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    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Free Trade With Communist Nations - Is It A Recipe For Disaster?

    3 Hours Ago by John Risselada

    Free Trade With Communist Nations - Is It A Recipe For Disaster?

    As we watch communist China slowly position itself to replace the U.S. as the world’s dominant economic power I think an analysis of how this occurred, and what the consequences are is in order. First we have to understand that the major objective of communism is the discrediting and the destruction of capitalism, while giving the illusion that communism is the higher (more fair) economic order.

    This is evident by reading goal number 31 which states:

    Belittle all forms of American culture (this would include capitalism and private property rights) and discourage the teaching of American history on the ground that it was only a minor part of the big picture. Give more emphasis to Russian history since the communists took over.

    Again, what this entails is the effort to infiltrate our cultural institutions and America in all its aspects and give the impression that communism is our savior. (Many of the community organizing tactics that I have written about would be applicable here as well.) Today, nearly half of our population believes that capitalism is their oppressor, and they have demonstrated an eager willingness to replace it with democratic socialism. President Obama, a community organizer, has done a great job of convincing these people that capitalism is what is keeping them down.

    With the help of his Weather Underground buddy Bill Ayers writing the text books, we have our universities essentially training our kids to go against themselves and their own best interest. All the while the world watches as the value of the U.S. dollar plummets and the Chinese economy continues to grow. The message to the uneducated people of the world is that Communism is a better economic system.

    How did this happen and what are the consequences? I believe they accomplished this bait and switch tactic by allowing Communist China into the Permanent Normal Trade Relations (free trade) in 2002. Many Americans already understand, but this is what caused the rapid loss of manufacturing jobs to the Communist nation. Since 2002 the U.S. lost roughly 50,000 jobs per month. Liberals blame George Bush and conservatives blame Obama, however the truth is much more frightening. Both Republicans and Democrats have been negotiating trade agreements with the commies for a long time. The issue of free trade between the Soviets and the U.S. goes back to the Eisenhower administration. Don’t forget NAFTA signed by Bill Clinton with the help of republican Newt Gingrich. These free trade agreements are also the reason we are continually hearing that the lowered standard of living many of us are experiencing is the new normal, and the prosperity we once knew will not be returning.

    Today’s programmed automaton lacks the education in historical fact to understand what is going on. They are convinced that China’s economic model is successful without understanding the differences between their model and ours. For instance they don’t understand that communism means government controlling everything. They don’t understand the consequences of that anyway. With this being said they also don’t understand that the Chinese model is successful because of the next to nothing wages the Chinese workers earn while the government rakes in all the profits. The profits of course are being derived from the trillions in cheap goods they ship to our shores without even having to pay a tariff. They also suffer from serious delusions as they lack the ability to connect the dots between the falling value of the dollar and the over regulated economy that is making it fall. In other words we have been conned into selling our sovereignty without even knowing it because we have been kept happy with a false bill of goods.

    The consequences of this are nothing short of a loss of the country. In fact, I believe we have had some major wool pulled over our eyes. Would it shock you to know that the Chinese have bought AMC Theaters and Smithfield Foods? Here is a list of a small portion of what the Chinese have invested in within the U.S. Cnooc and Sinopec are both Chinese corporations.

    Colorado: Cnooc gained a one-third stake in 800,000 acres in northeast Colorado and southeast Wyoming in a $1.27 billion pact with Chesapeake Energy Corp.

    Louisiana: Sinopec has a one-third interest in 265,000 acres in the Tuscaloosa Marine Shale after a broader $2.5-billion deal with Devon Energy.

    Michigan: Sinopec gained a one-third interest in 350,000 acres in a larger $2.5 billion deal with Devon Energy.

    Ohio: Sinopec acquired a one-third stake in Devon Energy’s 235,000 Utica Shale acres in a larger $2.5 billion deal.

    Oklahoma: Sinopec has a one-third interest in 215,000 acres in a broader $2.5 billion deal with Devon Energy.

    Texas: Cnooc acquired a one-third interest in Chesapeake Energy’s 600,000 acres in the Eagle Ford Shale in a $2.16-billion deal.

    Wyoming: Cnooc has a one-third stake in 800,000 acres in northeast Colorado and southeast Wyoming after a $1.27 billion pact with Chesapeake Energy. Sinopec gained a one-third interest in Devon Energy’s 320,000 acres as part of a larger $2.5 billion deal.

    Also, the Chinese are building their own “special economic zone” which is essentially a self-sustaining Chinese city that will cover 50 square miles in Idaho. This is a city that is built exclusively for Chinese purposes and only Chinese people with Chinese jobs will be able to live there.

