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Posted
On 9/17/2023 at 1:27 AM, lennikov said:

It feels like that because it is the punishment for people who want to break their promise to return to their home country, so DOS ensures that this category waiver will take 24 months or more. In many cases, people run out of legal presence unless they can get an O-1 you will run out of legal presence on J-1 eventually before the decision by DOS is made to return to their home country, fulfill their 2 years home residency, return to the US and get their green card, completely forgetting about the Hardships case only to get a letter with Favorable (and completely useless by that point) decision from DOS some 3-4 years down the line. 

Hardship is one among the five waiver categories. The rest categories also break their promise and their reason is primarily their job (except persecution). Incase of hardship, their is a US citizen involved (with actual hardship once it crosses the USCIS stage). This punsihment is only for hardship category and especially for the US citizens. Doesn't make any sense. 

Posted
28 minutes ago, Hardship_waiver said:

Hardship is one among the five waiver categories. The rest categories also break their promise and their reason is primarily their job (except persecution). Incase of hardship, their is a US citizen involved (with actual hardship once it crosses the USCIS stage). This punsihment is only for hardship category and especially for the US citizens. Doesn't make any sense. 

I think this is the way they look at all these other categories:

 

-No objection: Oh you have a phd and your country doesn't need you. Great! Stay! (This is the easiest category)

-Interested U.S. government agency: You want to work for an agency we care about? Great! Stay!

-Conrad 30: You want to be a doctor in an underserved area in the States that no U.S. citizen wants to go and you are willing to lock yourself in a 3-year harsh contract? Go right ahead 

-Persecution: I guess we can't tell you to go back to a country that will hurt you or kill you. Whatever. Just stay here. We know that even if we reject your waiver, you are going to apply for asylum and probably win

 

You see how hardship is the only category they can/want to mess with? 

Posted
12 hours ago, ErinK said:

I think this is the way they look at all these other categories:

 

-No objection: Oh you have a phd and your country doesn't need you. Great! Stay! (This is the easiest category)

-Interested U.S. government agency: You want to work for an agency we care about? Great! Stay!

-Conrad 30: You want to be a doctor in an underserved area in the States that no U.S. citizen wants to go and you are willing to lock yourself in a 3-year harsh contract? Go right ahead 

-Persecution: I guess we can't tell you to go back to a country that will hurt you or kill you. Whatever. Just stay here. We know that even if we reject your waiver, you are going to apply for asylum and probably win

 

You see how hardship is the only category they can/want to mess with? 

Hardship: There are many hardship cases where applicants have PhD too. 

From any aspect, it's hard to understand what DoS wants to achieve. At least it's clear, it's not Covid, it's something else. 

 
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