Monday, July 4, 2011

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  • javadeveloper
    08-23 08:57 PM
    Friends

    Here is a suggestion, who ever decides to join Vonage now, can use a referral link from one of the member, who is already a vonage customer, so that he can get 2 months off. Now the member who got 2 months off, can either donate two months bill amount or one month (if he choose to retain one month off) to forum.;)

    What do u guys think?

    Infact not only this, we can use any other similar referral programs, like Direct TV 100 offer etc..

    Good Idea.I'll donate 2 months amount.If someone wants to get referred please send a Private Message to me.





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  • pdakwala
    02-01 10:04 AM
    1. Legislation: The Future of Employment-Based Immigration during the next few weeks, Congress is scheduled to decide the future of
    employment-based immigration to the United States.

    Comprehensive immigration reform proposals by Senators McCain and
    Kennedy, Cornyn and Kyl, Hagel and Specter will be considered by the Senate in February.

    Each proposal contains a combination of the following elements: (1) a
    guest worker program; (2) stricter immigration enforcement; and (3) an
    expansion of the employment-based immigration system.

    The guest worker program is, by far, the most controversial part of the
    package. To President Bush and its Congressional proponents, a guest
    worker proposal is simply a way of creating a procedure to allow U.S.
    companies to continue to employ millions of foreign-born workers to fill jobs which American choose not to perform.

    Opponents of a guest worker program maintain that if employers simply
    raise their wages, American workers will do any job. Call me a "doubter".
    Our unemployment rate has been hovering around 5% for over a year. Yet,
    the Wall Street Journal recently ran an article about lettuce growers who,
    unable to harvest their crops, raised their rates to over $10 per hour. A few
    Americans applied, but none lasted more than a few hours. How many of the
    unemployed are willing and able to perform stoop labor in rural valleys?

    The opponents of a guest worker program refuse to vote for any program
    which looks like an "amnesty". Chairman James Sensenbrenner (R-WI) of the
    Subcommittee on Immigration in the House of Representatives puts it
    simply: "A guest-worker program that applies to illegal aliens already here is an amnesty." Representative Sensenbrenner and over one hundred Republican Congressman in the House of Representatives are against any "amnesty". Since Chairman Sensenbrenner will be the chief House negotiator in any Senate-House Conference Committee on an immigration reform bill, this spells trouble for any guest worker program.

    If the guest worker program does not include the 10 million plus
    illegal workers who are presently in the U.S., there is not the slightest
    possibility of either regularizing their immigration status or of deporting them.
    That is simply a fact, and building a huge fence on Mexico's border (no one
    ever suggests doing so along the Canadian border) with the U.S. will simply
    discourage illegal workers in the U.S. from returning home to visit
    their families. Also, it does nothing to stem the influx of illegal workers
    who enter the U.S. with visas and then overstay. Those in Congress who
    think that by criminalizing these people the problem is solved are kidding
    themselves and their constituents.

    The real solution is to look reality square in the face, and fashion a
    solution which will penalize illegal workers, but, at the same time, allow them
    to participate in a guest worker program that will eventually result in
    them becoming permanent residents of the U.S. Unless there is a light at
    the end of the tunnel for them, what is the incentive for them to come out of the shadows and register for the program? The McCain-Kennedy bill contains such a program.

    At least one ex-INS prosecutor (The one who writes this newsletter)
    knows that the government cannot solve the illegal alien problem by wishing it away, or by an enforcement-only approach. Ten years after President Clinton enacted a "get tough" at the border policy, the number of illegal workers in the U.S. has more than doubled. Congress must realize that, in the post-9/11, world, the United States simply cannot afford to have 10 million persons in the U.S. who are unknown to the government. Every citizen should write to his Member of Congress and tell them that he/she wants these people identified, fingerprinted, registered with the government, paying taxes and learning English.

