DHS is also proposing a new asylum program fee of $600 to be paid by employers who petition for temporary workers. The
DHS admits
that the new fee is âan effective way to shift some costs to requests that are generally submitted by petitioners who have more ability to pay.â
As the Biden administration tries to replace the legal immigration process with its cobbled-together workaround, getting a legitimate visa to visit, work, or immigrate takes more money and a longer wait.
Biden, the ideologues behind his agenda, and the activist charities who
take federal money
to facilitate it can all pretend that the deliberate opening of U.S. borders is a victimless crime.
Thatâs patently false. American communities, American taxpayers, and American families are all paying the price, and most of the bill has yet to come due.
Only Congress can stop this
abuse
. If the American people want to change the number of annual immigrants, or the process by which they come here, then they should vote accordingly. Until then, Bidenâs unacceptable parole programs should receive no funding from the 118th Congress
.
American citizens, legal visa applicants, and others hurt by the current unfair discrimination in favor of illegals at the border all deserve a return to lawful, orderly, and equitable prioritization of immigration cases.
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM RESTORING AMERICA
This article originally appeared in the Daily Signal and is reprinted with kind permission from the Heritage Foundation.