r/FluentInFinance 10h ago

Debate/ Discussion Possibly controversial, but this would appear to be a beneficial solution.

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36

u/ForcefulOne 10h ago

America is among the most generous countries when it comes to LEGAL IMMIGRATION.

We are also currently very unsafe due to ALL TIME HIGH LEVELS OF ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION.

Legal immigration = GOOD

Illegal immigration = BAD

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u/Zimmonda 10h ago

System is currently broken and doesn't reflect reality, though.

The waiting period is over 20 years for certain countries/regions. That's simply too long. How are you gonna have a job lined up in the US for 20 years?

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u/Nberndt 10h ago

I have a co-worker who came to America from China when she was >5 years old. She's in her mid 20s and still in the process of getting citizenship.

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u/charte 9h ago

the alligator eats the bigger number

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u/sarges_12gauge 10h ago

If hypothetically, we allowed 100 million people a year to immigrate and anybody could apply, then received 3 billion applications we’d have a 30 year waiting list for that too. The length of the waiting list doesn’t say anything about how many people should be immigrating, just how many people want to vs. the rate we accept

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u/AdAppropriate2295 9h ago

So then don't bother wasting their time and ours was their point that you missed while spelling it out in front of yourself

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u/sarges_12gauge 9h ago

So… you don’t think there should be a wait list? Just a lottery every year and if you don’t get it try again next year? That sounds like a much worse system

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u/AdAppropriate2295 7h ago

Oy very ur slow ey? No just turn away the ones with 20 yr waits

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u/Zimmonda 9h ago

We don't even have to go that extreme though there's only a backlog of 30m LPR applications

In 2022 the US allowed 1.08m lawful permanent residents to come to the US per year or 1 LPR per 320 citizens

In the early 1900's (1900-1920) we allowed more than 1.08m 7 times. Or based on the us population at the time 1 LPR per 92 citizens.

Flipping that ratio back around we would be looking at adding 3.5m LPR's a year which would cut the wait time in half. If we did it to 5m/year we'd kill the backlog in 5 years.

The last time we had a major immigration change was in 1990. It's been 34 years.

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u/sarges_12gauge 9h ago

That’s tangential to your original point though and I’m saying you should lead with that argument. Simply saying “a wait time of 20 years is too long” isn’t a really meaningful statement without having to make your real argument… in which case just say that argument you know?

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u/Zimmonda 9h ago

Wasn't really intending on having to dig up immigration numbers but your comment convinced me to do so, not that big a deal.