Episode 191

full
Published on:

2nd Jul 2024

Shifting Asylum Travel Patterns

For nearly three decades, immigrant opponents have focused their attacks on migrants from four countries – Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador – the four countries closest to the country’s southwest borders. 

They assert a border wall is needed.  Doors to entry need to be locked.

They fail to realize that the world’s migration flows have changed.

Their focus is misplaced.  Their solution is misguided.

Related Podcasts:

Episode 161: Vinnie The Brave

Episode 55: 71 Million Refugees

Recommended Links For More Information:

What You Need To Know About Cambodian Refugee Deportations

Will The U.S. Honor Its Permanent Residence Promises To Iraqi And Afghan Interpreters?

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About the Podcast

The Immigration Mastermind
The Immigration Mastermind is a podcast for immigrants and their families that shares tips, insights, and tidbits to help guide the quest for permanent residence and citizenship in the United States. The podcast strives to build knowledge, while dispelling myths in short bite-sized, easy-to-understand snippets of pull-no-punches information.

Designed for both immigrant families who have already started the immigration process and those just starting to think about their journey, the Immigration Mastermind provides a mix of expert tips about legal rules, insights about breaking news, and tidbits to help immigrants and their families to keep their chin up, even when the road to success seems to be a never-ending road.

About your host

Profile picture for Carlos Batara

Carlos Batara

Carlos Batara is an immigration lawyer, author, educator, public speaker, and online talk show host. A graduate of Harvard Law School, he has cared for, protected, and guided immigrants from over 100 countries on their journeys to the United States. His goal is to help at least one family from every nation in the world before he calls it quits.

With family roots from Mexico, Spain, and the Philippines, as well as Native American, Greek, and Turkish ancestry, he brings a broad multicultural background to the practice of immigration law.

Combined with knowledge gained from advanced studies in international relations and constitutional politics, Carlos is always willing to speak his mind openly on immigration issues.