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February 11, 2006
Fiancée
Visa Means Unhappy Valentine's Days
By
Joe Guzzardi
Writing for
VDARE.COM has made me (almost) famous.
This summer while I was traveling
through
western Pennsylvania, I stopped off at a saloon
recommended by the locals.
Within a few minutes, the fellow
sitting on the stool next to me introduced himself as
Steve.
When I told him my name and
where I lived, he replied:
"Joe
Guzzardi! I know you; I read you every week on VDARE.COM"
My new friend went on to tell me
that one of his favorite columns—and the favorite of
many others judging by the
mail I still receive three years after it originally
appeared—is
The Fiancée Visa Racquet.
Steve suggested with a smirk that I
meet his two buddies, "Sam" and "Dave"
"They can tell you what goes
really goes on at those 'Meet a Russian bride' places,"
Steve said.
Sam and Dave, as it turns out, are
two confirmed bachelors in their late 30s who one fine
day decided that signing up at one of the
dozens of Russian "dating agencies" might be
a great way to meet eager, willing young women.
So Sam and Dave put down a $300
deposit against their $2,500 total tab to travel to
Russia where they were promised they would meet "hundreds
of
beautiful women" in "romantic settings"
and would be "surrounded by 3 or 4 or women" at a
time.
Said Sam:
"Think
about it. They bring the women to you…by the busload!
And they're all dolled up. You don't have to do anything
except stand there and smile. You don't buy dinner. You
don't engage in witty repartee. And you don't have to
drive them home."
The agency offered three "socials"
each day. Sam and Dave were very busy fellows. Each
social lasted up to six hours—and their tour spanned ten
days.
Within no time, Sam and Dave got
their patter down. Every day, Sam and Dave would pick
out three or four women from the crowd and say to them:
"I'm
very attracted to you. Do you think you would like to
live in Pennsylvania? Maybe I could tell you more about
it if we could talk privately."
Sam and Dave would line up two,
three or even four intimate daily "conferences."
By the time their stay in Russia
ended, Sam and Dave were totally exhausted. But despite
the best efforts of the would-be Russian brides, neither
man left the country with any intention to marry anyone
at anytime under any circumstance.
Sam and Dave, however, had such a
thoroughly enjoyable time that they signed up again for
the following year.
According to Dave:
"You
just can't beat it for meeting women. They want to get
to the U.S. bad and being coy isn't in their best
interests. If I had more vacation, I'd take one of the
two-city tours…twice the women to choose from,"
I'll forego for now any analysis of
Sam and Dave's moral code.
But any potential fiancée visa
brides who get duped along the way should consider that
part of the risk they take when they put their picture
and profile on the Internet. As the saying goes, "You
pay your money and you take your chances."
Now let's turn from away from Sam
and Dave's amorous adventures.
VDARE.COM's overriding concern is
how damaging the K-1 non-immigrant fiancée is to the cause
of immigration reduction.
By observing up front and personal
a few brides in my English as a Second Language class, I
have found these two common denominators in marriages
facilitated by the K-1 visa: older guys (often losers)
marry younger women who are, to some degree or another,
on the make.
And the consequences of these
unions are the same as any other form of immigration:
more permanent residents, more chain migration and more
overcrowding.
What is slowly becoming public
knowledge is just how hurtful - except to immigration
lawyers and
agency operators - these
K-1 visas are not only to immigration patriots but
also to those for whom hope springs eternal.
Consider this
recent letter sent to "Dear Abby" from a
reader called "Taken for a Ride":
"I was
married to an impotent
doctor in New York for three years. He told me I was
the cause of his problem—I was too fat (I weighed 115
pounds). As time passed, I realized he was being cruel
to me to deflect attention from his impotence. On the
day he got his green card (I sponsored him), he left me.
I had no idea he had been using me all along to
establish his
career in the U.S."
Other cases of
shameless money-grubbing schemes:
- Especially
egregious examples of women like Eleonora
Kasyanova hoping to latch on to American husbands
The preposterously easy to obtain
fiancée visa could be eliminated tomorrow with
virtually no impact on emotional suffering.
And, as previously noted by many
VDARE.COM editors and contributors, the U.S. cannot have
immigration policies that benefit only a few while
harming so many.
Here's an amazing footnote to this
reverse
Valentine's Day column.
While it is utterly impossible to
imagine that President George W. Bush is even aware of
the K-1 visa and the fraud that it enables the
unscrupulous to perpetrate,
Russian President Vladimir Putin individually
interceded in a Russian bride scam.
Putin, alerted by a letter from an
Australian victim, ordered Interpol police to
track down a sophisticated group of con artists who
had bilked more than 1,500 men out of $1.5 million.
The Russians, at least, are willing
to do what the American government is not: recognize
hucksters when they are operating right under your
nose.
The course of action I advocate for
the U. S.: get rid of the K-1 visa.
Joe Guzzardi [email
him], an instructor in English at the Lodi
Adult School, has been writing a weekly newspaper column
since 1988. This column is exclusive to VDARE.COM. |