Advertisement
Business Insider
Tech

Start-up founder tortured by the US visa process after graduating from an Ivy League college

YouVisit founder says American immigration process is full of 'pain and tears' and stopped him from seeing his aging parents for six years

4-MIN READ4-MIN
YouVisit co-founder Taher Baderkhan proudly displays his US citizenship on the day he became a citizen. Photo: Taher Baderkhan
Business Insider

Let's say you are a super smart kid living overseas and you get accepted into an Ivy League school in the United States. You're ready to move to the US to go to college and then you want to start your own US company. That's the American Dream.

That's also job creation. The stats are clear that this nation of immigrants is still heavily powered by the newcomers, according to the Kauffman Group.

Unfortunately for the immigrants, the process is full of "pain and tears," one tech start-up founder who's been through it says.

Advertisement

And it can leave workers vulnerable to an almost indentured-servant situation with their employers.

This is Taher Baderkhan's story 

Advertisement

Baderkhan is the CTO co-founder of a start-up called YouVisit, a New York virtual reality company founded by three immigrants. Today it employees 85 people, Baderkhan tells us, and it's never taken VC money – meaning it is supporting itself on its own profits, he says. 

But it wouldn't have happened if Baderkhan didn't fall in love with a US citizen in college, a girlfriend who then patiently waited almost 10 years for him to hit his head against the green-card wall.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x