Libbyfornia: illegal alien becomes lawyer

Mexico, China and Philippines are THE WORST countries to be from if you need your adjustment of status to proceed.
That is completely understandable given that these three countries probably account for more newcomers than the others. Thus the backlog.
 
Mexico, China and Philippines are THE WORST countries to be from if you need your adjustment of status to proceed.
That is completely understandable given that these three countries probably account for more newcomers than the others. Thus the backlog.

I agree, but a 20 year long backlog is like a 74 minutes response time for the LE after the 911 call about robbery... it should not happen.
 
Garcia, 36, worked in the fields and at a grocery store before attending community college. He became a paralegal, went to law school and passed the bar on his first try. He applied for citizenship in 1994, and is still working toward that goal.

You should not have to wait in line for almost 20 years to adjust your status, especially since he applied BEFORE the last immigration law was passed.

That is a shame that he has not been processed. He worked hard to get where he is and law degrees are expensive.
 
We should allow anyone to come here as long as they are willing to support themselves. The only conditions should be they can't access social services if they don't have citizenship and we may want to look at changing the law on birth right citizenship so they can't have their kids here and start collecting welfare benefits for them. That aside, if someone is going to come here and work whether it's picking lettuce or getting a law degree, what's the problem? Our immigration system if completely fucked up. It shouldn't be this complicated and it never was until the latter 20th century.
 
This ruling could really open the floodgates for other illegal alien issues.

Fuck you California, and your crooked judicial system.


To all my conservative friends here, please spend your money somewhere else.
 
We should allow anyone to come here as long as they are willing to support themselves. The only conditions should be they can't access social services if they don't have citizenship and we may want to look at changing the law on birth right citizenship so they can't have their kids here and start collecting welfare benefits for them. That aside, if someone is going to come here and work whether it's picking lettuce or getting a law degree, what's the problem? Our immigration system if completely fucked up. It shouldn't be this complicated and it never was until the latter 20th century.

that would be idiotic.
no country can sustain unrestrained immigration.

it is a beneficial process as long as it is well thought through, regulated and maintained.
 
We should allow anyone to come here as long as they are willing to support themselves. The only conditions should be they can't access social services if they don't have citizenship and we may want to look at changing the law on birth right citizenship so they can't have their kids here and start collecting welfare benefits for them. That aside, if someone is going to come here and work whether it's picking lettuce or getting a law degree, what's the problem? Our immigration system if completely fucked up. It shouldn't be this complicated and it never was until the latter 20th century.

If we completely opened our borders we would be flooded.
Sounds nice to say they must be able to support themselves, but experience tells us that if they get here, they will stay regardless of their skills, and we cannot count on rules for staying here being enforced.
 

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