Archive for October, 2022

Be Good or Be Happy: Evergreen Insight from Fr. Servais Pinckaers, OP – Word on Fire

Happiness is the death of morality, the Enlightenment philosopher Immanuel Kant famously declared. Kants insight is a valuable one: if we decide to act morally only when it makes us happy (what Kant called a hypothetical imperative), then authentic moral actionaction that is not merely self-interest in disguisewill be as rare as an icicle in summer. Thats why Kant calls us to locate morality exclusively within the realm of duty (what he calls the categorical imperative): do what is right without exception independently of your happiness.

Thats one solution to the problem of the relationship between being good and being happy. But what a dragespecially to the secular minds increasingly uncloseted hedonism: Do something that doesnt make me happy? Deny my right to self-care? Are you kidding me? Yet if duty cant justify and motivate moral action, whats the alternative? Perhaps you could choose to be an honest cynic like the character Thrasymachus in Platos Republic: appear to be good when other people are looking, but otherwise do whatever you want if you think you can get away with it. However, even if this option accurately describes many individuals default practice of morality, openly embracing cynicism is indistinguishable from endorsing a Hobbesian war of all against all: with morality divorced from an objective duty to be good, each individual and group has carte blanche to exploit weakness, which ultimately leads to those with the most power, and the least reservations about using that power, dominating othersuntil an even more ruthless alternative arrives. (Look to the cartels in northern Mexico, or the drug gangs dominating inner cities in the United States, to observe what this theory looks like in practice.)

There thus appears to be a dilemma at the heart of morality: On the one hand, a morality of dutydoing good independently of what you desiremay provide individual and social stability, but it comes at the cost of not being able to do what you really want to do, that is, what makes you happy. On the other hand, having license to do whatever you desire, may, like Pinocchios Pleasure Island, make you feel happy, perhaps even intensely so; but that comes at the price of individual degradation and, ultimately, societal collapse. It seems, then, that we, individually and collectively, are forced to make an impossible decision: Should I do my duty? Or should I be happy? Should we live according to a moral law? Or should we let people do what they want?

What if it was your duty to be happy? What if it was in your self-interest to be selfless?

Classical liberal and libertarian political philosophy thinks it has found a way to thread the needle on this predicament. Based on a conception of autonomy, the solution takes the following form: I get to do whatever I want to do provided I respect your right to do the same. The we in this model is reduced to the procedural: the only thing that binds us is a system of laws that prevent people from violating each others autonomy. Meanwhile, everyones free to do what they want, when they want, and with whom they want to do it, provided there is consent.

This splitting of the difference between being good and being happy by saying all that being good means is not interfering with others pursuit of happiness is a tempting compromise. But it begs rather than answers a fundamental question: What should I do to make myself happy? The liberal/libertarian answer, is, Do whatever you desire to do (provided you permit others to do the same). But then comes the next question: But what should I desire? To which liberalism/libertarianism self-assuredly responds, You should desire whatever you desire to desire! And it is here where the liberal/libertarian dream begins mutating into a nightmare, where the illusion that happiness means the endless feeding of insatiable idiosyncratic cravings fades into the realization that the most obvious thing in life might actually be the most mysterious: What makes mewhat makes ustruly happy?

The liberal/libertarian point of view grants each of us the power to create our own answer to this question, but with two catches: First, you must accept that, whatever definition of happiness you choose, it is entirely subjective, which is another way of saying it is devoid of objective truth. Your definition of happiness is thus yours; but it is also a fancy, a whim, the grasping of a moral phantom in the darkness of equally absurd possible preferences. Second, and consequently, you cant tell anyone, not even your own children past the age of reason, that your definition of happiness is good because that would mean that you think that they should define happiness the same way you doshould here meaning obligated to believe because its truewhich is tantamount to violating their autonomy. This liberal/libertarian compromise on the relationship between morality and happiness thus dictates that a free choice to live on the streets injecting fentanyl into your veins is just as good as a free choice to work as a lifesaving, Narcan-administering EMT; the choice to turn whole urban districts into open-air drug markets is just as good as the choice to build parks and install new playground equipment. Its all just preference. And in the land where preference is king, theres no complaining about what others, individually or collectively, choose to do with their autonomy so long as no one physically assaults you or violates a contract youve signed. This is the price of the live and let live compromise: when the definition of happiness is radically individualized (and thus utterly relativized) and morality is reduced to consent, you gain the right to define the meaning of life and live it out how you chose; however, you lose the right to believe your choice, or anyone elses choice, is anything other than arbitrary and, therefore, objectively meaningless.

