Behind the numbers are people whose lives have been abruptly rerouted. Students who had packed for US universities are now unpacking in silence. Parents who sold homes to reunite with children in America are staring at closed embassies and unanswered emails. The policy’s language is clinical—“public charge,” “extract wealth,” “abuse of the system”—but its impact lands in hospital wards, classrooms, and crowded airport terminals.
For countries like Somalia, Haiti, Iran, and Eritrea, the pause feels less like a temporary measure and more like a verdict on their citizens’ worth. Supporters argue the US must protect its welfare system and security. Opponents see a familiar pattern of collective punishment dressed in legalese. Between those two narratives, millions now wait in limbo, their futures reduced to a line in a yet‑to‑be‑published list.