    Folks, if we don’t wake up it will be too late when we finally realize we have been sold to the highest bidder. Do you think the Chinese care about your rights? No, they only care about where they’re going to put 1.6 billion Chinamen. The loss of economic prowess in the U.S. sets the stage for the “elite” to establish their “dictatorship of experts” while empowering the communists with the economic power needed to assert their influence on a global scale. This is no joke America, nothing less than your children’s futures are on the line here. It’s time to turn off the alarm clock ringing next to your bed and get up and get to work America.

    http://library.cqpress.com/cqresearc...srre1959090200

    http://townhall.com/columnists/phyll...4749/page/full

    http://www.militaryphotos.net/forums...Of-Boise-Idaho


    http://freedomoutpost.com/2013/06/fr...-for-disaster/
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    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
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    S744 give preference to immigrants from countries with free trade agreements . Let the mass colonization begin!

    Summary: S.744 — 113th Congress (2013-2014)


    There is one summary of the bill.

    Shown Here:
    Introduced in Senate (04/17/2013)


    Border Security, Economic Opportunity, and Immigration Modernization Act - States that passage of this Act recognizes that the primary tenets of its success depend on securing U.S. sovereignty and establishing a coherent and just system for integrating those who seek to join American society.
    Establishes a Southern Border Security Commission if the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has not achieved effective control in all high-risk border sectors within five years after enactment of this Act.
    States that the Commission's primary responsibility shall be to make border security policy recommendations to the President, the Secretary of Homeland Security (Secretary), and Congress.
    Directs the Secretary to implement: (1) a Comprehensive Southern Border Security Strategy for achieving control between the ports of entry in all high-risk sectors along the Southern border, and (2) a Southern Border Fencing Strategy to identify where fencing and technology should be deployed along the Southern border.
    Establishes in the Treasury the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Trust Fund.
    Prohibits the Secretary from processing applications for registered provisional immigrant status (RPI), as established by this Act, until the Secretary has submitted to Congress the notice of commencement of implementation of the Comprehensive Southern Border Security Strategy and the Southern Border Fencing Strategy.
    Prohibits the Secretary from adjusting RPI aliens to lawful permanent resident status, with certain exceptions, until the Secretary certifies to the President and Congress that: (1) the Comprehensive Southern Border Security Strategy is substantially operational, (2) the Southern Border Fencing Strategy is substantially completed, (3) a mandatory employment verification system to be used by all employers to prevent unauthorized workers from obtaining U.S. employment has been implemented, and (4) an electronic exit system at air and sea ports of entry that operates by collecting machine-readable visa or passport information from air and vessel carriers is in use.
    Title I: Border Security - Directs the Secretary to increase the number of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officers by 3,500 by September 30, 2017.
    Authorizes the governor of a state, with the approval of the Secretary of Defense (DOD), to order National Guard units or personnel to perform operations in the Southwest border region to assist CBP in securing the southern border. Directs DOD to provide material and logistical assistance as needed.
    Directs the Secretary to: (1) increase the number of border crossing prosecutions in the Tucson sector of the Southwest border region, (2) enhance border infrastructure, and (3) establish a two-year grant program to improve emergency communications in the Southwest border region.
    Directs the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to enhance law enforcement and operational readiness along the U.S. borders through Operation Stonegarden.
    Directs the Secretary of Agriculture (USDA) or the Secretary of the Interior to provide CBP personnel with immediate access to federal lands in the Southwest border region in Arizona for security activities.
    Directs the Attorney General (DOJ) to reimburse state, county, tribal, and municipal governments for costs associated with the prosecution and pre-trial detention of federally initiated criminal cases declined by local offices of the United States Attorneys.
    Requires CBP to deploy additional mobile, video, and agent-portable surveillance systems, and unmanned aerial vehicles in the Southwest border region.
    Authorizes appropriations for the state criminal alien assistance program (SCAAP) through FY2015.
    Directs the Secretary to: (1) issue policies regarding the use of force by DHS personnel; and (2) provide appropriate training for CBP officers, U.S. Border Patrol officers, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents, and agriculture specialists stationed within 100 miles of any U.S. land or marine border, or at any U.S. port of entry.
    Establishes the Department of Homeland Security Border Oversight Task Force.
    Title II: Immigrant Visas - Subtitle A: Registration and Adjustment of Registered Provisional Immigrants - Authorizes the Secretary, after conducting the required national security and law enforcement clearances, to grant RPI status to an alien unlawfully in the United States who: (1) meets specified eligibility requirements, (2) applies before the end of the application period, (3) has paid the required fee and penalty if applicable, and (4) has been physically present in the United States since December 31, 2011, and maintains such presence until RPI status has been granted.
