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Yendi vaa aa twitter lolli. 10 mints chusthene depression vachindi. Atu vaipu vellakandi vaa both parties ki ade pani la vundi paid candidates ki. Twitter lo fight chesthe bill lu fass aithai ante every bill fass ayyedi. Btw @Repo mama msg me. 

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9 hours ago, Repo said:

Edo planning nadusthubdi especially blacks ni enter chepisthunnaru. More delay more opposition. 

edaina cheyyani kani Indians ani tag esi paga battakuntey chalu.... Indians are the most harmless people comparatively.... paisala vishayam lo manollu galeez kodukulemo kani America lo family values tho nindina society ni ivvatam lo manollu first and comparatively best...

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20 hours ago, Jilchika said:

Edhem logic baa think_ww

 

 

Right now, Rest of the world can go from OPT to GC directly skipping H-1B altogether. With S386, that loophole will be closed and hence the above conclusion.

 

 

 

 

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Oka sardaarji aavedana. Just create a separate bill to help H4 kids instead of s386.

 

 

Commentary: The silent trauma of simply being born in the wrong country

By Dr. Didar Singh
Posted Feb 7, 2020 at 7:35 PM 
Updated Feb 7, 2020 at 7:35 PM
 
 
 
 
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I am a physician at Springfield Clinic. I'm originally from India, but my family and I have lived in the United States for 13 years. In that time, I have worked hard to take care of my patients and to build a life in this community — all on my temporary visa for "exceptional ability."

There are now about 800,000 immigrants working legally in the United State, but waiting for a green card. Many of them are from India. This unprecedented backlog means an Indian national may have to wait up to 50 years to receive a green card. For an immigrant from most European countries, the backlog is much shorter and so, too, is their wait.

My eldest son was just 2 years old when we came here, and will soon "age out" of my green card application, meaning he will no longer be allowed to live here on my temporary visa and will either be forced to self deport to India or obtain his own student visa. We have to ask ourselves: can we find a way to keep our family together in the country we have called home for so many years? There are dozens of other physicians in our community in similar situations.

A bill in Congress — S.386 — would lift discriminatory country caps and make the skills-based green card system "first come, first served." This bill passed in the House with tremendous bipartisan support. The Senate would have passed it, too, but Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) blocked the bill in October 2019, using it as leverage to try to accomplish other immigration reform. That gamble ignores the urgency of this situation and leaves me and my colleagues in a dangerous limbo.

Families like mine of Indian origin are going through a silent trauma simply because we were born in the wrong country.

Didar Singh, MD, FACP

Springfield Clinic

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