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Oops sorry scratch that, I thought I was on political forum.
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+1000 The story of Kenia anf Noah traveling a top a train at 36 weeks pregs... i teared up |
She was 15 years old. |
Guess you missed the part about her ex husband being a cop who viciously beat her and tried to kill her. And the bsaby was Luis', not the estranged corrupt husband. And nothing is easy about how she came back. Nothing. |
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I watched the series this weekend, it was heartbreaking! What I didn't know about was the 1997 Clinton law that if you came to this country on a tourist visa but then worked illegally and then met an American citizen and fell in love and married (so not a sham marriage) you could still not become a citizen via your spouse - your earlier crime bars you forever!
The zero tolerance policy makes it feel like a police state and is so anti-American. |
He didn’t come on a tourist visa. Back when he came from Mexico in the 1990s, a passport wasn’t even required as a form of ID. A birth certificate would suffice. This didn’t apply to all countries but it did apply to Mexico at the time. This is no longer the case. He probably used the birth certificate of a US citizen. The law passed by the Clinton administration has a lifelong ban on anyone who falsely claims to be a US citizen, which is probably why he is banned. I don’t this is right because it happened when he was 14 and he was clearly just doing what some adult family member told him to do. On the positive side, he has a very wonderful husband. And I’d say Toronto is a huge upgrade from Milwaukee. |
Her story was incredibly sad. I found it the most compelling of any of the stories. She was 18 when she entered the US though. https://www.baynews9.com/fl/tampa/news/2019/08/12/veteran-fights-to-reunite-family-after-wife-deported-to-mexico-1-year-ago |
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Here’s an article on what happened a year later.
https://heavy.com/entertainment/2019/10/living-undocumented-where-now-2019/ |
It should also be mentioned that France doesn’t have birthright citizenship, so having a baby there wouldn’t make your child a citizen. Only about 30 countries have birthright citizenship and almost all are in the Americas. https://www.businessinsider.com/countries-that-recognize-birthright-citizenship-jus-soli-2018-10 |
| It made me cringe, at times. The Israeli family, very clearly, could have remained in their country, and been just fine. The family from Columbia, the Dunoyer parents, seemed to have a terrible, entitled attitude that they deserve to be here more than others. |
I don't buy the "medical bills were covered (by US citizens)" argument. How many billions of dollars are spent to operate the processing and deporting of many harmless people? What about those expensive costs, that could be used for many other beneficial needs? And those children are no less worthy citizens than you and I, just by our good fortune of being born here. You didn't do anything special - and neither did I. I am aware that we as a country cannot house every person wanting to come - it's unsustainable and unrealistic. But don't pretend to be concerned under the BS guise of a financial burden to citizens. The fact is, we citizens benefit tremendously by cheap (illegal/undocumented) labor. It saves us a lot of money. If you (and Trump voters) were really truly concerned, they'd be going after the wealthy businessmen who employ cheap undocumented labor, and prosecuting/fining them in a very big way - which would include Trump himself. It's a lot like going after women who prostitute, but not the pimps or the men who drive the business. Going after the desperate is just illogical. |
Agreed. I hope they get deported. So far the only family I felt for was Kenia and Luis |
I don’t understand his story. From the article linked in another post “He flew into the U.S., Thom explained, which means that he was likely required to provide some sort of paperwork. And because he might have lied about being a legal citizen, he is now permanently barred from ever being given citizenship.” How would Fernandez not know what he said? Also, to your point that you only needed a birth certificate to go back and forth to Mexico and the US, how do they know Fernandez didn’t fly in and say he was a tourist and present his birth certificate. And on another note, I wonder how accurate our immigration records really are from the 1990s. |
| Having a heartbreaking story is not justification for open borders. If you talk to families of violent convicts, I'm sure they will similarly have heartbreaking stories. |
Can’t do something illegal if there was no existing law to break. Europe civilized what would become the USA through conquest, because that’s what was done at the time. |