    Sets forth bars to eligibility based upon criminal convictions, terrorist activity, and grounds for excludability.
    Provides derivative RPI status to the spouse or child of an RPI alien if the spouse or child is physically present in the United States: (1) on the date on which the RPI alien is granted such status and on or before December 30, 2012, and (2) meets specified eligibility requirements.
    Requires an alien applicant to satisfy federal tax liabilities and security and law enforcement clearances.
    Grants RPI status for an initial six-year period, which may be extended under specified conditions.
    Permits an RPI alien to work and travel outside the United States under specified conditions.
    Enumerates the grounds under which the Secretary may revoke RPI status.
    Prohibits an RPI alien from being removed unless such person was ineligible for RPI status or RPI status has been revoked.
    Makes an RPI alien ineligible for any federal means-tested benefit, and considers such person to be a noncitizen for certain other federal benefits.
    Authorizes an RPI alien to be issued a Social Security number.
    Authorizes the Secretary to adjust the status of an RPI alien to that of an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence if such person meets specified eligibility requirements, including: (1) evidence of employment or full-time education, and (2) English language skills.
    Prohibits an RPI alien from applying for legal permanent resident status until the Secretary of State certifies that immigrant visas have become available for all approved petitions filed before the date of enactment of this Act.
    States that an RPI alien may only adjust status under the merit-based system provided for by this Act.
    States that a lawful permanent resident who was lawfully present in the United States and eligible for work authorization for not less than 10 years before becoming a lawful permanent resident may be naturalized in three years upon compliance with all requirements if such person, immediately preceding the date of filing a naturalization application, has: (1) been physically present in the United States for at least 50% of the three-year period preceding such filing date, and (2) resided for at least three months in the state or the jurisdiction of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services field office in which the application was filed.
    Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors Act of 2013 or DREAM Act 2013 - Authorizes the Secretary to adjust the status of an RPI alien to that of a lawful permanent resident if the person demonstrates that he or she: (1) has been in RPI status for at least five years; (2) was younger than 16 years of age when such person entered the United States; (3) has earned a high school diploma or obtained a general education development certificate in the United States; (4) has acquired a degree from an institution of higher education or has completed at least two years in a program for a bachelor's or higher degree in the United States, or has served in the Uniformed Services for at least four years and, if discharged, received an honorable discharge; and (5) has provided a list of each secondary school attended in the United States.
    Prohibits the Secretary from adjusting the status of an RPI alien to lawful permanent resident status unless the person: (1) satisfies citizenship requirements, (2) submits appropriate biometric and biographic data, and (3) undergoes security and law enforcement background checks.
    Considers for naturalization purposes an RPI alien granted lawful permanent resident status to have been: (1) lawfully admitted for permanent residence, and (2) in the United States as an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence during the period the alien was in RPI status.
    Amends the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 to repeal the denial of an unlawful alien's eligibility for higher education benefits based on state residence unless a U.S. national is similarly eligible without regard to such state residence.
    Sets forth RPI program provisions regarding: (1) prohibited and required disclosures, (2) employer protections, (3) audits and information evaluation, (4) administrative review, (5) privacy and civil liberties, and (6) judicial review.
    Establishes a criminal penalty of up to $10,000 for a person who knowingly uses, publishes, or permits the improper use of RPI application information.
    Authorizes the Secretary to establish within U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services a program to award grants to eligible nonprofit organizations to assist RPI applicants.
    Establishes a Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands-only lawful permanent resident status for certain long-term Commonwealth legal residents. Authorizes such aliens to receive an immigrant visa or to adjust to lawful permanent (U.S.) resident status beginning five years after the date of enactment of this Act.
    Subtitle B: Agricultural Worker Program - Agricultural Worker Program Act of 2013 - Directs the Secretary to confer "blue card status" upon an alien who: (1) has performed specified periods of agricultural employment in the United States or is a qualifying alien's spouse or child, (2) applied for such status during the one-year application period (with a discretionary 18-month extension period), and (3) is not ineligible under the grounds applicable to RPI aliens.
    Prohibits the Secretary from granting blue card status to an alien (or dependent spouse or child) unless such person submits eligibility-related security and law enforcement biometric and biographic data.
    States that blue card status expires eight years after the date on which final blue card regulations are published.
    Permits a blue card alien to work and travel outside the United States under specified conditions.
    Enumerates the grounds under which the Secretary may revoke blue card status.