    Whether or not the Congress enacts a guest worker program, the United
    States has another immigration problem that needs to be solved, and solved
    now. Our country is educating less scientists, engineers, doctors and nurses
    than we did when I graduated from law school in 1973. In the meantime, countries in Asia are graduating far more of these professional workers than does the U.S. Fortunately, many of these professional workers have been supplementing the U.S. workforce for the past 30 years. Unfortunately, during the past year, huge backlogs in our immigration system have developed, and many of the best and brightest of these professionals are choosing to stay at home. This does not bode well for our security and our industries.

    Our country is losing its manufacturing base. For example, the U.S.
    automobile industry is firing tens of thousands of U.S. workers and G.M. and Ford are edging ever-closer to bankruptcy. Why? Because the American public is choosing to buy automobiles produced by Japanese and German companies.

    Fortunately, thanks to the immigration of tens of thousands of Indian
    and Chinese engineers to the U.S., the top software, chip makers and
    biotech companies are still located in the U.S. But with our outdated
    immigration laws making it increasingly difficult for U.S. employers to hire talented foreign- born scientists and engineers, how long can America maintain its dominance in these industries? U.S. employers can vote with their feet the same as U.S. consumers. Make it impossible to bring a sufficient number of foreign-born engineers to the U.S., and Microsoft and Intel and other top U.S. companies will simply locate their new plants and hire their new engineers not in the U.S., but in India and China.

    Most of the bills pending before Congress would increase
    employment-based immigration to 290,000 annually. This would help insure that our country maintains its number one position in science and technology.





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  • ashkam
    11-26 08:35 AM
    Lost in all this is the fact that Punjabi wants to sell his house not because he cannot afford it anymore, but because he wants to move to a different city to a higher paying job and can't be bothered to take responsibility for his failed real estate venture. He could have done the ethical thing and stayed in his present job and paid off his loan but he is choosing not to. And who does he blame for his situation? The concept of the "American dream". So the fact that he wants to shirk his responsibilities in favor of foisting his own debt onto the rest of the country isn't his own fault, it's the "American Dream" that's making him do this. It's not exigent financial circumstances that are causing him to foreclose, it is greed and shortsightedness (colloquially known as "The American Dream"). Greed and shortsightedness already caused him to go 20K under the water. And they will now make him screw up his own credit history. If someone cannot learn from one mistake, I say let him keep making mistakes. He will soon find out how difficult life in the US can be if you don't have a good credit history. As for the burden on us taxpayers, hey, we've been spending 10 billion a week for the past 5 years dropping bombs on people, what's a mere 20K?





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  • pani_6
    08-21 07:34 PM
    We got another 20 days..want to send out flowers..to whom??.what message??.



    Guys,

    Can we atleast do a flower campaign than discuss over and over the same points. I see this is the only EB3-India thread thats going over 5 pages of late. I have sent 6 letters to the dept, Ms. Joe,John, USCIS etc.. and today I am sendning 6 more cards with some message to help EB3.
    I also contributed $100.00 and IV should get it tomorrow or Saturday.
    Please send card, messages emails, whatever to make EB3 also to catch up with EB2.

    Please do something before its too late. I am very hopeful something good must happen in Oct.
    We need more push from Core IV.


    Sri.

    Contributed $100.00
    PD 01/04
    EAD/AP/485 July 07.



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  • pappu
    01-08 03:36 PM
    Multiple-Year Single EAD-AP Card Reportedly Limited to Visa Regrogression 485 Filers

    Some more details have been released on Mr. Aytes' statement on this plan. Reportedly, such multiple year card may be issued only to those who suffer the visa number retrogression. In other words, those 485 filers who will experience delays in 485 applications who do not suffer from the visa number retrogression but from the USCIS delays including namechecks are not likely to benefit from the upcoming multi-year card issuance.