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There is, however, a fourth option for how to relate being good with being happy. What if it was your duty to be happy? What if it was in your self-interest to be selfless? What if you could align your deepest desires with the goal of becoming an objectively good person, meaning that what you want most in lifeby definition, what makes you happiestis one and the same as what morally you should do?

This, in a nutshell, is the Catholic vision of morality, and one of its greatest recent promulgators is the late Fr. Servais Pinckaers, OP (1925-2008). Fr. Pinckaersafter whom Bishop Barron named the Servais Pinckaers Fellowship in Catholic Ethicsis well known within Catholic circles for his brilliant, Vatican IIinspired work synthesizing the different strands of moral theologynatural law, Scripture, the Church Fathers, Thomism, the manualist tradition, the Magisterium, and spiritualityinto a vibrant, cohesive whole. However, Fr. Pinckaerss insights into the nature of morality and moral freedom hold great wisdom for non-Catholics as well. He writes in his book Morality: The Catholic View, From our birth, we have received moral freedom as a talent to be developed, as a seed containing the knowledge of truth and the inclination towards goodness and happiness, an inclination diversified according to what the Ancients called the semina virtutum, the seeds of virtue. This moral freedom, Fr. Pinckaers explains, is not a freedom of indifference, meaning a freedom whose only purpose is to show obedience to external commands and to fulfill subjective desires. Rather, this freedom is what he calls a freedom for excellence, which is the freedom to grow in virtue and thereby conform your lifeyour whole being: body, mind, soul, desires, emotionsto what is objectively good and, therefore, the only source of authentic happiness. As he explains,

Freedom for excellence engenders a moral science that directly takes up the question of happiness and the absolute good. It is a science that regards the question of happiness as decisive for the integral ordering of ones life and the formation of ones character. This science is organized according to the principal virtues that strengthen freedom and refine human action . . . [and] is brought to completion in the study of laws in its educational role, a role that firmly brings together wisdom and love, and even constraint, which is sometimes necessary in the struggle against evil.

To be sure, there is much to unpack here, a lifetimes worth. As a central part of my work for the Word on Fire Institute, I intend to explain and advocate for Fr. Pinckaers view of morality, which is synonymous with the comprehensive Catholic view. In other words, to be continued.

Yet it is enough to say now that the choice between being happy and being good is ultimately a false one. As Fr. Pinckaers shows, we need not choose between the two. The trick is to see that, if duty means doing good no matter what, and what is truly good is living according to Gods will, and Gods will is that each of us freely become wholly and permanently happy, then it is our duty to freely become wholly and permanently happyno matter what. Much more than a set of rules, in other words, Catholic morality is a recipe for joy.

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Be Good or Be Happy: Evergreen Insight from Fr. Servais Pinckaers, OP - Word on Fire

When and where to vote during early voting, Election Day in Ellis County – Waxahachie Daily Light

Chris Roark, croark@cherryroad.com

The Ellis County Elections Office has released times and locations for early voting and Election Day, which is set for Nov. 8.

The main site for early voting will be The Cowboy Church of Ellis County, the Ranch House Room, at 2374 W. US Highway 287 Bypass in Waxahachie.

Other early voting locations are the Ellis County Sub-Courthouse, 207 S. Sonoma Trail in Ennis; the Midlothian Conference Center, 1 Community Circle Drive in Midlothian; the Palmer ISD Annex Building, 303 Bulldog Way in Palmer; the Red Oak Municipal Center, 200 Lakeview Parkway in Red Oak; and the Ferris Public Library, 301 E. 10th St. in Ferris.

Early voting times are 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Oct. 24-28; 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Oct. 29; 1-7 p.m. Oct. 30 and 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Oct. 31 to Nov. 4.

The Ellis County Elections Office will not be an early voting site.

There will be 31 voting elections for Election Day, and polls are open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.

On the ballot are several key elections from the state level down to the local level.