    Makes a blue card alien ineligible for any federal means-tested benefit.
    Authorizes the Secretary to adjust the status of an alien who has been granted blue card status to RPI status if the alien is unable to fulfill the agricultural service requirement.
    Directs the Secretary to adjust a blue card alien (and spouse and children) to permanent resident status if the alien has fulfilled specified periods of agricultural employment.
    Amends the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) to create: (1) a W-3 nonimmigrant visa for an alien to perform agricultural services who has a written contract that specifies the wages, benefits, and working conditions of such full-time employment with a designated agricultural employer for a specified period of time; and (2) a W-4 nonimmigrant visa for an alien to perform agricultural services who has a full-time employment offer from a designated agricultural employer for such employment.
    Establishes the nonimmigrant agricultural (W-3 and W-4 visa) worker program.
    Sets forth employer and worker program provisions and requirements, including penalties for program violations and U.S. worker protections.
    Establishes a limit for the first five years of the program which may be adjusted annually based upon specified demand and economic factors.
    Bases subsequent year limitations upon specified demand and economic factors.
    Provides for a three-year period of admission, with one additional three-year extension without having to leave the United States.
    Provides for worker portability.
    Prohibits derivative status for the spouses and children of program aliens.
    Excludes W-3 and W-4 workers from need-based federal financial assistance programs.
    Establishes a cut-off date for petitioning for H-2A temporary agricultural workers that is one year after the effective date of the regulations implementing the agricultural worker program under this Act.
    Subtitle C: Future Immigration - Establishes a merit-based and points immigrant admissions system.
    Provides for: (1) 120,000 admissions per fiscal year, annual increases based upon specified conditions, and a maximum admissions cap of 250,000; (2) recapture of unused visas; and (3) lawful permanent resident status for such entrants.
    Provides that: (1) for the first four fiscal years the worldwide level of merit-based immigrant visas shall be available for skilled workers, professionals, and certain other workers; and (2) for subsequent fiscal years preference will be given to tier 1 and tier 2 aliens based upon a point allocation system.
    Awards tier 1 and tier 2 points to applicants for specified criteria, including: (1) education, (2) employment, (3) entrepreneurship, (4) high demand occupation, (5) English language, (6) age, (7) country of origin, and ( family relationships.
    Provides that: (1) RPI aliens may begin accruing points no earlier than 10 years after enactment of this Act, and (2) aliens with a pending or approved petition in another immigrant category are ineligible for a merit-based immigrant visa.
    Makes specified employment- and family-based applicants and long-term workers eligible for merit-based immigrant visas beginning on October 1, 2014.
    Sets forth worldwide levels of employment- and family-based immigrants.
    Includes the spouse or minor child of a lawful permanent resident alien in the definition of "immediate family."
    Eliminates the per-country limit for employment-based immigrants and increases the per-country limit for family-based immigrants.
    Revises family-based immigrant visa allocations for: (1) unmarried sons and daughters of U.S. citizens, (2) married sons and daughters of U.S. citizens (and requires that they be under 31 years old at time of filing, and (3) unmarried sons and daughters of U.S. lawful permanent residents. Eliminates the visa category for brothers and sisters of U.S. citizens.
    Includes among immigrants not subject to numerical limitations aliens: (1) who are derivative beneficiaries of employment-based immigrants; (2) with extraordinary ability in the sciences, arts, education, business, or athletics; (3) who are outstanding professors and researchers; (4) who are multinational executives and managers; (5) who have earned a doctorate degree; (6) who are physicians with completed foreign residency requirements; and (7) who have earned a graduate degree in a field of science, technology, engineering, or mathematics (STEM field) from an accredited U.S. institution of higher education with an offer of U.S. employment.
    Increases visa allocations for: (1) certain special immigrants, (2) employment creation immigrants, and (3) skilled workers and professionals.
    Repeals the diversity immigrant program as of October 1, 2014. Permits aliens selected for FY2013 or FY2014 to retain program eligibility.
    Revises nonimmigrant V-visa (spouses and children of lawful permanent residents coming to the United States to wait for completion of the immigrant visa process) provisions.
    Makes fiances of lawful permanent residents eligible for a nonimmigrant K-visa (fiance or fiancee).
    Redefines "child" for purposes of titles I and II of INA to include a stepchild under 21 years old.
    Permits children under 18 years old to be adopted.
    Provides specified relief for orphans and spouses regarding: (1) petitions for immediate relative status, (2) parole eligibility, (3) naturalization, (4) processing of immigrant visas and derivative petitions, (5) waivers of inadmissibility, (6) surviving relative consideration for certain petitions and applications, and (7) immediate relative status.
    Authorizes an immigration judge, under specified conditions, to: (1) decline to order an alien removed, deported, or excluded; and (2) terminate such proceedings.
    Revises waiver of inadmissibility provisions, including: (1) waiving inadmissibility for certain persons who entered the United States before they were 16 years old who have earned a degree from a U.S. institution of higher education; (2) adding a three-year limit on immigration-related misrepresentations; and (3) waiving inadmissibility for false claims of U.S. citizenship by persons under 18 years old, or otherwise lacking mental competence.
