Now It’s Official: US Visas Can Be Denied If You (Or Even Your Friends) Are Critical Of American Policies

Authored by Phillup Giraldi via The Strategic Culture Foundation,

There have been several interesting developments in the United States government’s war on free speech and privacy.

First of all, the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) Customs and Border Protection Agency (CBP), which is responsible for actual entry of travelers into the country, has now declared that it can legally access phones and computers at ports of entry to determine if there is any subversive content which might impact on national security. “Subversive content” is, of course, subjective, but those seeking entry can be turned back based on how a border control agent perceives what he is perusing on electronic media.

Unfortunately, the intrusive nature of the procedure is completely legal, particularly as it applies to foreign visitors, and is not likely to be overturned in court in spite of the Fourth Amendment’s constitutional guarantee that individuals should “…be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” Someone at a port of entry is not legally inside the United States until he or she has been officially admitted. And if that someone is a foreigner, he or she has no right by virtue of citizenship even to enter the country until entry has been permitted by an authorized US Customs and Border Protection official. And that official can demand to see anything that might contribute to the decision whether or not to let the person enter.

And there’s more to it than just that. Following the Israeli model for blocking entry of anyone who can even be broadly construed as supporting a boycott, the United States now also believes it should deny admittance to anyone who is critical of US government policy, which is a reversal of previous policy that considered political opinions to be off-limits for visa denial. DHS, acting in response to pressure from the White House, now believes it can adequately determine hostile intent from the totality of what appears on one’s phone or laptop, even if the material in question was clearly not put on the device by the owner. In other words, if a traveler has an email sent to him or her by someone else that complains about behavior by the United States government, he or she is responsible for that content.

One interesting aspect of the new policy is that it undercuts the traditional authority of US Embassies and Consulates overseas to issue visas to foreigners. The State Department visa process is rigorous and can include employment and real property verification, criminal record checks, social media reviews and Google-type searches. If there is any doubt about the visa applicant, entry into the US is denied. With the new DHS measures in place, this thoroughly vetted system is now sometimes being overruled by a subjective judgment made by someone who is not necessarily familiar with the traveler’s country or even regarding the threat level that being a citizen of that country actually represents.

Given the new rules regarding entering the United States, it comes as no surprise that the story of an incoming Harvard freshman who was denied entry into the United States after his laptop and cellphone were searched at Boston’s Logan Airport has been making headlines. Ismail Ajjawi, a 17-year-old Palestinian resident of Lebanon, was due to begin classes as a freshman, but he had his student visa issued in by the US Embassy in Beirut rejected before being flown back to Lebanon several hours later.

Ajjawi was questioned by one immigration officer who asked him repeatedly about his religion before requiring him to turn over his laptop and cell phone. Some hours later, the questioning continued about Ajjawi’s friends and associates, particularly those on social media. At no point was Ajjawi accused of having himself written anything that was critical of the United States and the interrogation rather centered on the views expressed by his friends.

The decision to ban Ajjawi produced such an uproar worldwide that it was reversed a week later, apparently as a result of extreme pressure exerted by Harvard University. Nevertheless, the decisions to deny entry are often arbitrary or even based on bad information, but the traveler normally has no practical recourse to reverse the process. And the number of such searches is going up dramatically, numbering more than 30,000 in 2017, some of which have been directed against US residents. Even though permanent resident green card holders and citizens have a legal right to enter the United States, there are reports that they too are having their electronic media searched. That activity is the subject of an American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security that is currently working its way through the courts. The ACLU is representing 10 American citizens and a legal permanent resident who had their media searched without a warrant as required by the Fourth Amendment.

It is believed that many of the arbitrary “enforcements” by the CBP are carried out by the little-known Tactical Response Team (TRT) that targets certain travelers that fit a profile. DHS officials confirmed in September 2017 that 1,400 visa holders had been denied entry due to TRT follow-up inspections. And there are also reports of harassment of American citizens by possible TRT officials.

A friend of mine was returning from Portugal to a New York Area airport when he was literally pulled from the queue as he was departing the plane. A Customs agent at the jetway was repeatedly calling out his birth date and then also added his name. He was removed from the line and taken to an interrogation room where he was asked to identify himself and then queried regarding his pilot’s license. He was then allowed to proceed with no other questions, suggesting that it was all harassment of a citizen base on profiling pure and simple.

My friend is a native-born American who has a Master’s degree and an MBA, is an army veteran and has no criminal record, not even a parking ticket. He worked for an American bank in the Middle East more than thirty years ago, which, together with the pilot’s license, might be the issue these days with a completely paranoid federal government constantly on the lookout for more prey “to keep us safe.” Unfortunately, keeping us safe has also meant that freedom of speech and association as well as respect for individual privacy have all been sacrificed. As America’s Founding Father Benjamin Franklin once reportedly observed, “Those who would give up essential Liberty to purchase a little temporary Safety will wind up with neither.”

