Oh man, I feel compelled to comment. Many people have already expressed my sentiments but I do have a few things I would like to add.
QUOTE(tito @ Feb 29 2008, 07:36 AM)

Lots of times, when a USC meets someone outside of the US, and the relationship builds and takes form during a series of trips to that place to be with the person, and/or during phone conversations in the interim that are all about missing each other and wanting to be with the other person again, the reality of life and the challenges that exist often get ignored to a certain extent.
During the months many of us spend apart I can assure you that conversations and thoughts do not merely revolve around whining about missing, wanting and needing your partner. This process is very involved and a whole host of practical considerations on both sides of the coin have to be taken into account prior to and during the application process. USCIS and DOS stipulate certain criteria for qualification for a fiance visa to counter the problems you are insinuating happen far too frequently.
QUOTE(tito @ Feb 29 2008, 07:36 AM)

Then, once thrust into the stresses of life in the US, the reality sets in, and many times, it's nothing like what the immigrant could possibly imagine, especially in instances where the way and manner and relative quality of life in one place is so different from life in the US. Naturally, there is frustration and disillusion on the part of both parties that is compounded by differences in culture, differences in education, differences in background, differences in religion, differences in experience, differences in upbringing, differences in age, differences in world-view, differences in values...differences in virtually everything except the mutual commitment on the part of BOTH persons for themselves, for each other, and for the relationship.
Actually, I do think you have a reasonable point here. Many of us are in fact aware of the difficulties faced when starting a new life in another country. Just reading around the forums here you will see many people from every country pondering and discussing the changes they will face when they finally move to the US. Read further and you will see USC's discussing ways and means of making the cultural transition easier for their partners. No one can know for certain what specific problems they will endure but at least there is a comprehension that it can and does happen. This is why this site is so useful, others can reveal the possible pitfalls and how to endure them.
QUOTE(tito @ Feb 29 2008, 07:36 AM)

With respect to all these stories about abuses and threats and such? Yeah, there's got to be another side. Many times, perhaps those posting these horror stories are too proud to capitulate and compromise, and expect the USC to be a different way, like they were during the 2 week vacation when they met and decided to be a couple. In my view, and the way I see this, and that's not to say it's the gospel by any means, the immigrant simply cannot comprehend what life is like in the US and the stresses and strains put on the USC...to get the immigration documentation in order, to make all the trips, to pay all the phone bills, to set up all the travel, to get everything in order, to maintain a heavy work load in order to afford another person in the household, to pay the mortgage, to make the car payment, to pay the gas, electricity and water bill, to pay the finance charges for the new appliances, to make sure the immigrant is comfortable enough...there's a LOT on the plate of the USC that, perhaps...just maybe...the immigrant just doesn't understand. Is that abuse? Maybe the USC feels that the failure or inability on the part of the immigrant to grasp the nature of the stresses is ALSO an abuse! And it's that frustration to which the immigrant is not accustomed is, MAYBE, what the immigrant calls "abuse".
A huge amount of assumption here and this weakens your argument. Of course there *are* instances of people visiting for just two weeks and not really thinking things through, but I do think these are the minority of cases. You don't have to have a foreign fiance to make that mistake. And, in fact, I would argue that having a foreign fiance forces many of us to over-analyse our relationships, because, why the heck would anyone want to go through any of this if it didn't feel right?
As the 'immigrant' I have planned this move to the nth degree but I realise that there are pitfalls I am not aware of yet. Hence, it is useful to read threads on this forum. During the application process I have worked my backside off so that I have money to keep me going during a period when the US government makes it difficult for K1 visa holders to work so that I can take some pressure off my USC partner financially. I am giving up a good career, my home, belongings, family, friends, a way of life I am familiar with for the person I know is worth it. If I didn't feel it was worth it I wouldn't have bothered. Really.
The same is true of my USC partner. He has used the time since we decided to get married to prepare for that. No longer will he only have himself to consider, he is building a life for us and relishes the prospect. During our time apart he has thought about the impact my moving to be with him has had on my life and he certainly wouldn't take on the responsibility of all of that if he felt it would bite him in the backside.
The fact is, we both want this and we both are having to consider all the implications of what we are doing. We talk about it - we have so much time to talk about it. Time, in my experience, you don't spend too often when you are in a relationship locally.
QUOTE(tito @ Feb 29 2008, 07:36 AM)

All these horror stories about abuse, control, threats, arise out of the perception on the part of the immigrant. Maybe life in the US is just a little too tough for the immigrant, much more so than they might have imagined...
The threads about positive life changes outnumber the horror stories.
QUOTE(tito @ Feb 29 2008, 07:36 AM)

Again - who bears the risk? Who is "right"? What are the options? Who gets the benefit of the doubt? The USC on the hook for 10 years if the immigrant wants to stay, so that the USC bears all the risk of the relationship? Or the immigrant who has the option of going back home to re-establish his or her life as he or she knows, in which case everyone is put back into their original position before the relationship fell apart (no harm - no foul)? Tough issue.
We ALL bear the risk. USC and immigrant alike. The immigrant leaves his/her life behind, closes many doors. Why should the only respectable option be to return home? Why do you assume that the immigrant would choose to leech off the USC if the relationship does break down?
And onto the next post I take issue with...
QUOTE(tito @ Feb 29 2008, 08:42 AM)

Talk about fingerpainting!! Why in the world would someone with all the hopes and expectations for the future with someone who, no doubt, is your perfect mate, be cruising the part of a forum that involves conversations and posts and thread after thread where the content is mostly nothing more than DISASTER!??!?
This forum is designed for people to discuss the possible pitfalls or difficulties in adjusting. It is contradictory of you to assert that people are wrong and distrustful of their own relationships to 'cruise' here when you previously asserted that we are too caught up in whining about missing each other such that "the reality of life and the challenges that exist often get ignored to a certain extent". If that's the basic premise of your argument against fiance visa immigration then you just shot yourself in the foot.
QUOTE(tito @ Feb 29 2008, 08:42 AM)

When someone says something or cries "foul" there is an entire bandwagon of sorrowful and sympathetic sorts...problem is, all the sorrow, prayers, best wishes and sympathy is based SOLELY on what the poster says at face value, without regard for another differing point of view or perspective, one that I, for one, because of what I do for a living, see all the time.
I think everyone is aware that they are reading only one side of the argument which is why it's best, in these circumstances, to stick to assisting with the immigration questions raised. Telling someone one side of the immigration story, i.e. "It is best that you go home to your country" is equally allowing personal perspective to get in the way of giving good advice.
QUOTE(tito @ Feb 29 2008, 08:42 AM)

You assume that I have an agenda, and that is absolutely not the case. You like to thump your chest and play king of the sandbox all the time proclaiming to have all the answers as you defend a very tenuous position, but just think of the FLIP side of the coin in the context of all these posts for once. If you can.
Personally I think you do have an agenda. Looking back over the thread you have ONE perspective on immigrants and ONE perspective on what they should do in the event of the relationship breaking down. Much of the content of your posts reveals a negative attitude towards fiance visa relationships. Sure, not all of them survive. No one is arguing that. Sure, no one can ever be *really* prepared for what happens after marriage - but these aspects are common to all human relationships. At least give us some credit for having thought about the choices we are making.