    Extends the Iraqi special immigrant visa program and the Afghan special immigrant visa program. Requires application processing improvements.
    Makes the special immigrant non-minister religious worker and the EB-5 regional center programs permanent.
    Subtitle D: Conrad State 30 and Physician Access - Makes the J-1 visa waiver (Conrad state 30/medical services in underserved areas) program permanent.
    Excludes from numerical immigration limitations alien physicians who have completed national interest waiver requirements by working in a health care shortage area (including alien physicians who completed such service before the date of enactment of this Act and their spouse and children).
    Sets forth specified employment protections and contract requirements for alien physicians working in underserved areas.
    Increases the number of alien physicians that a state may be allocated to 35 per fiscal year under specified circumstances. Provides for additional increases or decreases based upon demand.
    Provides up to three visa waivers per fiscal year per state for physicians in academic medical centers.
    Permits dual intent for an alien coming to the United States to receive graduate medical education or training, or to take examinations required for graduate medical education or training.
    Subtitle E: Integration - Renames the Office of Citizenship of DHS as the Office of Citizenship and New Americans. Authorizes the Office to make grants to states and local governments to assist them in integrating immigrants.
    Authorizes the Secretary, through U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, to: (1) establish the United States Citizenship Foundation to expand citizenship preparation programs; and (2) award initial entry, adjustment, and citizenship assistance grants to eligible nonprofit organizations for immigration integration programs.
    Waives, with respect to naturalization: (1) English language and civics requirements for persons over 65 years old who have lived in the United States for at least 5 years as lawful permanent residents, and (2) the English language requirement for persons over 60 years old who have lived in the United States for at least 10 years as lawful permanent residents.
    Title III: Interior Enforcement - Subtitle A: Employment Verification System - Prohibits an employer from: (1) hiring, recruiting, or referring for a fee an alien who is not authorized to work in the United States or failing to comply with E-Verify or document requirements; or (2) continuing to employ an unauthorized alien.
    Authorizes an employer to rely on a state employment agency's referral of an employee if the agency has certified that it has complied with document requirements.
    Provides a good faith defense for an employer who has complied with document and E-Verify requirements.
    Requires an employer to: (1) examine specified documents to verify an individual's identity and employment status and use an identity authentication mechanism once it becomes available, and (2) retain verification records for the later of three years after hiring or one year after termination.
    Requires an employee to provide an employer with such documents and attest that he or she is authorized to work in the United States.
    Sets forth employer penalties and civil rights protections.
    States that these provisions shall not be construed to authorize the establishment of a national identification card.
    Requires: (1) federal agencies and departments to participate in E-Verify 90 days after the date of enactment of this Act, (2) federal contractors to participate as provided for by a final rule, (3) employers with more than 5,000 employees to participate within two years after implementing regulations are published, (4) employers with more than 500 employees to participate within three years after implementing regulations are published, (5) agricultural laborers to participate four years after enactment of the Legal Workforce Act, (6) tribal employers to participate within five years after implementing regulations are published, and (7) all other employers to participate within four years after implementing regulations are published.
    Provides that one year after implementing regulations are published the Secretary may authorize or direct critical infrastructure employers to participate in E-Verify.
    States that failure to participate in E-Verify shall constitute a civil violation.
    Sets forth E-Verify program provisions.
    Requires that within five years all Social Security cards issued shall be fraud-, tamper-, wear-, and identity theft-resistant.
    Makes specified forms of Social Security fraud punishable by fine, up to five years' imprisonment, or both.
    Amends the Social Security Act to direct the Commissioner of Social Security (SSA) establish a secure method to check specified employee data against SSA data in order to confirm identity and employment eligibility.
    Makes it an unfair immigration-related employment practice for a person, entity, or employment agency to discriminate based upon an individual's national origin or citizenship status with respect to hiring, firing, or verifying employment eligibility.
    Subtitle B: Protecting United States Workers - Expands the U-visa (crime victims) category to include aliens who have suffered substantial physical or mental abuse or harm, or who would suffer extreme hardship upon removal, as a result of having been a victim of the following covered violations: (1) certain workplace abuses, (2) slavery or trafficking in persons, or (3) deprivation of due process or constitutional rights.
    Provides specified protections for aliens arrested or detained as part of a workplace enforcement action at a facility about which a workplace claim has been filed, including non-removal until interviewed by DHS.
