They’re calling it “voluntary.” Others are calling it a bribe to disappear. In a stunning turn, the U.S.
government is now offering undocumented immigrants free flights and cash to leave the country they risked everything to reach.
Supporters say it’s humane. Critics call it a moral surrender.
And as the first migrants quietly tap the CBP Home app, the real battle is only just beg… Continues…
The new self-deportation program lands at the intersection of political theater and human desperation.
For some migrants, a paid ticket home and a chance at future legal reentry may feel like a lifeline after years of fear, unstable work,
and the constant risk of arrest. For others, accepting the offer would mean abandoning families, jobs,
and dreams they have already sacrificed so much to chase.
Beyond the individuals deciding whether to board those flights,
the policy is a live test of what “humane enforcement” actually means.
If participation remains low, critics will point to the program as proof that complex migration crises cannot be managed with incentives and apps.
If it grows, it will reshape both border politics and public opinion,
forcing Americans to confront an unsettling question: when the state pays people to leave, whose conscience is really being eased?