Post-Covid-19, as the vaccines have begun to ease tensions and travel tourism is opening up, rules are being put into place by countries as they welcome arrivals.
The Atlantic
Older Americans receive generous benefits, but the immigrants who support them receive little from the government.
January 24, 2021
Lecturer at the Stanford Graduate School of Business
Alicia Valeriano, originally from Mexico City, pictured at home in Freehold, New Jersey. Because she doesn’t have a Social Security number, her family did not qualify for aid under the CARES Act, even though she has paid taxes for 18 years.Ed Kashi / VII / Redux
Some of the couples eligible for coronavirus-relief stimulus checks last year, and who could receive up to $2,800 more under Joe Biden’s proposed plan, paraded in their golf carts in support of Donald Trump through the Villages, a Florida community for people over 55. Many are retired and living comfortably, their benefits protected by the government safety net. If they
U.S. citizens with deported parents still separated during the holidays
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Erick Alcala, 19, was born in the U.S., but when he was 7 his parents were deported back to Mexico. He has graduated from high school, completed community college and now is looking forward to going to UTSABob Owen /San Antonio Express-NewsShow MoreShow Less
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Erick Alcala, 19, was born in the U.S., but when he was 7 his parents were deported back to Mexico. He has graduated from high school, completed community college and now is looking forward to going to UTSA, on Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2020.Bob Owen, Staff-photographer / San Antonio Express-NewsShow MoreShow Less