Among the key contested races is the governors race where incumbent Republican Greg Abbott will face Democrat Beto ORourke, along with Libertarian Mark Tippetts and Green Party candidate Delilah Barrios.

Incumbent Republican Dan Patrick will face Democrat Mike Collier and Libertarian Shanna Steele for lieutenant governor.

In the race for attorney general incumbent Republican Ken Paxton will face Democrat Rochelle Mercedes Garza and Libertarian Mark Ash.

There will be two contested state senate races locally. In District 2, incumbent Republican Bob Hall will face Democrat Prince S. Giadolor. In District 12 incumbent Republican Brian Birdwell will face Libertarian Jeremy Schroppel.

At the county level incumbent Republican Dan Cox will face Democrat Sharon Levingston in the Justice of the Peace, Precinct 3 race. Republican Louis Ponder will face Democrat Robert E. Shelton in the Justice of the Peace, Precinct 4 race.

The cities of Ennis and Milford will have propositions on the ballot, and Glenn Heights will have an election for five seats on the City Council.

Red Oak ISD and Ferris ISD will have propositions on the ballot, and Avalon ISD will have a trustee election.

Tuesday is the last day to register to vote. The last day for the elections office to receive a regular or FPCA ballot by mail application is Oct. 28.

For more information go to co.ellis.tx.us/elections or facebook.com/elliscountyelections, email elections@co.ellis.tx.us or call 972-825-5195. The elections office is located at 204 E. Jefferson St. in Waxahachie.

Below are the Election Day voting locations:

First Baptist Church-Avalon, 206 Giles St., Avalon

First United Methodist-Bardwell, 104 Pecan St., Bardwell

Bristol United Methodist, 104 Church St., Bristol

Ellis County Sub-Courthouse, 207 S. Sonoma Trail, Ennis

Ennis Welcome Center, 201 NW. Main St., Ennis

Faith Assembly of God Church, 1810 W. Bladridge St., Ennis

Ferris Public Library, 301 E. 10th St., Ferris

Forreston Baptist Fellowship Hall, 211 Seventh St., Forreston

Harvest of Praise, 2603 S. Hampton Road, Glenn Heights

Mt. Gilead Baptist Church, 106 Harris St., Italy

First Baptist Church-Maypearl, 5744 FM 66, Maypearl

Midlothian Church of Christ, 1627 N. Highway 67, Midlothian

Midlothian Conference Center, 1 Community Circle Drive, Midlothian

Midlothian Peak Community Church, 751 W. FM 875, Midlothian

Stonegate Church, 4025 E. US 287, Midlothian

The Shepherds House, 3221 Mockingbird Lane, Midlothian

Milford Senior Citizen Center, 109 S. Main St., Milford

Grace Church of Ovilla, 519 Westmoreland Road, Ovilla

Ovilla City Hall, 105 S. Cockrell Hill Road, Ovilla

Palmer ISD Annex Building, 303 Bulldog Way, Palmer

Eastridge Baptist Church, 732 E. Ovilla Road, Red Oak

Red Oak Municipal Center, 200 Lakeview Parkway, Red Oak

Grace Covenant Church, 212 N. Main St., Red Oak

The Cowboy Church of Ellis County, 2374 W. Highway 287 Bypass, Waxahachie

Ellis County Womans Building, 407 W. Jefferson St., Waxahachie

Farley Street Baptist Church, 1116 Brown St., Waxahachie

First United Methodist-Waxahachie, 505 W. Marvin Ave., Waxahachie

Park Meadows Baptist Church, 3350 N. Highway 77, Waxahachie

Salvation Army of Ellis County, 620 Farley St., Waxahachie

Southlake Baptist Church, 2378 S. Highway 77, Waxahachie

The Avenue Baptist Church, 1761, N. Highway 77, Waxahachie

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When and where to vote during early voting, Election Day in Ellis County - Waxahachie Daily Light

Putin really could fall but will that help the West as much as we think? – Salon

The disarray and likely collapse of Vladimir Putin's effort to mobilize 300,000 conscripts to fight in Ukraine suggests that his iron grip on power could someday soon be broken as quickly and surprisingly as the czar's grip was broken in 1917 and the grip of Soviet totalitarianism was broken in 1990. But with what consequences?

