Subjective biases towards asylum seekers: Democrat vs Republican

msv5450

Active Member
There is no doubt that the current tide of the USCIS is in favor of:
1) white
2) highly educated
3) Fluent in English
4) female

There are published academic studies on this and it is undeniable that if you possess the above characteristics, you are more likely to get a more favorable decision for your immigration petition. Overall, asylum is a subjective matter and it boils down to who interviews you. Here is my question:

Is it true that the asylum offices in more liberal states like the west coast welcome gay asylum seekers and have a negative bias towards Christian applicants? That's what I heard from one applicant in Chicago. Apparently, you have a higher chance of approval in Chicago if your asylum claim is based on sexuality rather than religion.
 
There is no doubt that the current tide of the USCIS is in favor of:
1) white
2) highly educated
3) Fluent in English
4) female

There are published academic studies on this and it is undeniable that if you possess the above characteristics, you are more likely to get a more favorable decision for your immigration petition. Overall, asylum is a subjective matter and it boils down to who interviews you. Here is my question:

Is it true that the asylum offices in more liberal states like the west coast welcome gay asylum seekers and have a negative bias towards Christian applicants? That's what I heard from one applicant in Chicago. Apparently, you have a higher chance of approval in Chicago if your asylum claim is based on sexuality rather than religion.
I saw that the female cases do not have long background check even from travel ban countries and approved their religion cases in Chicago in less than 6 months after interview.
 
I saw that the female cases do not have long background check even from travel ban countries and approved their religion cases in Chicago in less than 6 months after interview.
Could you share her timeline?
Was her interview in the city of Chicago or one of the neighboring states?
 
Do you see any approval differences between states for ex: Texas Vs California? As far speed is concerned i think they're almost same for new applicants but i might be wrong...
 
Do you see any approval differences between states for ex: Texas Vs California? As far speed is concerned i think they're almost same for new applicants but i might be wrong...
I saw in the table that San Fransisco has the highest approval rate. California seems has higher approval rate
 
Wondering if anybody has the data related to Asylum cases showing approval rates at various service centers and time taken
 
I do not think so.

If you are highly educated and you are fluent in English, you are more likely to "steal" American jobs from the middle class. Thus, highly educated and fluent in English might not be a positive sign.

In fact, the United Sates generally does not welcome any asylum seeker.
 
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