    I posted about this here
    http://immigrationvoice.org/forum/showthread.php?p=212615#post212615





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  • aadimanav
    01-03 12:55 AM
    Source:
    http://www.metrocorpcounsel.com/current.php?artType=view&artMonth=January&artYear=2008&EntryNo=7723

    Delay In The Age Of Security - Employee Green Card Woes

    Geoffrey Forney
    WolfBlock
    Geoffrey Forney is an Associate in WolfBlock's Employment Services Practice Group and is a member of the group's Immigration Services Team. Geoffrey handles all aspects of immigration and nationality law, including employment- and family-based immigration, removal (deportation) defense and asylum.

    Many human resources representatives who handle immigration matters are well aware that dealing with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) can be confusing and at times frustrating. The agency has volumes of regulations, policies, decisions and guidelines governing the admission and employment of foreign nationals. Understanding the agency's requirements can be an overwhelming task. In addition, the agency's decision process is often obscure, leaving employers and foreign nationals guessing about the procedures that affect them directly.

    Added to the confusion is the baffling situation of the excessively long-delayed adjudication of green card and naturalization applications. Employers spend a lot of time and money to sponsor valued foreign national employees only to find that the last stage of the process (adjustment of status or "green" card) is bogged down within a quagmire of endless and seemingly unexplainable delay. Applicants for green cards can face delays up to seven years or more. From an HR perspective, the situation is frustrating: all of the employee's appropriate paperwork has been filed, but the USCIS simply refuses to act on the application. Employers and foreign nationals make inquires with the USCIS only to be told that their applications are being held up because of "security" issues.

    What "security" issues? Many foreign nationals are upset by this response, because they know that they have never had any contacts with law enforcement. Just because a foreign national is caught in security clearance delays does not necessarily mean that the person has had problems with law enforcement authorities. In the vast majority of cases, it simply means that the foreign national's name matches in some way a name in an FBI administrative file. Only after the USCIS confirms that the foreign national is not the same individual who is listed in the FBI administrative file will the USCIS proceed with the adjudication of the green card or naturalization application. It sounds simple enough, so why does this process take so long?

    Congress requires the USCIS to perform criminal background checks on foreign nationals applying to become permanent residents (green card holders) or naturalized citizens of the United States. In addition to the Congressionally mandated criminal background check, DHS performs two other background checks on foreign nationals applying for green cards or citizenship. The criminal background check is a relatively easy and fast check: the USCIS obtains a fingerprint impression from the foreign national and checks this fingerprint image against the FBI's Criminal Master File. This check is usually completed within 48 hours, as it is largely a computer automated system. The second type of check, the Interagency Border Inspection System (IBIS) check, is also very quick. The IBIS check is based on a database containing information from 26 different federal agencies that includes information on persons of "interest" to law enforcement. This check is usually completed immediately upon entering the foreign national's name into a computer database.

    The problem arises with the third and final background check, known as the "name check." Although Congress does not require name checks, in 2002 legacy INS began requesting name checks for all green card and citizenship applications as part of its post-9/11 heightening of security. A "name check" is performed by taking every permutation of the foreign national's full name and comparing those various permutations against the FBI's "Universal Index," which references the FBI's Central Records System, a voluminous archive of administrative, personnel and investigative files. Of course, foreign nationals with common names will usually "match" an FBI file. In addition, a foreign national's name need not necessarily match a "main" file name, containing, for example, a suspect's name, but may match "reference" names, including informants and witnesses. Hence, the universe of possible matches is very large.

    Although the FBI usually responds to a USCIS request for a name check within two weeks, if there is a "hit" or match between one or more permutations of the foreign national's name, a more extensive search must be completed. If a secondary search does not clear the foreign national's name, the USCIS requests a manual investigation of the relevant FBI case files. Since a "match" ultimately leads to a manual inspection of physical files. The process is time and labor intensive. One of the main reasons for the excessive delays in this arena is the lack of resources devoted to the manual inspection of files. To date, the USCIS and FBI currently have more than 340,000 cases in the name check backlog, according to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Ombudsman.

