I'm sure that will change as Russians realise that the US is open to them...pErvinalia wrote: ↑Fri Apr 18, 2025 2:32 amTourism from Western countries is way down in the US. Another example of Trump shooting the US in the foot.

I'm sure that will change as Russians realise that the US is open to them...pErvinalia wrote: ↑Fri Apr 18, 2025 2:32 amTourism from Western countries is way down in the US. Another example of Trump shooting the US in the foot.
I've been wondering what they do about international travelers, coming through Canada, having some (legal for recreation) weed and forgetting some in their luggage on the way to the next country.JimC wrote: ↑Fri Apr 18, 2025 2:00 amhttps://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-04-17/ ... /105136846
There have been many reports of travellers, including Australians, being forced to allow US border officers to open up their phones, which are checked for political stuff. They are then refused entry...
I think Australians considering a tourist trip to the US should instead think Canada orJapan or Outer Mongolia...If you are planning a trip to the United States, consider taking a temporary or disposable "burner" phone, printing out bank statements and creating detailed itinerary plans.
These are some of the tips immigration lawyers say could help when facing scrutiny from US border security.
They also warn about getting "entrapped", and admitting to activities such as illicit drug use.
As the Trump administration continues its immigration crackdown, fears have been growing about "enhanced vetting" at airports.
No visa guarantees entry into the US, and border officials have broad powers to detain non-citizens and turn them away.
ICE agents arrested a former interpreter for the U.S. Army after he attended his asylum hearing in San Diego.
The man, who reportedly risked his life to aid American troops in Afghanistan for three years, was placed in handcuffs by a pair of immigration officers who concealed their faces with neck gaiters.
His arrest was captured on camera, with the agents moving to cuff him as soon as he walked out of a hearing on the fourth floor of a downtown courthouse, the Times of San Diego reported.
“Yeah, get him,” one agent says to another. “Take him. Go ahead, take him.”
The former interpreter appeared shocked by what was playing out.
“I came here to make a better life,” the man pleaded in the clip. “I didn’t know that this would happen… I worked with the U.S. military. I worked in a very dangerous part of Afghanistan with the U.S. military.”
Attorney Brian McGoldrick asked that his client’s name be kept anonymous because he will likely face persecution by the Taliban if he is ultimately deported to Afghanistan. McGoldrick told the Times that the man was a translator for American troops but also assisted the U.S. Army logistically on the ground in a war zone.
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