    Authorizes a U-visa applicant to work in the United States.
    Limits the disclosure of information provided by alien victims of certain crimes.
    Subtitle C: Other Provisions - Establishes in the Treasury the Interior Enforcement Account.
    Directs the Secretary, by December 31, 2015, to establish a mandatory exit data system that shall include the collection of data from machine-readable visas, passports, and other travel and entry documents for all aliens who are exiting the United States from air and sea ports of entry.
    Directs the Secretary to implement an interoperable electronic data system to access database information from federal law enforcement agencies and the intelligence community for purposes of visa issuance or admissibility or deportability.
    Requires an appropriate official of each commercial aircraft or vessel departing from the United States to any port or place outside the United States to ensure transmission to CBP of identity-theft resistant departure manifest information covering alien passengers, crew, and non-crew.
    Prohibits federal law enforcement officers, in making routine law enforcement decisions (such as ordinary traffic stops), from using race or ethnicity to any degree, except that officers may rely on race and ethnicity if a specific suspect description exists.
    Subtitle D: Asylum and Refugee Provisions - Eliminates the one-year time limit for filing an asylum claim.
    Permits, and sets forth the requirements for, reopening a claim that was denied because of failure to file within one year.
    Authorizes the spouse or child of a refugee or asylee to bring his or her accompanying or joining child into the United States as a refugee or asylee.
    Authorizes the President to designate refugee groups.
    Authorizes: (1) the Secretary to designate specific groups of individuals as stateless persons, (2) the Secretary or the Attorney General to provide conditional lawful status to a qualifying stateless person who is otherwise inadmissible or deportable, and (3) the Secretary or the Attorney General to adjust such person to lawful permanent resident status after one year in conditional lawful status.
    Sets forth protections for stateless persons in the United States, including work and travel authorizations.
    Increases the number of annual U-visas, with a set-aside for victims of a covered violation.
    Subtitle E: Shortage of Immigration Court Resources for Removal Proceedings - Directs the Attorney General to: (1) increase the number of immigration court judges and Immigration Board of Appeals staff attorneys in each of FY2014-FY2016; (2) appoint counsel in certain removal proceedings involving an unaccompanied child, an individual with a serious mental disability, or a particularly vulnerable individual; and (3) establish within the Executive Office for Immigration Review an Office of Legal Access Programs to develop programs to make immigration proceedings more efficient by educating aliens regarding administrative procedures and legal rights.
    Requires the Board of Immigration Appeals to review decisions of immigration judges.
    Subtitle F: Prevention of Trafficking in Persons and Abuses Involving Workers Recruited Abroad - Requires any person who engages in foreign labor contracting to disclose in writing in English and in the primary language of the worker being recruited specified information, including the identity of the employer and the recruiter, worker protections, and a signed copy of the work contract.
    Requires a foreign labor contractor to register with the Secretary of Labor. Sets forth registration requirements.
    Prohibits certain recruitment fees.
    Prohibits any person who engages in foreign labor contracting from discriminating in hiring based upon race, color, creed, sex, national origin, religion, age, or disability.
    Directs the Secretary of Labor to: (1) maintain a list of all foreign labor contractors registered and a list of all foreign labor contractors whose registration has been revoked; and (2) establish a process for receipt, investigation, and disposition of complaints.
    Sets forth administrative and civil action enforcement provisions.
    Subtitle G: Interior Enforcement - Makes an alien who has been convicted of an offense for which an element was active and knowing participation in a criminal street gang inadmissible and deportable.
    Makes an alien inadmissible who is physically outside the United States and since the age of 18 knowingly and willingly participated in a criminal street gang.
    Makes an alien who is at least 18 years old ineligible for RPI status for such criminal street gang activities.
    Makes an alien who has been convicted three or more times for driving under the influence or driving while intoxicated inadmissible and deportable.
    Revises criminal penalty and related affirmative defense provisions regarding illegal entry and reentry.
    Increases: (1) monetary penalties for owners and operators of vessels and aircraft regarding stowaways and execution of removal orders; and (2) criminal penalties for passport and immigration fraud, including penalties for a passport crime committed to facilitate international terrorism or drug trafficking.
    Authorizes the Attorney General to commence a civil action to enjoin any fraudulent immigration service provider from continuing to provide services that substantially interfere with the administration of the immigration laws or from continuing to willfully misrepresent such provider's legal authority to provide representation.
    Makes an alien who is convicted of a passport or visa violation under the federal criminal code inadmissible and removable.
    Makes certain aliens inadmissible who: (1) refuse to comply with a lawful request for biometric information; (2) have been convicted of a crime of domestic violence, stalking, child abuse, child neglect, or child abandonment; or (3) are in violation of a domestic protection order by engaging in conduct that constitutes criminal contempt of such order.
