The US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) announced the new 100 questions and answers that will comprise the civics component of the new naturalization test. The questions are based on fundamental concepts of American democracy.

This new test will be administered to citizenship applicants beginning October 2008.  Current applicants will have the choice of taking the new test or the old one up until October of 2009 when the new test becomes mandatory. 

Taking the test will cost immigrants $675.00, along with the lengthy and costly application process.  If the test is failed twice, the entire application process must be undertaken again, including the $675.00 fee payment.

The test consists of 100 questions - applicants are only required to get a 60% to pass (that’s a ‘D’ to pass and they can take it twice.)

Here are 10 Questions from the test. Would you pass?

1. How many U.S. Senators are there?
2. We elect a U.S. Senator for how many years?
3. Who is one of your state’s U.S. Senators?
4. What does the judicial branch do?
5. There are four amendments to the Constitution about who can vote. Describe one of them.
6. What is one responsibility that is only for United States citizens?
7. What are two rights only for United States citizens?
8. Who wrote the Declaration of Independence?
9. When was the Declaration of Independence adopted?
10. The Federalist Papers supported the passage of the U.S. Constitution. Name one of the writers.

 

Answers 

1. 100
2. 6
3. Answers will vary. Do you know yours???
[For District of Columbia residents and residents of U.S. territories, the answer is that D.C. (or the territory where the applicant lives) has no U.S. Senators.]
4. reviews laws ▪ explains laws ▪ resolves disputes (disagreements) ▪ decides if a law goes against the Constitution
5. Citizens eighteen (18) and older (can vote). ▪ You don’t have to pay (a poll tax) to vote. ▪ Any citizen can vote. (Women and men can vote.) ▪ A male citizen of any race (can vote).
6. serve on a jury ▪ vote
7. apply for a federal job ▪ vote ▪ run for office ▪ carry a U.S. passport
8. (Thomas) Jefferson
9. July 4, 1776
10. (James) Madison ▪ (Alexander) Hamilton ▪ (John) Jay ▪ Publius


See the entire test – click here.
 

The US State Department is urging potential applicants 2009 Diversity Visa Lottery to register as early as possible due to the danger of system slowdown as a result of excessive demand.

The 2009 Diversity Visa Lottery will begin on October 03 2007 and end on December 02 2007. People who wish to enter must visit the official government site at (www.dvlottery.state.gov/) to read the lottery rules and submit an application. Paper entries are not valid and will not be accepted. 

Winners who meet the official criteria are selected in a computerized random drawing. Those whose names are selected will then be able to apply for one of 50,000 immigrant visas available each year. One rule of the lottery is the visas are only available to applicants from eligible countries (countries that have low immigration rates to the US).

Applicants are reminded that registration for the lottery is free.

Please visit www.dvlottery.state.gov/ to apply.

Q: Can I live outside the US and keep my green card? Can I renew if my green card status is taken away?

A: Green cards are for people who can genuinely prove that they are permanently residing in the US. A green card is a Permanent Resident Alien registration card. So if you live outside the of the US, abandonment of said green card will be assumed.

If you’ve entered the US not using your green card then again, abandonment will be determined absolutely. Abandonment is automatically presumed after one year’s absence from the US. You can rebut the presumption if you can prove that you did not in fact abandon residency in the US. Evidence would include, but is not limited to, your filing of tax returns each year during your absence, retaining some life, property or assets in the US and so forth. If none of these elements are present or presentable to immigration then your green card will not be renewed due to abandonment and you will have to qualify all over again. US Immigration are not sympathetic to aliens who have allowed the green cards to match since they regard qualifying for a green card in the first place as an immense honor where people risk life and limb every day to acquire this coveted status.
 
If you feel you may have a viable claim to get your green car renewed my office would certainly be happy to make the application on your behalf.
 

According to a new report from the Government Accountability Office, an official government program meant to diversify US immigration may be a loophole for potential terrorists to gain entry into the US.

The ‘Diversity Visa’ (also known as the ‘Green Card Lottery’) allows a number of immigrants from specific countries to gain entry to the US every year and receive an immediate Green Card.

In the past seven years the program has allowed almost 10,000 immigrants from countries the US government has accused of sponsoring terrorism (including Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Sudan and Syria).

Despite the fact that no immigrants who have entered the US through the Diversity Visa have ever been linked to terrorism, the 51-page report recommends that the program should be overhauled due to the high level of risk, plus ongoing fraud.

