Saturday, August 23, 2025

55 MILLION? WTF? Trump Administration Reviewing 55 Million Visas for Violations

THAT'S 16% OF THE US TOTAL POPULATION!

We don't need this many non-citizens in our country. 

ENOUGH!

The Biden administration, in addition to allowing at least 10 million illegal aliens into the country according to CBP data, failed to deport at least 3,095,577 who had already been encountered. More than 617,000 of these had criminal convictions or pending charges, and 1,323,264 with final deportation orders were still allowed to remain in the United States.

Since President Trump’s inauguration, the State Department has revoked more than twice as many visas as during the same period last year, including nearly four times as many student visas. Building on this trend, the administration has launched a sweeping review of more than 55 million valid U.S. visas under a system of “continuous vetting.”

The review is intended to determine whether visas that were legally issued should remain valid or be revoked. According to the State Department, all current visa holders are subject to screening for overstays, criminal activity, security threats, terrorist links, and other disqualifying factors. If such evidence is found, visas will be revoked, and those already in the United States may face deportation.

The government is on track to deport 400,000 people in 2025, according to New York Times estimates. This effort accompanies widespread raids on restaurants, construction sites, and farms, as well as courthouse arrests of individuals attending civil appointments meant to help legalize their status.          

In short, while these individuals currently appear to have valid visas, the ongoing review aims to identify those who may have violated the terms or become ineligible since the visas were granted.

The review covers a wide range of visa categories, including student visas (F-1 and J-1), temporary work visas (H-1B, H-2B, and others), B-1/B-2 tourist and business visas, multiple-entry tourist visas, exchange visitor programs, and other temporary visa types. Large populations from countries not in the Visa Waiver Program—such as China, India, Indonesia, Russia, and most African nations—are also included, since their citizens must apply for visas to travel to the United States.

According to the Department of Homeland Security, there were 12.8 million green-card holders and 3.6 million people in the U.S. on temporary visas last year. The total figure of 55 million under review suggests that many of those being screened are currently outside the country but hold multiple-entry tourist visas that allow them to travel back and forth.

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