Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Nothing but the truth. Even if against me.

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Another TACO: He's Re-admitting Immigrant Scientists and Doctors


 

Not enough US-born American citizens go to medical school or science and engineering. These poorly educated American never get the basic education and thinking skills from their high schools, and so never qualify for higher education in science and technology. The majority are anyway too dumb or too lazy for this sort of demanding careers in scientific research, engineering and other high tech career paths. 

Which exposes the stupidity of the MAGA universe and Trump who choose to ignore the fact that their country is the leading contender in these areas BECAUSE of all the smart and hard working foreign-born scientists, doctors, engineers and such who have been immigrating to the US since the 1940s, propelling the US ahead of all other countries. From the standpoint of racist Zionist Stephen Miller, skin color is the first criterion to admit people into the country. If you're a drunkard white imbecile taxi driver from Ireland, you're welcome. But if you're a dark-skinned PhD in Nuclear Physics from Sri Lanka, you're rejected.

It's a dilemma that these MAGA criminals do understand. They know that it is immigration that has made this country great, not the dumb inbred white assh--es from Appalachia or Georgia or Arkansas or Tennessee or Texas. But they don't want the skin color of the country to continue turning tan because of the influx of darkies from all over the globe.

So now, after nearly two years of persecuting immigrants (Green card holders, H-1B visa holders, PhD students...), the country is sliding backward in science and technology, and the professional unions, syndicates and associations are begging the jerks in the Whout House to start re-admitting skilled and smart immigrants because their dumb MAGA "base" can't furnish the supply of intelligence needed to keep the country ahead of the Chinese, the Europeans and the Japanese. The dumb MAGA "base" of peasants and neanderthal rednecks is in fact jealous of these smart immigrants and is more interested in such barbaric endeavors as storming Congress to steal an election, being saved by Jesus, or joining Erika Kirk's mindless Turning-Stomach-USA organization, or buying more and more guns and storing canned food in the backwoods in preparation for Armageddon, or any such numskulling Hollywood-worthy trash.  

Again, one more time, Trump goes TACO. He has decided now to listen to his imploring buddies in the medical and insurance Mafia, now starving for doctors because of the Great Moron's ban on importing skilled physicians from shithole countries. 

============================================= 


US lifts hold on immigration applications for doctors but leaves others waiting
Associated Press
Sat, May 9, 2026 


Dr. Faysal Alghoula is a pulmonary and critical care physician whose path to practicing medicine in the US spans multiple countries and years of training. - Michele Abercrombie/CNN

Libyan Dr. Faysal Alghoula must renew his green card to continue caring for roughly 1,000 patients in southwestern Indiana, but hasn’t been able to since the Trump administration stopped reviewing applications for people from several dozen countries it deemed high-risk.

Alghoula’s current visa will expire in September if his application is denied.

But last week, the administration quietly made an exemption for medical doctors with pending visa or green card applications, possibly allowing Alghoula’s case to move forward. It’s a move physicians organizations and immigration attorneys had sought for months, citing widespread shortages and a high proportion of foreign-trained doctors, who disproportionately work in underserved areas, according to the National Library of Medicine.

The lack of doctors is top of mind for Alghoula, a pulmonologist and Intensive Care Unit doctor who serves a mostly rural population spanning parts of Indiana, Illinois and Kentucky.

“It is about four to five months wait to get the pulmonologist here,” he said.

Still, applicants and immigration attorneys say its unclear how big a difference the exemption will make. The change means doctors can have their cases reviewed, but it doesn’t guarantee their green cards or visas will be renewed. It is also unclear whether U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services will be able to process those applications in time to meet immigration deadlines like Alghoula’s — especially as many doctors with pending applications still haven’t heard any updates from the federal government directly since the announcement was first made.

This photo provided by Dr. Faysal Alghoula shows him performing robotic bronchoscopy to diagnose lung cancer at his clinic in Evansville, Indiana, in 2024. - Faysal Alghoula/AP

Alghoula said he doesn’t trust the administration will approve him due to numerous stories about immigrants being detained at appointments to renew their paperwork like the one he has next month.

“I’m still scared to go to my interview,” said Alghoula, who has lived in the U.S. since 2016. That uncertainty intensified on Friday when he learned that his interview, scheduled for early June, had been canceled without any explanation. He said he doesn’t know what that means for his application.

Meanwhile, the pause remains in affect for thousands of others including researchers and entrepreneurs from 39 countries including Iran, Afghanistan and Venezuela. While they’re on hold, many can’t legally work, get health insurance or a driver’s license. If they leave the U.S., they won’t be let back in.
Immigrants unable to work or see family

The Trump administration decided last year to stop reviewing green card and visa applications for people from a list of countries deemed high-risk and this year stopped reviewing visa applications for citizens of more than 75 countries over concerns they would seek public assistance. The moves came amid the U.S. government’s broader crackdown on immigrants.

The pause followed the shooting of two National Guard troops by an Afghan citizen, which the administration said highlighted “what a lack of screening, vetting, and prioritizing expedient adjudications can do to the American people.”

The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees immigration officials, didn’t answer questions about the pause or recent changes to exempt physicians but said in an email it wants to ensure applicants are properly screened after determining the prior administration failed to do so.

“There are lots of bans and lots of pauses that are happening right now,” said Greg Siskind, an immigration attorney based in Memphis, Tennessee. “It is all about making life miserable for people who are here legally so they will choose other countries.”

It isn’t clear how many doctors have been affected by the pause, according to a spokesperson for the American Academy of Family Physicians, who said several doctors have reached out to the organization asking for help.

Dr. Zahra Shokri Varniab came to the United States three years ago to conduct radiology research. - Jeff Chiu/AP

Some doctors have already been denied

Before the exemption, many immigrants filed federal lawsuits demanding the government issue decisions on their cases.

One of them was Iranian Dr. Zahra Shokri Varniab, who came to the United States three years ago to conduct radiology research. She was waiting for a green card to attend a residency program but her application got stuck in the pause. She filed a lawsuit demanding an answer to her application and a federal judge ordered immigration officials to review her case.

They did — and denied her. The 33-year-old doctor said she believes it was in retaliation for her lawsuit.

“I feel completely confused,” Shokri Varniab said.

In court filings, U.S. government lawyers wrote that Shokri Varniab’s application contained inconsistencies about whether she plans to become a practicing doctor or researcher. She said she plans to do both.

She said the exemption doesn’t appear to apply to her since her case was decided but is seeking relief in court.

Immigration policy compounding war abroad

Immigrants who hold prestigious jobs in science and technology said they currently can’t work due to the pause because they’re waiting on employment authorization documents. Some said they are running out of money for rent and groceries and worry their careers could be thwarted if they’re forced to leave the country.

Those from Iran are especially worried about returning home during the ongoing war with U.S. and Israeli forces. They said they can’t regularly reach family due to the Iranian government’s internet blackout or count on them for financial support.

Kaveh Javanshirjavid came to the United States from Iran seven years ago to study for his doctorate in agriculture. He was supposed to start a lab job in January but needs employment authorization and his application is on hold.

The 41-year-old said he’s borrowing from friends to pay rent and relying on his wife’s doctorate stipend for basic necessities. But he doesn’t know how long that will last because she’s also Iranian and will need work authorization to get a job after graduating this summer.

“The whole of my life is on hold,” he said.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account at CNN.com

No comments:

Post a Comment