User talk:Alena Shautsova

Waiver of inadmissibility (United States)
Hello. This is about your edit to the above article. First, a person who wants to visit (or immigrate to) the United States is not required to obtain any form of waiver of inadmissibility unless he or she is inadmissible under or deportable under. Second, those who are inadmissible or deportable do not need to have American (or permanent resident) family members. That requirement is only for "criminal aliens" (i.e., generally speaking, those convicted of something for which a judge had legal authority to impose one year or longer of imprisonment) but, irrespective of committing non-removable offenses in the past, not all inadmissible or deportable aliens are criminal aliens. See generally, , and. The text you added applies exclusively to removable immigrants requesting a waiver of inadmissibility under. But those seeking admission to the United States as refugees under or readmission under, or under , including adjustment of status under , are not required under any law to satisfy the requirements of , which is the most difficult relief to obtain in the Immigration and Nationality Act. The reason for this social inequality between refugees and non-refugees is very easy to understand. Non-refugees have a safe country to permanently reside in while refugees do not have such basic human rights. Once a refugee is granted relief under section 1157(c), 1159(b), 1181(c), or 1182(h), the provisions under section 1229b or any other such provisions no longer apply to that refugee.--Libracarol (talk) 16:43, 26 November 2021 (UTC)

Your comment is not related to my edit. The article is titled "Waiver of Inadmissibility" and purports to cover all waivers of inadmissibility. The article is incomplete and as such is misleading. I have tried to correct it, but for some reason, you decided that I am the author of the article, I am not, as I would have never published such a misleading article.