However, the State Department strongly opposes the report as the 55,000 lottery winners are thoroughly screened before entering the US and being granted their Green Cards.

To read more about this story, click here.

 

A former military officer in the Argentine army has been given a six-month prison sentence in the US for visa fraud.

Despite having been held on torture charges in the 1980’s, 59-year-old Ernesto Barreiro stated on his 2003 US visa application that he had never been detained for a crime in Argentina.

Barreiro will be deported back to Argentina where he will likely face war crimes charges after serving his sentence in the US. If convicted, Barreiro faces a life sentence in Argentina for his role during Argentina’s "dirty war" in the 1970s and 1980s as chief of interrogation at a secret torture facility.

US Attorney Chuck Rosenberg says, "By virtue of his fraud, Barreiro lived an anonymous life in Virginia horse country. His alleged victims remain scattered, left to wonder whether the defendant would ever be held accountable for the war crimes charged."

To read more about this story, click here.

Hollywood filmmaker Ron Maxwell is set to make a new documentary about immigration in the United States.

The "Gods and Generals" director’s new project is scheduled for release in December, and will focus on how, according to Maxwell, US immigration is controlled by the corporate, political and intellectual elite who are exploiting the US border situation so they can gain at the expense of the country’s institutions.

Maxwell says, “Immigration is totally out of control and our infrastructure is totally overwhelmed.”   

To read more about this story, click here.

Over 1000 legal immigrants staged a protest on Tuesday (18SEP07) at the Capitol to raise awareness on the long waiting times immigrants must currently endure to receive their Green Cards.

The immigrants (who were dressed in t-shirts with American flags on them and carrying placards) included doctors, medical technicians and computer engineers from India and China.

Traveling from as afar as Washington State and California, the immigrants called on Congress to provide more permanent visas for highly educated immigrants as well as more resources for an immigration system that is so overburdened, the wait for a Green Card can be a decade.

According to immigration policy advocates, the rally was a highly unusual event - legal immigrants are traditionally very cautious as their future rests entirely in the hands of the federal government.

Chinese computer scientist Paul Wang says, “When I heard about this rally I immediately made the decision to come. I like the freedom and the safety in this country. I want to send a request signal to Congress to bring more efficiency to the process for us to get a green card.”

American Families United consultant Paul Donnelly says,  “It is a significant thing to have foreign-born people, who are notoriously hard to organize, organizing themselves."

To read more about this story, click here.
 

 

 

 

 

158 immigrant groups in the US are staging a boycott against Western Union, accusing the company of charging their customers extortionate fees and exchange rates.

The boycott began last week in California and will go nationwide slated for nationwide on Monday - the immigrant groups are demanding that Western Union invest money back into the communities that make up the bulk of their customer base.

According to market analysts, immigrant workers in the United States send home approximately $70 billion in earnings, of which wire transfer companies take $14 billion in fees.


Executive director at the Transnational Institute for Grassroots Research and Action (TIGRA) Francis Calpotura says, "We choose to stand up for our right to live in dignity and fight for our families."

A representative of the Oaxaquena Federation says, "Western Union makes billions from Mexicans and they give us pennies. It’s time for Western Union to reinvest meaningfully in our communities."

To read more about this story, click here.

British musicians who wish to perform in the US are facing mounting difficulties with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services following delays regarding the P-1 visa.

The P-1 is a necessary piece of documentation for foreign acts to travel and work in the US. Part of the requirements for the P-1 is proof that the band or performer in question has been "internationally recognized" for a "sustained and substantial" amount of time.

As a great number of bands achieved success in a relatively short amount of time (thanks to mediums such as the internet), it is proving more and more of a challenge to prove that the bands are indeed prolific and successful and therefore eligible to perform in the US.

A Guide to the Entertainers Visa 

 

To read more about this story, click here.


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Immigrants from New Orleans are claiming they were exploited after Hurricane Katrina, according to evidence given during a tribunal on August 29 to September 2 2007.

The International Tribunal on Hurricanes Katrina and Rita was initiated by the People’s Hurricane Relief Fund to expose any crimes the US government may have carried out regarding the hurricanes.

Two Latino immigrants testified on the labor part of the tribunal and claimed that the construction and cleaning contractors were heavily involved in criminal practices.

Honduran immigrant Dennis says, “The first week I was paid for two days, the second and third weeks only one day, and the fourth week, I was not paid at all. The boss finally told me I would not be paid anything and if I protested, he was going to call the police. I was scared and did not do anything.”

To read more about this story, click here.

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