    Prohibits an individual acting for financial gain from directing or participating in an effort to bring or attempt to bring five or more persons unlawfully into the United States. Establishes: (1) monetary and/or prison penalties for such actions; and (2) increased penalties for such actions that result in death or serious bodily injury or that place a life in jeopardy or involve bribery of a government official, robbery, or sexual abuse.
    Makes it a crime to: (1) transmit to another person the location, movement, or activities of law enforcement agents while intending to further a federal crime relating to U.S. immigration; and (2) destroy, alter, or damage any physical or electronic device used by the federal government to control the border or any port of entry.
    Prohibits the carrying or use of a firearm in an alien smuggling crime.
    Directs the Secretary to establish secure alternatives programs with community-based organizations to ensure appearances at immigration proceedings and public safety.
    Prohibits a U.S. national from renouncing his or her citizenship during wartime.
    Authorizes the Secretary to use secure alternatives programs to maintain custody over detained aliens, except for terrorist aliens.
    Sets forth oversight and related provisions for detention facilities.
    Directs the Secretary of State, upon notification from the Secretary, to prohibit visas to be granted to persons of a country whose government denies or unreasonably delays accepting their citizens, subjects, nationals, or residents back.
    Makes inadmissible an alien who has committed acts of torture, extrajudicial killings, war crimes, or systematic attacks on civilians.
    Title IV: Reforms to Nonimmigrant Visa Programs - Subtitle A: Employment-based Nonimmigrant Visas - Establishes: (1) an H-1B visa (specialty occupation) cap of 110,000 for the fiscal year after the date of enactment of this Act; and (2) a market and unemployment based adjustment mechanism that increases or reduces the annual cap by not more than 10,000, with a minimum floor of 110,000 and a maximum ceiling of 180,000.
    Limits the exemption from H-1B numerical limitations to STEM occupations and increases the annual STEM allocation to 25,000.
    Authorizes an H-1B spouse to work if he or she is the national of a country that permits reciprocal employment.
    Provides deference to prior H-1B or L-visa (intra-company transferee) adjudications involving the same employer and nonimmigrant absent material error, changed circumstances, or new information adversely affecting eligibility.
    Provides a 60-day lawful status period for an H-1B nonimmigrant whose employment is terminated.
    Authorizes visa revalidation within the United States for specified nonimmigrant visa categories.
    Establishes: (1) in the Treasury the STEM Education and Training Account, and (2) a low-income STEM scholarship program.
    Subtitle B: H-1B Visa Fraud and Abuse Protections - Revises H-1B requirements for employer applications and application reviews.
    Revises provisions regarding nonimmigrant nurses (H-1C visa) in health professional shortage areas to: (1) permit a one-time three-year extension of admission, (2) reduce the maximum number of such visas per fiscal year to 300, and (3) authorize such nonimmigrants to accept new employment as a registered nurse at any H-1C-qualifying facility.
    Revises provisions regarding complaints against H-1B employers, including: (1) extending the statute of limitations on complaint investigations, (2) increasing fines for specified violations, (3) enhancing whistle-blower protections, and (4) authorizing the Department of Labor to initiate investigations.
    Directs the Secretary of Labor to establish an H-1B recruitment website.
    Establishes: (1) specified filing fees foe H-1B-dependent employers, and (2) a fee for premium processing of employment-based immigrant petitions.
    Subtitle C: L Visa Fraud and Abuse Protections - Authorizes and enumerates the requirements for: (1) outplacement of L-visa nonimmigrants, and (2) 12-month approvals of new office L-visa petitions.
    Prohibits employers with 50 or more employees in the United States from hiring new or additional H-1B or L-visa workers if their workforce comprises more than 75% H-1B or L-visa workers in FY2015, 65% in FY2016, and 50% H-1B and L-visa workers in FY2017 and thereafter. (Excludes nonprofit institutions of higher education or nonprofit research organizations from such limitation.)
    Sets forth filing fee provisions.
    Authorizes the Secretary to initiate complaints against L-visa employers. Sets forth related penalty provisions.
    Directs the Inspector General of DHS to report to Congress regarding the use of L-visa blanket petitions.
    Subtitle D: Other Nonimmigrant Visas - Authorizes dual intent for F-1 visa foreign students (and dependents), including students who commute from Canada or Mexico to study in the United States.
    Establishes additional accreditation requirements for colleges, universities, and language schools.
    **Revises the nonimmigrant E-visa (treaty trader) category to: (1) include aliens seeking to enter the United States pursuant to a bilateral investment treaty or a free trade agreement; (2) establish an E-4 visa for specialty occupation workers (other than from Chile, Singapore, or Australia) to enter the United States pursuant to a free trade agreement; and (3) establish an E-5 visa for specialty occupation workers who are nationals of the Republic of Korea (South Korea).
    Limits E-4 entrants to 5,000 per fiscal year per country.
    Includes in the nonimmigrant E-3 visa category certain nationals of Ireland coming to the United States under a treaty of commerce to perform specialty occupation services.
    Extends portability to certain nonimmigrant O-1 visa holders (extraordinary ability in the sciences, arts, education, business, or athletics, or extraordinary achievement in the motion picture or television industry).
