Please register to participate in our discussions with 2 million other members - it's free and quick! Some forums can only be seen by registered members. After you create your account, you'll be able to customize options and access all our 15,000 new posts/day with fewer ads.
I already asked questions as to whether he broke the laws that I listed. Do you know the answers? I never said anything about his ineligibility to re-enter. I am not familiar with those types of laws in regards to minors. However, he is no longer a minor.
If you think he broke laws, then you should know the answers. Until then he did nothing wrong, his parents did.
What law did he break? He was brought here by his parents as a minor.
He is in the country illegally which is breaking the law. If he has ever held a job he's broken additional laws. If he has a Florida driver's license he has broken other laws.
What law did he break? He was brought here by his parents as a minor.
He still broke the law. At what age is the cutoff for robbing banks, murder, theft or other offenses?
The case of 25-year-old Jose Godinez-Samperio, a resident of greater Tampa who wishes to be admitted to the Florida bar, presents an interesting twist on the generation of young people who were brought to the United States by their parents illegally while very young but are now fully grown and, in some cases, highly motivated and highly talented.
If you think he broke laws, then you should know the answers. Until then he did nothing wrong, his parents did.
Are you purposely ignoring the questions that I asked? If he took a job knowing that he was an illegal alien or used fake or stolen ID how is that his parent's fault? Those actions were his!
What law did he break? He was brought here by his parents as a minor.
He's not a minor anymore. He's an adult. He has no right to remain here. He's in violation of our laws by remaining here. He has no right to vote, work or drive. He's asking us to let him immorally skip the immigration lines because his parents broke them as well.
This is absurd. First we get well need illegals because they'll do jobs that Americans won't do. (Which isn't even true as most Americans will do those jobs -- just not for slave labor and under lousy conditions with no rights). Now we get well they should be allowed to stay here even if they are doing jobs Americans will do.
We have an oversupply of lawyers, especially those from mediocre law schools. We don't need him. We didn't invite him or his parents. We've been forced to educate him. His entire lousy family has been arrogantly breaking our immigration laws for decades. All of them need to finally go home.
Why do you think otherwise? If your parents break the law why should you get to benefit from it? If he's that smart surely the world's 12th largest economy should be happy to have him back.
Being immoral, having bad ethics or a lousy family and graduating from a mediocre school are not breaking laws.
This is a positive member of society.
How is a man who seeks to skip our immgration lines and join an already oversubscribed profession a positive member of our society? Laws are supposed to be of good moral character. By breaking our immigration laws for over seven years he isn't.
He wants to be a lawyer when he isn't even allowed to legally practice law here. I am so sick of illegals like him who think that our immigration laws should exist solely to make their lives easier. Why isn't he back in Mexico demanding changes there? Or mad at the Mexican officials who created a society so bad his parents left? Why are illegals always demanding things from us instead of their own leaders?
The last thing our country needs are more lawyers or more arrogant law breakers.
Please register to post and access all features of our very popular forum. It is free and quick. Over $68,000 in prizes has already been given out to active posters on our forum. Additional giveaways are planned.
Detailed information about all U.S. cities, counties, and zip codes on our site: City-data.com.