    As a result, a foreign national stuck in the name check backlog can expect to wait a very long time - a matter of years - before expecting a final adjudication of his or her application for a green card or citizenship. In some cases, a final resolution never occurs. It is not unusual to find applicants with unresolved cases that are more than five years old.

    Recently, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Ombudsman cited "name check" delays as a major problem for the agency in his 2007 annual report. The Ombudsman questioned the utility and effectiveness of the name check process, noting that "[n]ame check[s] are not conducted by the FBI as part of an ongoing investigation or from a need to learn more about an individual because of any threat or risk perceived by the FBI." Furthermore, the Ombudsman suggested that the name check program does not comply with DHS Secretary Chertoff's risk management modeling, because the cost of name checks far outweighs the purported national security benefit: "Considering the protection the FBI name check provides, the cost of government resources used, and mental and actual hardships to applicants and their families, USCIS should reassess the continuation of its policy to require FBI name checks in their current form." Notwithstanding the Ombudsman's criticism of the name check program, other high-level USCIS officials continue to support the process, so it appears that name checks will remain a part of green card and naturalization applications.


    (Part 2 in the next post below)



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  • l1fraud
    06-14 09:58 AM
    rsharma, l1fraud,

    There is nothing wrong in reporting fraud.
    However your argument that you are reporting it since you cannot tolerate fraud isn't that convincing.

    If you were always against injustice/lawlessness, you will see a lot of it in your daily life. Do you report or take action against each of those ? I don't think so.

    After living in India for long and seeing people put up with all injustice and sometimes doing it themselves, it is hard to believe your argument that you are doing it just for the sake of law.

    How many times in this thread I have mentioned that I am getting replaced by one of these L-1B resource, I am a poor Oracle/DB developer who fortunately cannot be replaced by L-1B visa resources (as my skills is a common technical one). So once these violations impact your day to day life you look around for ways to stop this fraud. Its true that if I was a Nuero Surgeon in Phily or a Astro Scientist in Houston I wouldn't be interested in this violation :-) .... tomorrow let this scenario happen to you ... you would be first one to raise the alert.

    Regarding 'getting burnt', I don't think there is bigger burn than loosing our jobs (which already is happening) and hope you know that there is something called 'anonymity'... ya lets see whos going to get 'burnt' here. We'll definetly keep you updated regarding the outcome.





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  • trramesh
    01-06 07:06 AM
    I think the thread is perfectly valid and we should go for it. If someone has paid income taxes to US for 10 years, it is no mean thing. 10 years represent typcially about 25% of his/her earning life. After spending substantial percentage of one's life living in, and making contributions to, US, especially in his/her youth, the guy is more naturalised except that he does not have a citizenship card. Now how many of these guys will be able to slip back in to their own country to readjust their lives with american born and american grown kids.

    I think it is not only reasonable but also humane for the government to consider the plight of such people and issue citizenship. The yardstick for qualification will have to be worked out, but Saralayar listed some of the valid parameters like
    - 10 years working in US (legally)
    - 40 points in social security
    - no criminal record

    If I may share my thoughts on yardstick, it would be like this
    - 7 years of legal residence, contributions to SSN, and taxes should provide provisional GC
    - 10 years of legal residence, contributions to SSN, and taxes should provide citizenship
    - 7 years of legal residence post approved I-140 should provide citizenship

    Most of us in this forum must have already contributed over 75K-100K to IRS over the years. I strongly believe that the govt owes more than an obligation to take care of the interests of this skilled group.

    rgds,
    rammy



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  • kumar1
    11-20 05:06 PM
    You are not the only one who thinks this way! Do you want to stuck with your house...paying 600k mortgage for 300k worth house? It is stupid people like you who would, I won't!

    Those who are walking away are smart. Banks are stupid to finance 100%. If you go bankrupt, govt won't bail you out. If banks go belly up, govt would give 750 billion!

