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#7
11-20-2009, 07:07 PM
Member
Joined in Feb 2009
51 posts
dreamactcris
That would be the worst move the US would take.

What a load of laziness to say that the government has too much to worry about. I am almost 25 and been here for almost 11 years undocumented and the government rather turn their cheek on me.

I am not afraid but disappointed, but it is true that you have to be careful about what you can expect from the same people that let the country they are supposed to take care of, be brought down so low by companies using political leverage; to commit fraud and outsource the economy while ripping a huge chunk of profit.

I had hopes yes, hope in reform and the chance to work in a nation that has always been the crossrads of the world and now I can't imagine what will happen to people like me and many more who instead of getting a chance to helping this nation are getting basically kicked out, when amnesty is nothing new, it won't add to any deficit and will benefit rather than not.

If it is true that some are thinking that immigration reform can be pushed even another year or even to the 3rd or 4th quarter of 2010, they can expect great quantity of resentment from all over the world, because undocumented students are not just Latin people.

If China opens their doors to Latin America to contribute to China the USA might disappear as a backbone to global affairs quicker than you can say "We should have passed immigration reform, and quickly"...

We are already seeing many US born students take to China in search of jobs, the US not paying attention to this and not working to create more jobs using the clean energy movement that is at hand is a big risk that the US has no need to take and if done it could easily bring the USA further down the path of economic crumbling that has become usual in the US economy since the beginning of the recession.
Last edited by dreamactcris; 11-20-2009 at 07:19 PM..
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