A hundred years of Russian experiences with overthrowing autocracy suggest only another turn in a depressing cycle. Americans tried but failed to arrest that cycle when U.S. troops actually invaded to support anti-Bolshevik White Russians in the 1920s and when free-market evangelists in the 1990sput their dirty fingers into the Russian economy,only to wind up getting burned.

In "The Unconquerable World:Power, Nonviolence, and the Will of the People,"Jonathan Schell remindedus that revolutionary Bolsheviks were surprised that the imperial regime fell quickly and with little bloodshed. Between 1989 and 1991, most Russians and Westerners were equally surprised by the speed with which the supposedly impregnable Soviet Union lost its grip on Eastern Europe and on Russia itself, vanishing almost as if in a puff of smoke. The reason is that autocracies that are run mostly on fear on domestic terror drain their people of the spontaneous energy and comity, or love, that can sustain a healthy society. So those societies fail. And if their public's fear is displaced by contempt, they unravel.

Huge upheavals in technology, economics, communications, migrations and demographics over these past hundred years have exposed the bankruptcy of fear as a social glue and have weakened the grip of old-style authoritarianism. But the new technologies and other arrangements have also intensified top-down surveillance, indoctrination and control in increasingly subtle and even seductive ways in the hands of rulers in Hungary, Singapore, Turkey and other countries whose elites are more imaginative than Czar Nicholas II or Joseph Stalin and their legatees. (See William Dobson's "The Dictator's Learning Curve.")

Putin, who spent his childhood under Stalin and his formative years in the KGB, is almost a throwback to the old authoritarianism, and has not seemed to master the new authoritarianism's greater subtlety and intimacy.Watch this three-minutevideo of Putin entering the Kremlin,which I posted here in Salon with anotherwarning about hima few months ago. Notice the cartoonish postures of his guards and the obsequious deference of the nomenklatura, receiving him in ways that suggest that Putin's curse may truly be Russia's. For better or worse, Russian civil society has never had anything like America's libertarian-individualist strain or its civic-republican ethos.

But are those differences really to the West's advantage? Right now, American libertarian individualism and civic-republican cooperation are undergoing disturbing, funhouse-mirror distortions at the hands of Donald Trump, a professedadmirer of Putin's "genius."Trumpism carries dangers that are metastasizing not only in America but also in Marine Le Pen's France, Giorgia Meloni'sItaly and elsewhere in Western Europe.

The irony is that whilePutin's vulgar authoritarianism may be weakening in Russia, with unpredictable consequences, a new authoritarianism is rising among tens of millions of citizens in Western democracies who demand to be lied to and recruited by myths as simplistic as Putin's, myths that tell them whom to scapegoat for their stress and dispossession and whom to follow to "fix it."

Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.

The demagoguery of Trump and his Fox News heralds is more a symptom of this spreading virus than the main cause of our crisis. That cause is partly conspiratorial and malevolent, but often it's just mindless: Americans (and other Westerners) have been increasingly stressed and dispossessed in recent decades by the frantic financialization and consumerization of civil society. It's groping and goosing us 24/7, bypassing our minds and hearts on its way to our lower viscera and our wallets by titillating us, intimidating us, tracking us, indebting us and leaving us enmeshed in a spider's web of commercial come-ons and pressures.

Unlike Putin, Donald Trump is both a product and an accelerant of that social malady. Putin has his oligarchs and his rubber-stamp parliament, but he hasn't mastered the new autocrats' learning curve, which may be transforming the West even as he clings to the weakest elements of Russia's old authoritarianism: a society running on fear more than on love.

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about Vladimir Putin, Russia and Ukraine

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Putin really could fall but will that help the West as much as we think? - Salon

Immigration needs more than reform, it needs to be fixed – Suburban Chicagoland

We have an anonymous problem with illegal aliens coming into our Land of the Free and home of the Brave.

This is not new, it has been going on for over a decade, if not longer.

Our political parties wont or cant deal with it. Why, because one party likes the cheap labor cost for businesses and large corporations, the other party believes they can make them citizens and get their votes in the near future.

Very disappointing positions by both political parties, once again demonstrating they only care what they think is good for their party, not what is good for our Land of the Pilgrims Pride.

Our present Presidential administration has just ignored the problem, and by doing so, has exacerbated the problem.

