Not correct. It’s a question about a very typical situation, and offers no assumptions. It addresses your use of the word, ‘rewards’.Markk wrote: ↑Wed Jan 29, 2025 4:13 amThat is just a strawman. It assumes so many things.Regarding ‘rewards’ - if a border crosser with the fake ID is working in the meantime (while awaiting their court date and chance to obtain a green card/LPR status) and having taxes pulled from his/her wages under that ID - isn’t the ‘reward’ being shared by their employer, both in work rendered and taxes paid that don’t credit back to them for social security? We can acknowledge that some will also use taxpayer resources, but a lot of Americans do the same.
Is this something that you believe? I don’t see this in my post.1. If they are here with a fake ID, that is somehow okay and not against the law. I can't do that, and either can you lawfully. If they are working here it is doing so illegally.
It serves both purposes.2. The court date that they are waiting for is a NTA, which is the start for deportation, and not citizenship.
“If you're an alien in removal proceedings, your Individual Calendar Hearing is your chance to show your eligibility for relief or protection from removal.
You’ll have the opportunity to share evidence and explain to the judge why you are eligible for the application you seek.”
Per: https://portal.ice.gov/immigration-guide/court
If the person assigned the NTA makes a convincing case to the immigration judge, then they can move on to the next step towards citizenship.
Yes, they can. Wait times for issuing the green card are reported to presently be unremarkable at around 9 to 14 months, after applying at the proper locations and as long as you fit one of the listed categories. After that, the 5-year minimum wait as a LPR begins, after which you can file your N400, after which you may have another 3 - 7 year wait for approval and citizenship.3. If they really wanted a green card, they could have applied for one vis that legal process.
But this doesn’t disqualify the ‘show up and be assigned an NTA’ option as a first step, which is technically a legal and installed route, although obviously riskier.
There’s some good news for applicants these days. Starting on January 25, no one will be required to show proof of COVID-19 vaccinations when filing paperwork, because even in the midst of virtually shutting down the border, it’s important to the Trump Administration to make the obligatory nod to MAGA conspiracists and vaccine snowflakes. : D
Your quote is truncated. The benefit is shared by all citizen taxpayers because SS tax extracted from a paycheck made out to an illegal employee using stolen ID will not ever be factored into the retirement calculation for that person down the road if they became a citizen. Those tax dollars are captured and directed towards legal residents. A small benefit (‘reward’) for sure but the math is what it is.4. No, it is not shared by the employer. An employer pays employee taxes whether the person is legal or not. How on earth does an employer benefit from that? As far as business goes, an employer might benefit by having a lower overhead and greater profit, by hiring folks accepting lesser wages than citizens who demand a higher living wage. SS taxes are set.
I don’t see that in my post. Where are you seeing it?5. LOL , are you really saying that legal citizens and illegal immigrants....have equal right for public services? Yes American citizens use and benefit from taxpayer resources.
So you’ve said, and yet the reality of the situation is that you’re incorrect. It’s still a pathway to citizenship for some percentage of folks that are willing to just show up at the border and try their luck.Folks that arrive at the border either get sent home, or receives a NTA, which is a promise to appear in regards to your removal from the US. It is not , in now way, the beginning of a legal citizenship. If one wants that they can apply, and if approved receive a green card, and after 5, or 6 years, they can apply for citizenship....As far as the question of “are you saying ..?” ... well, you can read what I wrote. If that’s how you interpret it, then that’s what you’re going to see. But my point, in response to your comment about just hiring a lawyer to fill out an application, is meant to emphasize a point that you also made:
“ ... No one said it is easy, or fast. Nor should it be.”
Folks who’ve arrived at the border and assigned a court date are technically following the legal procedure, even as it’s not as apparent. Would you agree?
Either way, their presence has allowed a lot of Americans to benefit from their labor and low wage requirements. It’s a mixed bag, don’t you think?