US Immigration on the Easiest Setting

Is it a maze or a cakewalk? Internet feuds over “too easy” vs “impossible”

TLDR: A veteran immigrant says even with money and lawyers, U.S. immigration is a punishing paperwork maze, sparking a brawl in the comments. Some brag it’s not hard—just slow—others insist it’s nearly impossible without sponsors and cash, while cynics ask why the rich bother at all; the divide is the point.

Author says America’s immigration isn’t a line—it’s a boss fight. Even with money, English, and fancy lawyers, he describes 800–1,200-page “genius visa” binders (proof), 48-hour document scrambles, and forms where a single mistake feels like a trapdoor. He calls it a pay-to-play system that already favors the rich and slams federal enforcement with fiery language—then the comments explode.

One camp shrugs: “It’s not hard, just slow.” A DIYer claims they got a green card and citizenship without a lawyer, and another waves population stats to argue immigration is “too easy.” The other side fires back: “Legal immigration is very difficult to impossible,” warning that “just follow the rules” is a fantasy unless you’ve got a corporate sponsor and deep pockets. A cynic crashes the party asking why anyone rich would immigrate at all—“just do business or have a baby there”—which sparks eye-rolls and a fresh round of privilege arguments.

Gamers pile on with jokes about playing on “Easy Mode” still feeling like “Elden Ring,” while others quip the real final boss is the kid’s college aid forms. A veteran H‑1B worker says even the employer-backed route wasn’t “easy setting.” Beneath the memes, the vibe is clear: same maze, wildly different maps, and everyone’s sure they’re right.

Key Points

  • The author obtained an initial U.S. work visa more than 25 years ago and became a U.S. citizen in 2022, describing the system as complex and high-stakes.
  • They argue the system effectively favors affluent, English-speaking applicants due to high legal costs and reliance on specialized immigration lawyers.
  • Employer-sponsored immigration is described as common and can tie residency to employment; the author instead hired their own lawyers and faced heavy documentation demands.
  • Immigration paperwork is presented as signed under penalty of perjury, with errors potentially leading to severe consequences, prompting extremely comprehensive filings (e.g., 800–1,200-page O-1 applications).
  • Post-naturalization, the author notes continued administrative interactions, including a child’s college aid-related paperwork that queried naturalized citizenship status.

Hottest takes

“It’s not hard. It’s just time consuming and the wait times are very long.” — xenospn
“Clearly immigration to America isn’t hard. Judging by the numbers, it’s too easy.” — rayiner
“Summary: legal immigration is very difficult to impossible.” — kreetx
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