So far this year, that we know of, 2.1 million illegals have been permitted to enter our country.

They turn themselves in at the border, are arrested, registered, given a work permit, and told to come back for a hearing on their request for asylum.

This process turns them from illegal aliens into legal immigrants.

I would love to know how many come back for that hearing, unfortunately my research has not turned up a current number.

At one time it was 61%, but most people that work in the immigrant community think it is much lower now.

Because of this Presidential administration ignoring the problem the states along the border have been overrun by illegal aliens, driving many of their voters into the hands of the Republicans, that is if the Republicans dont mess it up; as they so often due.

Perhaps we have stumbled into an opportunity for us to get a handle on our illegal immigration challenge.

The governors of Texas and Florida may have found away to force President Biden into doing something about our immigration challenge.

By bussing and flying these illegals into democratic sanctuary cities, such as Chicago, New York, Washington D.C. and Marthas Vineyard it has brought the immigration issue to the front page of liberal newspapers and liberal television news.

The criticism of these governors of course has been way over-the-top, calling them brutal and inhumane, but it has gotten the issue in front of the American people, hopefully forcing the Biden administration to stop ignoring the issue and taking some corrective action.

President Biden cannot solve our immigration problem by simply dealing with the influx of illegal aliens at the border, but it would be a step in the right direction; perhaps leading to a comprehensive reform of our immigration system.

I strongly support legal immigration, it has been necessary and great for our country, in future columns I will offer my ideals on a comprehensive reform bill.

I had some strong reservations about supporting the last immigration reform bill, until President Reagan asked me and others to vote for it, and I did.

What we need is to do is stop playing politics with immigration and start addressing the real problem ensuring that people who come to this country and properly vetted and welcomed and immersed in our culture.

I would love to hear your thoughts, readers, on what you think needs to be done.

Share your comments about this column by emailing former Congress Bill Lipinski atBillLipinski@hotmail.com.)

Hanania also writes about Middle East issues for the Arab News, and The Arab Daily Newscriticizing government policies in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Hanania was named "Best Ethnic American Columnist" by the New America Media in November 2007, and is the 2009 recipient of the SPJ National Sigma Delta Chi Award for column writing.

Email Ray Hanania at rghanania@gmail.com.

Follow RayHanania on Gettr.com, the uncensored Twitter Ray Hanania on Gettr, the new Twitter

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Immigration needs more than reform, it needs to be fixed - Suburban Chicagoland

For prospective U.S. immigrants, the stars have to align perfectly – Manchester Ink Link

Bruno DBritto. Photo/ Kate Brindley

Bruno DBritto left his home in Rio de Janeiro as a teenager, arriving in Nashua to join his father, who had left Brazil for the United States years earlier after his parents divorced. Coming to the U.S. was a chance to seek better opportunities, he said, and to leave a neighborhood beset by violence.

I saw many people being shot. Like a month before I came (to the United States), this kid got shot, killed pretty much in front of my school as we were leaving. When you are living with that, you kind of become numb to it, he said. It actually took me a couple of years after I came to realize that wasnt the norm.

DBritto said his father was able to bring him to the United States under the family reunification program, the leading immigration pathway for foreign nationals (citizens of a foreign country), according to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Other pathways: employment-based immigration, refugee resettlement, asylum, and the diversity lottery.

As with much of immigration policy, family reunification also called family-based immigration can be a complicated process involving multiple eligibility categories and qualifications. Now an immigration attorney, DBritto helps others hoping to bring family members to the United States.

DBritto is also founder and member of the N.H. Brazilian Council, which provides a variety of legal and social services to the Brazilian population and other immigrants in New Hampshire, including promoting language access.Bruno DBritto. Photo/Kate Brindley

Recently, DBritto said, he helped clear the path for a father to make his way from Brazil to join his wife and child in New Hampshire. Of the 60 immigration-related cases he is working on, he said, most address family reunification, involving such countries as Brazil, Mexico, Venezuela, Thailand, and Colombia.

U.S. citizens have certain advantages when it comes to petitioning on behalf of immediate family, a category that includes spouses, unmarried children under the age of 21, and parents of U.S. citizens if the U.S. citizen is 21 years of age or older. There are unlimited visas for this group and reunification generally takes two to three years, according to Lina Shayo, an immigration lawyer with Mesa Law Immigration Services in Manchester.