    Eliminates the 12-month attendance limit for elementary and secondary foreign students.
    Subtitle E: Jobs Originated through Launching Travel Act of 2013 or the JOLT Act of 2013 - Directs the Secretary of State to establish a pilot fee-based premium processing service to expedite visa interview appointments.
    Authorizes the Secretary to admit into the United States a qualifying Canadian citizen over 55 years old and spouse for a period not to exceed 240 days if the person maintains a Canadian residence and owns a U.S. residence or has rented a U.S. accommodation for the duration of such stay.
    Establishes a nonimmigrant Y-visa for: (1) an alien who invests (and maintains) at least $500,000 in U.S. residential real estate, of which at least $250,000 must be for a U.S. primary residence where such person will reside for more than 180 days per year; and (2) such alien's accompanying spouse and children. Makes such visa renewable every three years.
    Requires a Y-visa alien to: (1) be at least 55 years old, (2) have purchased a qualifying residence, (3) not need public assistance, and (4) live in the United States for more than 180 days per year.
    Directs the Secretary to make publicly available each month data for the previous two years regarding visa appointment availability for each visa processing post to allow applicants to identify periods of low demand.
    Revises the visa waiver program to: (1) authorize the Secretary to designate any country as a program country; (2) adjust visa refusal rate criteria, including addition of a 3% maximum overstay rate; and (3) revise probationary and termination provisions.
    Authorizes the Secretary to expand registered traveler programs to include individuals who meet security requirements and are employed and sponsored by an international organization which maintains a strong working relationship with the United States.
    Prohibits enrollment of an individual who is a citizen of a state sponsor of terror.
    Directs the Secretary of State to require U.S. diplomatic and consular missions to: (1) conduct nonimmigrant visa application interviews expeditiously, consistent with national security requirements and in recognition of resource allocation considerations; and (2) explore expanding visa processing capacity in China and Brazil.
    Subtitle F: Reforms to the H-2B Visa Program - Exempts returning workers from the nonimmigrant H-2B visa (temporary nonagricultural services) annual numerical limitations through FY2018.
    Includes ski instructors in the nonimmigrant P-visa (athletes, artists, and entertainers).
    Requires H-2B employers to: (1) attest that they will not displace a U.S. worker in the same metropolitan statistical area where the H-2B worker will be hired within the period beginning 90 days before the start date and ending on the end date of the H-2B employment, (2) pay certain H-2B worker transportation costs, and (3) pay a $500 labor certification application fee.
    Authorizes the nonimmigrant admission of: (1) multinational executives and managers for up to 90 days to oversee U.S. operations of their related companies, (2) multinational company employees for up to 180 days to participate in leadership and development activities, and (3) certain relief workers for up to 90 days in response to a federal or state declared disaster. Prohibits the receipt of U.S.-sourced salaries for such activities.
    Establishes a nonimmigrant Z-visa for certain aliens coming to the United States for up to 90 days to perform health and safety-related maintenance or repairs for common carriers on equipment or machinery manufactured outside of the United States.
    Subtitle G: W Nonimmigrant Visas - Establishes the Bureau of Immigration and Labor Market Research which shall: (1) devise a methodology to determine the annual change to the W-visa nonimmigrant cap and use such methodology to set such caps, (2) supplement W-visa recruitment methods, (3) conduct a survey every three months of construction worker unemployment, (4) devise a methodology to designate shortage occupations by job zone, and (5) report to Congress on employment-based and immigrant and nonimmigrant visa programs.
    Establishes: (1) a nonimmigrant W-1 visa for an alien having a foreign residence who is coming to the United States to perform services or labor for a registered employer in a registered position, and (2) a nonimmigrant W-2 visa for the accompanying or joining spouse or children of such alien.
    Requires such alien to be certified abroad by the Secretary of State as eligible for a W-visa.
    Provides that: (1) a certified alien may be granted W-visa status for an initial three-year period, with additional three-year extensions which may be made while in the United States; and (2) a W-visa nonimmigrant must leave the United States if unemployed for more than 60 consecutive days.
    Sets forth employer registration and related provisions.
    Subtitle H: Investing in New Venture, Entrepreneurial Startups, and Technologies - Establishes a nonimmigrant X-visa for a qualified entrepreneur: (1) who has secured at least $100,000 in investments from an accredited investor, venture capitalist, or government entity for such alien's U.S. business; or (2) whose U.S. business has created at least three qualified jobs during the previous two years and has generated at least $250,000 in annual revenue in the United States.
    Provides for an initial three-year period of authorized admission, with three-year extensions based upon job creation, investment, or revenue and up to two one-year extensions based upon performance waivers.
    Establishes an immigrant investor visa (capped at 10,000 per year) for qualifying entrepreneur aliens (including aliens with advanced STEM degrees) living in the United States whose U.S. business has met specified job creation, revenue, and/or venture capital or investment requirements.
    http://beta.congress.gov/bill/113th-...enate-bill/744
    Last edited by Newmexican; 06-08-2013 at 10:01 PM.

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