Passport Questions?
 
 
 
 
 
   
WORK PERMIT..?
Question:

If you are interested in obtaining a work permit in the US and have money to invest in a business we can help you?

Answer:

Must be a fake one.....No such thing as a work permit in the U.S.

An H-1b visa allows one to work in the US for 3 years, renewable for another 3 years. The company that does the hiring must sponsor the visa, and the visa is no longer valid if the alien leaves the employ of the sponsor (but the alien may obtain another H-1b visa from a subsequent employer).

Never heard about various ways to get a green card or work permits in the US?

Do ya accept monoply money ??

Yes, there are various visas, but no Work Permits...They are still called Visas.

No such thing as Work Permits in the States...Green Cards can not be had simply by investing in a business, unless things have changed recently....Maybe you are thinking of Canada, where investment can buy you immigration rights. Getting a Work Permit for Canada is much easier than in the States, and doesn't require any investment.

Anyway, put your SPAM somewhere else, please. It's not appropriate here.

I think many of us here are "serious" and would be "interested" to accept your invitation to send you email, perhaps many of them, with very, very large attachments.

Obtaining a work permit in Canada is easier you say? I dont agree. I would think it would be as equally as difficult as the U.S. http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/work/index.html

This site explains it all, it is obtainable but not as easily as one might suspect.

I would say that it's much easier due to various different programs...For example, a person with a written job offer to be a caregiver can use the contract to enter Canada, then, after 2 years of work, can apply for permanent resident status..

If your profession is under the list of occupations deemed in need by canada, you can also use this to apply for immigration....This category includes bakers, chefs, commercial drivers, dancers, actors, comedians and many more like these....Have a college degree and reasonable language skills (french or English), along with a written job offer, and you fit most of the requirements to apply for immigration....

Some of my former students (mostly Chinese) have gotten in under these guidelines. Canada seems much easier to enter and live in than the US does, but I only know what my students have told me, and from some info from http://canamglobal.com/noc.htm which provides immigration services and information

Yes and terrorist would agree that it is much easier to enter through Canada coming off a plane, etc. Then it is rather easy to enter the US from Canada (albeit illegally) through one of the unmanned road crossings.

Regardless of what you have heard of or think you have heard of, Larry is right. There is no such thing as a "work permit" in the US.

If you're going to try to spam the group, at least try to get some of your facts right.

And the terrorist still has to enter the U.S. and pass through U.S. customs, is what your saying that the U.S. customs inspectors are blind? Stupid? Not doing their job? Everytime I enter the U.S. it isn't as easy as you say. Profiling is big to. Ever cross the border lately?

Things definitely have improved, and I assume will get even tighter. But before 9/11 there were some unmanned roads (no immigration or customs checks) in remote areas on the US/Canada border that one could just drive across into the US. Not sure if those roads are still open, or still unmanned, but someone could backpack across the border in remote areas, especially if there was someone to pick them up once they crossed. The basic problem is that Canada has fairly lax immigration laws.

Yes, I have crossed the border lately, and saw them take someone of Middle Eastern decent (who was on my inbound plane) into custody at SF airport, presumable because of visa violations or some other immigration irregularity.

Canada has pretty much similar immigration policy as the U.S. The numbers of entries into both countries is basically the same and difficulty or level of ease is also the same. There was an interesting meeting on the No Spin Zone about two months ago, between Bill Oreilly and the Canadian Immigration Minister. Bill tried to put her down, did his usual best to bad mouth the Canadian "open" policy and she had all her statistics available of both sides and the numbers of illegal and legal are basically the same. Hurtles are also basically the same. Different titles but same obstacles. The borders are much more enforced on the U.S. side, you have armed inspectors with vests, cuffs, a more experienced level inspectors. On the Canadian side, the primary inspection booths are mostly students and mostly concerned about collecting tariffs, taxes, duties and also looking for citizenship and proper documents. Of course the U.S. side is in heightened security levels and also inspects as you leave U.S.





 
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