Other family members, such as siblings, fall outside the immediate category and can involve a longer wait. A U.S. citizen petitioning for a sibling can take 15 years, for example. A U.S. citizen petitioning for reunification with a child who is over 21 can take eight years. There are a limited number of visas available and a lot more people apply than the numbers that are available, so it creates a backlog, she said.

Those approved for entry into the U.S. can apply to become lawful permanent residents (LPRs), non-citizens authorized to live permanently in the United States, also referred to as Green Card holders. They are allowed to work and own property here, receive financial assistance at public colleges and universities, and join the Armed Forces. After meeting certain eligibility. requirements, they may also apply to become naturalized U.S. citizens.

Lawful permanent residents can also petition for family, including spouses and unmarried children under the age of 21. The number of visas is limited for this group, however, and these family-based immigration efforts can take decades, Shayo said. Additional limits apply to oversubscribed countries including India, China, and Mexico that have exceeded their allocation of visas.

In certain circumstances, U.S. employers can hire foreign workers. Its a bit of a complicated process, said Shayo. They have to prove that they cant find an American worker who is willing and able to do the job, and that theyre going to pay the foreign worker what they call the prevailing wage, which is set by the Department of Labor, she said.

The process is designed to protect American workers and American jobs, she said. So they have to jump through a lot of hoops to do it, but if its successful then youre able to bring foreign talent to the United States. As with family-based immigration, there is a big backlog of cases.

Employment-based immigrants fall under various categories, including priority workers, or people with extraordinary abilities in various fields, outstanding professors and researchers, and certain multinational managers and executives. Other groups, in order of preference, include people with advanced degrees and exceptional ability, and both skilled and unskilled workers.

In some cases, individuals themselves petition to gain entry to the U.S. This is when the foreign national or the non-U.S. citizen petitions on their own behalf to the U.S. government to get a Green Card to live and work in the United States, Shayo said.

If, for instance, someone plans to come to the U.S. to make an investment a minimum of about $750,000 and open a business, they can apply for entry, she said. You have to have a lot of money and you have to promise the U.S. government that youre going to come and open a business and this business is going to hire American workers, she said.

In some cases, people who are outstanding in their field or considered high-performing can petition for themselves recipients of major internationally recognized awards, for instance. They can petition the U.S. government based on their outstanding ability and, if they are successful, theyll get a Green Card and theyll come and live and work in the United States, or stay here permanently, she said.

Under the asylum program, individuals who come to the United States petition to remain for various urgent reasons. They must be in the country or at a point of entry to do so. An example of a self-petition is an asylum, which is when someone says my government or a group that my government cannot control is persecuting me because of my race, or my religion, my national identity, membership in a particular social group, (or political opinion), Shayo said. Its not, for example, conditions in my country are not very good, and I have to come because there are no jobs.

In addition, Bruno DBritto said, You have to show that you were unable to relocate to another region of your country, and even if you do, you would suffer the same effect.Fred Nshimiyimana. Photo/Kate Brindley

Unlike asylees, refugees gain approval for entry from a third country before arriving in the United States. Like asylees, they must demonstrate they have experienced persecution or have reason to fear persecution on the basis of race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group.

Concord resident Fred Nshimiyimana and his family lived in a refugee camp in Rwanda for many years. His parents arrived there in about 1998 after fleeing war in Congo, he said. Nshimiyimana was born in the camp. We didnt have much food, we didnt have clean water. We didnt have electricity, and education was tough, he said. We survived that life, he said.

When he turned 12 or 13, he said, his family began a series of interviews with the United Nations High Commissioner of Refugees, the beginning of a process that would take more than a year and lead to resettlement in the United States. We went for many interviews (with UNHCR). They asked a lot of questions on why we wanted to go to the United States, why my parents left Congo, he said.

The Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration within the U.S. State Dept. oversees this admissions program. After conducting initial screening, UNHCR refers qualifying individuals to a State Department Resettlement Support Center (RSC). These RSCs conduct further interviews and submit information for background checks to various U.S. national security agencies. Domestic resettlement agencies meet to review the biographies of refugees selected by the RSCs to determine where they should be resettled in the U.S.