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29 Comments
anon
anon
September 6, 2019 6:56 am

Everyone whose email address dumped here probably should worry.

ordo ab chao
ordo ab chao
  anon
September 6, 2019 7:54 am

Haha, anon.

The way this is headed, anybody that’s developed a habit of eating or breathing should worry.

annuit coeptis novus ordo seclorum <<<<<—–there it is, anon. Look real deep at that dollar

Grog
Grog
  ordo ab chao
September 6, 2019 8:36 pm

Do you mean the piece of paper marked as “Federal Reserve Note”?

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  ordo ab chao
September 6, 2019 10:12 pm

Stay off the internet if you want anonymity and even then there’s no guarantee. Your SS#, birthdate, medical records and any and everything you ever did that involved some form of government action or paperwork has you in the cross hairs. If things get spicey enough the ‘authorities’ can make shit up and accuse you of wrongdoing and you get to prove your innocence. Thanks to the Patriot Act you can be disappeared, just like in the Soviet Union.

John Galt
John Galt
  anon
September 6, 2019 7:56 am

Govt has no legal claim to disallow a returning citizen based on their free speech or criticisms of their govt or policies or even hate speech as long as it was not threatening or inciting violence or riots. You do not lose your first amendment rights in your own country just because you legally temporarily left and are now returning. Your rights remain protected for what you said while away also and cannot be held against you upon returning. This is bullshit. It is in regard to non citizens.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  John Galt
September 6, 2019 8:31 am

Not until after you clear customs. Until then you arent in the US.

Plato_Plubius
Plato_Plubius
  Anonymous
September 6, 2019 12:27 pm

And yet those God given natural rights that are the foundation of the U.S. Constitution suggests that my natural sovereignty is not given to me by any government or man made entities.

My natural rights do not cease to exist because I might be critical of the government.

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
September 6, 2019 7:21 am

Why would anyone entering the USA need a visa? There are 50 million people here who walked across unimpeded with no documents of any kind, I thought that no person was illegal?

Just walk over from Mexico, problemo solved.

ordo ab chao
ordo ab chao
  Hardscrabble Farmer
September 6, 2019 7:50 am

I dropped this little turd over at the bottom of ‘poopy talk’

annuit coeptis novus ordo seclorum <<<<—–Emperor T. is gonna fix that border, the cartel is gonna pay for it, and every illegal that's here is goin home……trust the plan

Not Payola
Not Payola
  ordo ab chao
September 6, 2019 7:54 am

Is all in Queue!

Plato_Plubius
Plato_Plubius
  ordo ab chao
September 6, 2019 12:44 pm

Ordo,

Thank you for posting that video. Great rant!

Plato_Plubius
Plato_Plubius
  ordo ab chao
September 6, 2019 10:14 pm
overthecliff
overthecliff
  Hardscrabble Farmer
September 6, 2019 10:14 am

because they are not citizens.

Plato_Plubius
Plato_Plubius
  Hardscrabble Farmer
September 6, 2019 12:33 pm

I wonder how this will be played out when the Real I.D. act begins to be enforced later in 2020?

Talk about a means to control and monitor the citizenship’s movements within their own country no less. I wonder if these Gestapo like tactics will begin to be enforced at airports across the United Free States of Murika….

If you don’t have the right “papers”, no air travel… I wonder if the U.S. doesn’t already have a social credit system like China’s, only difference is we aren’t privvy to its existence or uses yet.

John Galt
John Galt
September 6, 2019 7:52 am

Hey all you stupid leftist how this red flag law working out fer ya. Lmao. Be careful what you enact you may not like it.

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 6, 2019 8:30 am

I’m good with it. Even your buddies issue. Now do that at the mexico border because selective enforcement nullifies the effectiveness.

Legal beagle
Legal beagle
September 6, 2019 9:44 am

You must be Nova Scotia boy!

Enjoy…

RiNS
RiNS
  Legal beagle
September 6, 2019 12:56 pm

Thanks legal..
I am getting ready
For the Hurricane party…
In the County of Halifax
on St. Margaret’s Bay..

overthecliff
overthecliff
September 6, 2019 10:12 am

…a Palestinian resident of Lebanon was refused a visa ???????? That action should be repeated 2 or tree million times. Who gives a shit about a non citizen besides the ACLU communists. American citizens on the other hand Due Process.

yah sure
yah sure
September 6, 2019 10:14 am

Everyone is ok with this until they are the one being interrogated.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  yah sure
September 6, 2019 10:55 am

I’ve been “interrogated” ( asked a few questions) dozens of times when crossing an international border. BFD Answer the questions and move on.

