couple kotor doodles

seen from T1

seen from New Zealand
seen from China
seen from Poland
seen from Latvia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from France
seen from Poland
seen from Singapore
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Portugal

seen from New Zealand
seen from Japan
couple kotor doodles
@jan-jan-binks
🎵When I was
An apprentice
My master
Took me to see the ashes
Of the planet he just ate :(
WAKE ME UP—
Directive claims that new process is due to ‘the high number of aliens claiming asylum’ in the US
Joseph Gedeon at The Guardian:
Applicants seeking a temporary visa to the United States must now tell a consular officer that they have not experienced harm and do not fear returning to their home country, according to new guidance issued from the state department. If they answer yes or decline to respond to either question, the chance they will be denied will increase dramatically. The Guardian obtained a State Department cable which instructs officers at every US embassy and consulate globally to amend their process and ask applicants to affirm they do not fear mistreatment if they return home as a prerequisite for the interview to continue. The two new questions are: “Have you experienced harm or mistreatment in your country of nationality or last habitual residence?” and “Do you fear harm or mistreatment in returning to your country of nationality?” The directive claims that the new process is designed to cut down on what the department claims are people misrepresenting themselves during the visa process. “The high number of aliens claiming asylum in the United States indicates that many aliens misrepresent this intention to consular officers in the visa application process and at US ports of entry,” the directive reads, “and that information collected from visa applicants under current guidance is inadequate to identify those applicants who fear harm or mistreatment in returning to their home country.” The cable was first reported by the Washington Post. It comes after a federal appeals court ruled that Donald Trump’s invocation of an “invasion” at the southern border to curtail asylum seekers was unlawful, a decision that in effect reopens the United States to migrants fleeing persecution abroad.
The state department issued nearly 11m non-immigrant visas in fiscal year 2024, and the latest data for 2025 is still being processed. The category covers everyone from people on vacation and university students to H-1B tech workers, seasonal farmhands and business executives. Under both US law and the 1951 Refugee Convention, the right to seek asylum is not conditional on how someone enters the country or what they told a visa officer. But Tuesday’s policy creates a screening mechanism that would filter out victims of persecution, including domestic abuse survivors, journalists who have received death threats or members of a persecuted religious minority, before they ever reach US soil, regardless of whether their stated purpose of travel is legitimate. There is also a risk of perjury. An applicant who correctly fears return but answers “no” to obtain a visa has made a material misrepresentation to a federal officer, which is a crime that carries a permanent bar from the United States.
More anti-refugee cruelty from the Trump Regime: The State Department tells US embassies to deny visas to applicants who say they fear return to their home country.
‘There are doctors in other countries. The US is not the world’s hospital!’ the far-right activist said
‘There are doctors in other countries. The US is not the world’s hospital!’ the far-right activist said
Far-right activist Laura Loomer is taking a victory lap for a new State Department policy decision: halting all visitor visas from Gaza.
The ban on students from the four countries comes amid a rise in anti-immigration sentiment in the UK.
The United Kingdom says it will end study visas for students from Afghanistan, Cameroon, Myanmar and Sudan, and work visas for Afghans, amid a rise in anti-immigration sentiment in the country. The UK Home Office said in a statement on Tuesday that “an ’emergency brake’ on visas has been imposed for the first time on nationals from four countries”, following a surge in asylum claims by students on study visas.
Continue Reading.
Amid the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown, some longtime US residents like Taylor who have visas, work permits or green cards fa