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Visa Is Not a Right. It Is a Power Filter.

 

Close-up of passports and a U.S. visa page with an approved stamp, featuring the headline “Visa Is Not a Right. It Is a Power Filter.”
A symbolic image showing stacked passports and a U.S. visa page stamped “Approved,” with bold overlay text reading “Visa Is Not a Right. It Is a Power Filter.” The visual represents passport hierarchy, visa discretion, and geopolitical power in global mobility

“Visa approval is a choice, not your right.”

That sentence landed heavily in travel groups this week after comments attributed to U.S. officials circulated online. The legal point is correct. Under U.S. immigration law, no statute obligates America to issue a visitor or student visa. Consular officers have broad discretion. Visas can also be revoked.

But law is only the surface. Underneath, visa policy reflects power.

From a geopolitical lens, a visa is not just permission to travel. It is controlled access to an economic system, a labor market, a research ecosystem, and in America’s case, the world’s reserve currency economy. Powerful states ration access. Weak states negotiate for it.

And Karachi’s middle class feels that asymmetry more than most.

Passport Hierarchy Is a Global Class System

Global mobility is not evenly distributed. It never has been.

According to the Henley Passport Index 2025 rankings, Japan and Singapore passport holders can travel visa-free to more than 190 destinations. Germany and South Korea sit just below. Pakistan ranks near the bottom, offering visa-free access to fewer than 35 countries.

That gap is not symbolic. It shapes opportunity.

A Japanese graduate can attend conferences across Europe without a visa file thicker than a novel. A Karachi engineer applying for a short training course in Boston prepares bank statements, employment letters, property documents, tax records, and still faces a presumption of immigrant intent.

Mobility follows trust. Trust follows economic and political strength.

Overstay Data Shapes Risk Calculus

Visa officers do not operate on emotion. They operate on risk models.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security publishes annual overstay reports. In recent years, the overstay rate for B1/B2 visitors from some developing countries has been significantly higher than the global average. Even if Pakistan’s rate fluctuates year to year, South Asia generally records higher visitor overstay percentages compared to Western Europe or Japan.

That data feeds consular discretion.

An officer does not see you only as an individual. They see you through statistical patterns. If a nationality has a higher historical overstay rate, scrutiny intensifies. That is not personal prejudice. It is bureaucratic risk management.

But risk management at scale feels deeply personal at the interview window.

The Karachi Middle-Class Equation

Walk through PECHS, Gulshan, or North Nazimabad and you will hear a familiar story.

A family saves for years. The father works in banking or logistics. The mother runs a home-based business. The son secures admission to a U.S. university. The daughter prepares for a research exchange. Documents are perfect. Funds are arranged. Property valuation certificates are printed in triplicate.

Then a two-minute interview ends it.

“Application refused under Section 214(b).”

Legally valid. Geopolitically predictable. Emotionally crushing.

For Karachi’s middle class, a visa is not leisure travel. It is strategy. It is currency hedging. It is educational arbitrage. It is an exit option in a volatile economy marked by inflation spikes and currency depreciation.

Mobility becomes insurance.

When that insurance is denied, frustration rises. The Facebook post’s message, “Do not be emotional,” sounds detached from lived stakes.

Sovereignty as Strategic Leverage

Strong states assert sovereignty because they can afford to.

The United States attracts more applicants than it can process. Germany tightens student visa rules yet remains a magnet for talent. Canada reduces quotas and still dominates immigration demand.

Pakistan cannot reciprocate at that scale.

That asymmetry reveals hierarchy. Visa policy becomes an instrument of foreign policy and domestic politics simultaneously. It signals control to domestic voters and risk discipline to global applicants.

Discretion is not random. It is structured power.

Conditional Access in a Managed World

Globalization once promised frictionless mobility for talent. That era is narrowing.

Digital monitoring systems track entries and exits. Data sharing between governments has increased. Student visa compliance reviews are stricter. Revocations happen more frequently than in previous decades.

Mobility is now conditional access. Granted, monitored, revocable.

For Karachi’s aspiring professional class, that reality changes calculations. Families diversify destinations. Germany becomes attractive because of clearer student pathways. Turkey and Malaysia gain attention for cost reasons. Gulf states remain employment hubs, though without permanent residency security.

Geopolitics reshapes household strategy.

The Uncomfortable Conclusion

The Facebook post is legally correct. A visa is not a right.

But it is also a filter. It filters risk, economic value, geopolitical trust, and national reputation.

When powerful states say, “It is our choice,” they are not merely stating law. They are exercising structural advantage built over decades of economic dominance, institutional stability, and global influence.

Karachi’s middle class understands ambition. It understands saving, planning, and documentation. What it struggles with is asymmetry.

A passport is not just travel paper. It is a geopolitical scorecard.

And until the balance of economic power shifts, access will remain a privilege allocated by strength.

Not by emotion. Not by fairness. By leverage.

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