cocoa

cocoa

-41p

217 comments posted · 0 followers · following 0

16 years ago @ KOMO - Seattle, WA - \'I\'m scared to be ju... · 0 replies · +4 points

Btw, your and you're is not the same. You should take up your own suggestion.

I am the "real" American. You my friend, base on the criterion of English skills, you should be concern about your citizenship.

16 years ago @ KOMO - Seattle, WA - \'I\'m scared to be ju... · 2 replies · +2 points

HAHAHAHAAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAH. What?

Oh wow, I tried really hard to avoid calling you stupid.

Sir, you're a moron.

16 years ago @ KOMO - Seattle, WA - \'I\'m scared to be ju... · 6 replies · 0 points

Dude, where? Copy and paste a line in which you can somehow infer the rambling you're accusing me of.

Do you seek help to tie your shoes every morning? Are you really this thick? First you're making fun of "real Americans" by calling yourself one. Now you're making fun of military by saying you were one of them.

16 years ago @ KOMO - Seattle, WA - \'I\'m scared to be ju... · 10 replies · -2 points

Wow...it appears that you simply cannot read or comprehend what I said.

In my last post, I have stated a fact:

"For example, a legal resident can be deported if he/she has committed a serious crime."

An interpretation of what she said:

"In this case and I am obviously making an assumption base on her words, is that she seems to have taken the position of a resident of sort, instead of the position of a citizen"

Then last but not least, my input on her situation, which is to hire a lawyer to solve her citizenship issue because "I think she has a case that she is a citizen".

But somehow I lack American values, and I support back door access to our system? I dictate what is right or wrong?

Sigh..."real" Americans would be embarrass to be anywhere near you.

16 years ago @ KOMO - Seattle, WA - \'I\'m scared to be ju... · 37 replies · +1 points

I am confused by your rambling but I will try to respond. I'll just ignore your comment about me breaking down facts, which lacks logic.

"Your going to base your opinion on the level of the crime she committed while illegal on whether or not to deport?"

No, the law does. For example, a legal resident can be deported if he/she has committed a serious crime. In this case and I am obviously making an assumption base on her words, is that she seems to have taken the position of a resident of sort, instead of the position of a citizen, which she seems to have a case for. Hence I said that she should hire an immigration lawyer as soon as possible and obviously to argue her case that she is a "citizen".

16 years ago @ KOMO - Seattle, WA - Oops! Pics of purporte... · 2 replies · +2 points

Who and where do you see such suggestion? Or is it you who truly believes it to be the next Messiah.

16 years ago @ KOMO - Seattle, WA - \'I\'m scared to be ju... · 39 replies · +3 points

Let me try to break it down to you so you might understand this better...

1. Her claim was that she's a US citizen and never thought she wasn't. Her supporting evidences were she went to college here, she paid taxes (assuming she worked as well), and an assumption she failed to address, which is she married a US citizen???

2. She committed a crime and admitted to guilt.

Don't mix two separate issues together as a single deciding point. Her ultimate goal right now is to fight off the deportation. I believe she has a very valid case (base on the article) and if she proves #1, she would reach her goal.

Personally I think it was a bad judgement to mix the two separate issues together as the article was written:

"I do not deny my bad choice. I am not a drug trafficker. I've never sold a drug in my life, but I do not deny that I should have never put myself in that position," she said. "There was never any violence in my crime. Those pills were for personal use. They never saw me selling, delivering any kind of drugs. There was never any money exchanged. I'm not involved in any terrorist group or a gang."

Base on the above comment, she seems to have accepted that she's not a legal resident/citizen. However, she is trying to argue that should not be deported on the seriousness of her crime.

Again, GET A IMMIGRATION LAWYER AS SOON AS POSSIBLE AND SOLVE THE CITIZENSHIP ISSUE!

16 years ago @ KOMO - Seattle, WA - \'I\'m scared to be ju... · 2 replies · +2 points

You have to explain further because I am having tough time understanding what you wrote.

Was your daughter's citizenship in question or was yours? Did your daughters ever work in the states and filed tax returns on themselves?

The reason why I am asking is that I am trying to establish the similarity between your daughters (or you if I was confused) and the subject of the article.

16 years ago @ KOMO - Seattle, WA - \'I\'m scared to be ju... · 12 replies · +5 points

I am very confused by her legal status. If she is a citizen, she would have at minimum, a valid SSN card. So if she has a valid SSN and reports her taxes every year, wouldn't she have discovered any discrepancy of her citizenship status far earlier?

She needs a immigration lawyer ASAP...

16 years ago @ KOMO - Seattle, WA - \'I\'m scared to be ju... · 1 reply · +8 points

So to you, justice should be practice in absolute terms. So let's throw away our judicial systems and fire all the judges.