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 6, 2019 10:52 am

So your friend was taken somewhere private and asked a few questions, ( based on his history ) then allowed to proceed. How is that harrassment ? Seems like thats what border security is supposed to do. They need to do it more in my view.
Regarding the student, a country has a right to deny entry to foreigners for any reason they want. A foreigner has no “right” to enter the US. Every country except the US does this commonly. Try to enter Canada if you have a pot conviction. I was stopped and questioned (harrassed) at the Canadian border because I have a concealed carry permit in my state and somehow Canadian customs has this information.
We need to be much more selective about who we allow into the US.

tanks into teakettles
tanks into teakettles
September 6, 2019 1:22 pm

here’s a thought-leave your real cellphone and laptop at home, travel with a dummy one UNUSED, or if queried just say you are a luddite (look it up). You are not compelled to provide them with any online info, it’s up to them to find it out.

Montefrío
Montefrío
September 6, 2019 4:41 pm

I’m a dual national (USA-EU) and my US passport expired ten years ago. I didn’t renew at the time because the gov of the country in which I live charged a large fee for US citizens but none for EU citizens. I decided to renew a year ago to visit a dying friend (and godmother of my daughter) or at least attend her funeral, but learned that to do so I have to provide a photo of myself for every year from 1986 going forward, photos I don’t have. Given that I was born in the USA, I can’t enter the country with an EU passport, so I am effectively banned from ever entering again. In order to visit my daughter, a USA resident, we must meet elsewhere. This seems to me a bit extreme. The post-9/11 laws are imho not reasonable. I concur that laws with respect to non-USA citizens are valid if also extreme, but…

The USA of 2019 seems to be increasingly restrictive and not in the best interests of the citizens of the country of my birth and upbringing. One wonders why and asks oneself just who it might be that is behind this. The water in the frog’s pot just seems to get warmer and warmer, but who will take action to keep it from reaching the boiling point?

Didius Julianus
Didius Julianus
  Montefrío
September 6, 2019 8:29 pm

So you missed the final deadline to renew with an expired passport (my wife and I almost did many years ago but got in just within the deadline) ? Looks like at most they would want photos for those years since passport expiration. Your valid passport would have covered the earlier years. I don’t suppose they said why for all of those years? Also, not that it would be worth it, but I don’t see how they could reasonably (yeah, who said they are reasonable) keep a US citizen out even without a current passport. On the other hand, it might be very hard to get out again for anyone who tried that!

EC
EC
September 6, 2019 5:12 pm

I never called you “RiNseY with no shame” but it’s never too late to start.

RiNS
RiNS
  EC
September 6, 2019 9:09 pm

Don’t take it to close to heart.. This Nigga was just rapping and that kinda worked…
So please don’t go all Hollywood on me and sperg out..

Anyways we are situated in an Air BnB for weekend and waiting for Dorian…

Just checked ABC and it is going to be coming ashore as CAT 1.. meh!

comment image

The House is pretty much under the hurricane symbol as it makes landfall..
We are staying in an amazing place right at the Head of a spit of land..

If it rolls up St. Margaret;s Bay we are gonna be fooked..

Will keep everyone posted..
Got my camera and youtube channel ready..

Will post if anything interesting happens.

Odin must be pissed but I am ready..
Time for another beer..

RiNS

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  EC
September 6, 2019 10:23 pm

For one hundred miles from the US Border, the Constitution is essentially invalid. They can seize all your stuff, you and whatever and tough titties to you. Fight them and see what happens, ask for a warrant?

https://www.theroot.com/video-louisiana-cops-strangle-black-man-to-death-for-a-1828091116

In practice, Border Patrol agents routinely ignore or misunderstand the limits of their legal authority in the course of individual stops, resulting in violations of the constitutional rights of innocent people. These problems are compounded by inadequate training for Border Patrol agents, a lack of oversight by CBP and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and the consistent failure of CBP to hold agents accountable for abuse. No matter what CBP officers and Border Patrol agents think, our Constitution applies throughout the United States, including within this “100-mile border zone.”

https://www.aclu.org/other/constitution-100-mile-border-zone

gilberts
gilberts
September 6, 2019 10:46 pm

I’ve crossed a whole lot of borders in my life. I’ve been all over the world. If you travel overseas, you must be prepared to get stopped and hassled at the border. It’s to be expected. I’ve seen articles claiming this before, but with all my trips overseas, I’ve never been stopped. In my opinion, British customs are much more awful than US customs.

This article doesn’t bother me- if the federales want to hassle foreigners at the border, I say DO IT. I would love to see getting into America be difficult, like getting into a hot NYC nightclub, complete with mean-looking bouncers and a line around the block of losers waiting to get in. Go look at who is getting their citizenship these days and it doesn’t seem like we’re keeping the undesirables out. Just look at Congress and you can see we’re not keeping the undesirables out.
Hell, if the border patrol could keep all Harvard’s attendees out, we would be in better shape.