To become a citizen you have been in possession of legal documentation authorizing you being here in the first place.....so why do you try to make it sound so simple... when in fact it is not.
2006-10-05 08:10:43
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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They are supposed to live as they are, support, cherish, love, and gain, wherever they go and think there will be other people like them with different issues and scheemes to create and control, the time anyone looses the aim to excerpt others many do see the full picture and do their own best, not others´s best. It is time to regain aspects of life and disdain for power for there are other things to do regarding nurture and candy, so if some do not abide in their business they will feel others are, the thing is many will say true things to perform control, but the control is performed by the ones those true things are sent to, is not that true? I think it is so. There is a time to ponder about proper things not those believed to be one´s possesions. They might as well be your possesions, but you do know the truth, don´t you? that is the point. Miserable pointless thinking is not winning any battles is it? The whole world knows these situations, scheemes and aspects are not scenarios but illusions framed by powerful and evolved minds, who do not control because we know exactly certain things are better left untouched, while some very young and stupid folks will still append to hurting and dismaying proper planning. This is the real life.
Hecho en el Perú.
2006-10-05 08:22:18
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answer #2
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answered by Manny 5
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U.S. Citizenship and becoming a legal/authorized immigrant are two entirely different things. They're really not related at all. People seekign citizenship are already authorized to be in this country and just have to go through the process of taking a test. You cannot go through that test until you are authorized to be in this country, which can be VERY difficult.
The reasons people don't become authorized immigrants are myriad. First of all, in the current climate, it can take YEARS...even for people from countries that you wouldn't consider places we would restrict. (I.e., more than two years to get a Visa to come from Ireland.)
Once you're here, it costs THOUSANDS of dollars to get paperwork to become authorized. It's also outrageously complicated. If you are, using the example above, a privileged Irish guy, working and earning a good living, who reads, writes, and speaks English, has plenty of freinds to sponsor him, then the process of legalization is difficult, but doable.
If you are, say, an El Salvadoran who works in a factory below minimum wage, reads Spanish at a 4th grade level and has minimal or no English skills, has no English-speaking contacts or help to sponsor you, etc. it's nearly impossible.
You likely need American Citizens to "sponsor you" claiming that it is of some benefit for you to be here (that you have some skill not easily found in the area or something to that effect). So that can become an issue. These sponsors need to have certain redeeming qualities, probably have some power in their community and/or state of residence.
Even after marrying an American citizen it takes upwards of two years and $10,000 to get a green card...though there IS some protection provided before you get that green card, it's still risky.
I'm not trying to change your opinion about people coming here illegally. But your argument about citizenship is not at all related to those people living in this country without green cards. You should be looking up information on how to apply for green cards from other countries, or how to apply for them once you're here. Or even how to RENEW them once you are in the States.
Also, you should look up and consider reasons WHY people want to come here from other countries, why they want to stay once they get here, etc. I volunteer with a family from El Salvador (who consequently are here legally and all have green cards) who actually ESCAPED El Salvador during communist attacks. The horror stories they left behind made me realize why many people take the risks involved in living in this country illegally.
2006-10-05 08:23:32
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answer #3
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answered by CuteWriter 4
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It's not as easy to immigrate to this country and become a citizen as they make it out to be. It is astronomically expensive! If most of these people are slipping across the border in order to find work that pays a living wage so they can send money back to their impoverished families back home, how many of them do you think can afford these exorbitant amounts of money this government requires in order to immigrate; especially when you eventually want to bring your whole family here. It is beyond the means of so many! And being able to immigrate to a country like the US, which is known as the land of opportunity, should not b restricted to only the most wealthy or the skilled or the smartest, etc. It should be affordable for EVERYONE.
2006-10-05 18:49:50
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answer #4
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answered by LaNina75 1
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Well i know i will probably get a lot of boos but i agree with you. Why dont they? i understand that there are horrible places and such. But you can gain access into the states if you have a reasonable fear of your homeland...refugee right? So why do so many people come here and mooch off of america, (legals and illegals both irk me). They dont want to wait. They want what they want when they want it. Not wanting to wait for the process, or in the case of legals, those who have children just to get welfare and free money instead of taking the time to work for it and putting kids off til they are better equipped to give them a good future (and in the meantime their kids suffer). i dont agree with any of it. Im not saying i am right. I just dont understand it. Sorry for going off on a tangent.
2006-10-05 08:20:03
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answer #5
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answered by Autumn M 3
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You obviously have never been to another country and seen how people have to live. The USA and Canada are wonderful free countries to live in - the dream of every supressed and even those who are not is to come to America and live the clean, free, medically available life that we enjoy. Can they help that they don't always follow the thousands of guidelines that are laid down? Everyone wants to do things the easy way - one is that they DON'T follow the rules.
2006-10-05 08:13:25
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answer #6
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answered by PP4865 4
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I'm sorry I've tried that and they denied it's useless bureaucracy even now that I'm married to an American citizen who's also a professional women still not get things rigth the system needs to change they need to bring back 241 i
2006-10-05 08:10:13
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answer #7
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answered by saul_herandez 3
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It's harder then you think. I have a friend who got married to a mexican several years ago and he went to the immigration office to become a citizen and they deported him A**h****.
2006-10-05 08:12:05
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answer #8
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answered by Sparkles 4
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If they DID that,they would have to pay taxes (shudder)! And they would actually have to pledge their loyalty to THIS country, instead of mexico ( oh NO). I'm using sarcasm here,lol!
2006-10-05 08:11:17
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answer #9
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answered by illegals_suck 1
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they would have to wait to long to get on welfare....
2006-10-05 08:12:35
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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