Nshimiyimana and his mother and two brothers were resettled to Concord in 2015, he said. It was a difficult period, in part because they had left his father behind. He was working outside the camp, he said, so that we could have a better life. Leaving the camp to work on behalf of his wife and sons complicated his fathers resettlement case, causing him to lose his refugee status, Nshimiyimana said. His mother has been working with an immigration lawyer for several years to try to bring his father, who now lives in Kenya, to the U.S.

Now entering his junior year at UNH, Nshimiyimana recently started a one-year internship at the American Friends Service Committee of New Hampshire and works as lead organizer for Change for Concord, a group of young adults working to improve the quality of life for young people in the Concord community. He is particularly interested in helping immigrant students. I will try my best to work with the schools and try to make middle school and high school a better place for the immigrants, so that once they leave they have a better future and they can go to college and have a career, he said.

This summer, Nshimiyimana passed the test for U.S. citizenship. He was asked to come back later that same day for the naturalization ceremony, when he took the oath of allegiance and received his Certificate of Naturalization, proof that he is now a U.S. citizen.

Its a relief, he said. Its a big relief. I was not a citizen of Rwanda and I didnt have citizenship of Congo, he said. I didnt have a nationality. Now that Im American and I belong to a country, that feels amazing.Fred Nshimiyimana. Photo/Kate Brindley Photography

At the beginning of every fiscal year, in October, people can enter the diversity lottery, a program limited to about 50,000 people from countries with low rates of immigration to the United States.

Its a true lottery, Lina Shayo said. You get picked and if you get picked you have to be vetted. They want to make sure you graduated from high school, that youre not a criminal. Then you get an interview at the U.S. Embassy where you live and then, if you pass the interview and you pass all that vetting, you get an immigrant visa and you come to the United States and get a Green Card.

During the pandemic, interviews have been difficult to get, she said. And since the law requires a Green Card to be issued the same year a person is picked by lottery, a years delay can mean losing out.

This is the third year where people are getting picked and theyre submitting all of their applications and then they never get called for an interview, Shayo said. And those visas cannot be issued, which means those Green Cards will never be issued and theyre just wasted.

As Shayo has found, there are some common misconceptions, both among those who are new to navigating the immigration system and the general public those who observe it from afar, perhaps hearing about it fleetingly on the evening news.

A recent client, for instance, inquired about bringing a friend to the U.S. from a foreign country, Shayo said. She asked What can I do to sponsor this person to come here? Shayo informed her that her friend does not qualify under any of the immigration categories. She was very shocked and she said I really cant believe that as a U.S. citizen I cant do anything to help my friend.

Shayo encouraged her client to push for immigration reform as a voter. A U.S. citizen should be able to bring a person here, as long as that person passes the vetting process, Shayo said. We can create common sense laws to allow people to come into the United States. Other countries are able to do it; we can do it.

Shayo also said she believes average Americans may not not realize how steep the path can be to get into this country, and how few immigration pathways there are.

The stars have to align so perfectly for people to be able to immigrate in the way our law is written, she said. You have to have a family member; you have to have an employer; or you have to have advanced degrees; or you have to have a lot of money; or you have to have this horrible story of persecution, and you have to flee persecution and cross all these borders to get here. The stars have to align so perfectly, that most people are just locked out of it.

Theres also the category of humanitarian parolee, the status of many Afghans and Ukrainians who needed admission for urgent humanitarian reasons. Under the program, the person isnt on the path to citizenship and doesnt have permanent legal status, but is here temporarily.

Comprehensive immigration reform, meanwhile, remains a contentious issue.President Joe Bidens immigration bill, which includes a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants, has stalled in Congress and reportedly has virtually no chance of gaining enough GOP votes to pass.

When people so casually say get in line, for most people there is no line. There simply is no line to get into, said Maggie Fogarty, N.H. program director for the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker-founded organization that works on peace and justice issues, including immigration-related efforts, such as helping to build a network of host homes for asylum seekers.

Yet despite limited opportunities, migration remains a fundamental human behavior, Fogarty said.

Every story of migration is about human beings either trying to live, trying to be safe, trying to make sure that their children can live or be safe, or trying to live more fully, Fogarty said. It isnt always fleeing war and poverty and other kinds of violence. Its simply the universal human longing to seek and have adventures and learn and explore new places.

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