Anonymous wrote:OP: as a solution tell your wife you are applying for green card and will be brining your mom to take care of her last days at your house. Your wife will be amendable immediately for you to visit your parent. WIN-WIN!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you apply for an emergency Green Card and insurance,and bring your mom to the US? Why is she even in a foreign country?
Bet he’d hire a caretaker for his mom in a flash. And at USA prices, $25-30 per hour.
Actually, home aid care is covered by Medicaid if his mom has no other income in the US. It's his fault that 1) he left his mother abroad and sick 2) now they obviously need a live-in nanny since both are working - his wife appears cold but she's right by at large!
Exactly why the elderly parent pull-in waits by green card and new citizens are 20+ years long for many countries like India, Pakistan, Mexico, UK, all of Central America, etc. Foreigners are advised to put their parents on the USA immigration list the minute the adult children get their green cards or citizenship. or turn 18 yo if born here.
Very common immigration tactic. But the wait is very long. Maybe the emergency angle would help but America and its health care system and hospitals cannot serve all current immigrants sickly and diseased parents to come here and get free treatment. And it is free to them; they themselves paid in nothing to the system over the years. Not via income tax, property tax, sales tax, Medicaid, SS, etc. Net negative
This is not correct.
Foreign parents of US citizens are considered immediate relatives and there is no waiting time for the green card. The 10-20 year wait lists are for the foreign siblings of US citizens.
Exactly: my mom was temporary green card holder in 3 months from applying, and I moved her into my home right away as soon I got my US citizenship. Also not correct that these people didn't pay anything into US system. Their children do pay taxes. I paid so much taxes over the course of my work life in the US and won't be eligible for Medicaid as high earner. I don't think it's unethical for my mother to be eligible: I paid taxes sufficient to maintain several retirees already.
Anonymous wrote:Op needs to go himself, after setting up a sitter
OPs wife needs to save her vacation days for the funeral. If there is no funereal or death, they can all go there when jobs allow soon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you apply for an emergency Green Card and insurance,and bring your mom to the US? Why is she even in a foreign country?
Bet he’d hire a caretaker for his mom in a flash. And at USA prices, $25-30 per hour.
Actually, home aid care is covered by Medicaid if his mom has no other income in the US. It's his fault that 1) he left his mother abroad and sick 2) now they obviously need a live-in nanny since both are working - his wife appears cold but she's right by at large!
Exactly why the elderly parent pull-in waits by green card and new citizens are 20+ years long for many countries like India, Pakistan, Mexico, UK, all of Central America, etc. Foreigners are advised to put their parents on the USA immigration list the minute the adult children get their green cards or citizenship. or turn 18 yo if born here.
Very common immigration tactic. But the wait is very long. Maybe the emergency angle would help but America and its health care system and hospitals cannot serve all current immigrants sickly and diseased parents to come here and get free treatment. And it is free to them; they themselves paid in nothing to the system over the years. Not via income tax, property tax, sales tax, Medicaid, SS, etc. Net negative
This is not correct.
Foreign parents of US citizens are considered immediate relatives and there is no waiting time for the green card. The 10-20 year wait lists are for the foreign siblings of US citizens.
Anonymous wrote:Wild that so many people think “baby is too young” on this thread. There are babies all over the world. Unless you are going to a conflict zone, or a place where the baby would need a ton of shots and take preventative meds (like for malaria) or there’s some other dangerous endemic disease, I personally don’t see why not to take baby. But, you should get some kind of baby helper while you’re there because you want to be able to focus on your mom at times.
I find your wife’s attitude that you can’t take the baby for 2-3 weeks to another country to see your dying Mom to be incredibly selfish. This is the last time your Mom may be able to see baby. Last time for you to build significant memories with your baby and her, take pictures, and build memories with your Mom about your own childhood and child-raising, etc.
I would maybe try again with wife, but only after you have found childcare at your Mom’s. Also consider that you go for 3 weeks and have Mom visit you for the middle week. That way she’s only away for a week at a time.
Obviously, try not to be resentful that your wife is so selfish when you re-present the idea.