    Keep your emotions checked. Do not talk like you haven't returned anything in Wat Mart if you found same item 25 cents cheaper somewhere else.

    Worst advice I have seen so far. It is morons w/ no scruples like you that have brought us into the mess we are in...

    Shame on you!





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  • ss777
    06-17 07:12 AM
    Option# 1 is better as there is trace of application being submitted and a receipt number to follow up with. With option# 2, you will never know how USCIS is treating your request.



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  • logiclife
    06-15 01:47 PM
    Don't you have to file Advanced Parole for your husband or can he travel just on EAD?

    No one can travel on EAD. EAD is for employment authorization. AP is for travel. You cant mix and match the purpose of them.

    If you dont need to travel or if you have a valid H1 stamp for travel, dont file for AP. If you want to travel and if your stamp has expired and dont want to apply for new stamp, then file for AP.

    If you want to work for your employer and continue there and if you are sure of your job security, then you dont need EAD, and dont apply for EAD. However its a good idea since EAD is a great option of you are suddenly fired or laid off. EAD makes it easy to search for jobs coz the employer doesnt have to file your H1 and you can join them immediately without any hassles.





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  • pansworld
    07-15 05:06 PM
    let's compile a list of famous immigrants like Albert Einstien, Henry Kissinger, Madalene Albright et al and change the face of what constitutes a legal immigrant. We need stories of doctors, scientists, engineers (the success of NASA) who were immigrants and benefited this country. That way we can fight the image of the immigrant as a low wage seeking will work for food kind of a worker being created by anti immigrants. Let Lou Dobbs fight history and deny it.



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  • CADude
    09-25 09:57 PM
    I called 2 weeks back to her office. Her staff told me to contact my reps. If any one lives in San Jose then he/she can contact her office.


    how to send an email to Lofgren her website only talks about CA certain areas. Any idea please guys do u have her direct email id , i am sending email , fax along with my area congressmen. Trying something to think out of blue.





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  • newuser
    07-12 11:52 AM
    Picture on an Indian Newspaper

    http://andhrajyothy.com/



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  • mbawa2574
    08-07 08:06 AM
    Notes:
    If you already have applied in EB2 you won't be affected.
    If you have a Masters you won't be affected.

    I am EB2 India with Dec 2005 waiting. I think all EB applications should have fair short. So if a EB3 can become a EB2 legally, I think it is a fantastic thing.

    I did not know about this rule. I changed employer in Jan 2005. My last employer's lawyer ill advised them to file me under EB3 in spite of the fact that the job paying off close to 200 k in compensation required B +8 and M+4 years of experience. I changed the job in Sep 05. Next company did the right thing and started the labor in EB2. I did not know about porting/interfiling otherwise my PD would have been Jan 2005. So even if I would have done a Port/Interfile, how am I at fault ?





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  • desi3933
    06-17 02:23 PM
    Good job slumdogs. You are becoming a puppet of anti-immigrants. Today they are using you to throw your L1 brothers out. Tomorrow they will throw you out. There is fraud in H1 too. No visa is perfect. Just like no American citizen is perfect. 1 in 10 citizen has gone to jail.
    If you have so much energy and motivation, why don't you go after anti-immigrants and expose their evil.

    Educated idiots!

    Are you suggesting that no fraud should be reported?

    I would say, any fraud, whether H1/L1/F1, employee related, employer related should be reported? Why should law abiding immigrants/workers pay for those who are committing fraud?

    >> 1 in 10 citizen has gone to jail.
    Not correct. There are about 260 jail inmates per 100,000 US residents.
    Link: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/jails.htm

    >> Educated idiots!
    Now, tell me, who is educated idiot?


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  • Macaca
    12-05 04:56 PM
    JUAN GONZALEZ: Well, I�d like to move on. I want to play a report from your show covering former Mexican President Vicente Fox�s May 2000 visit to the United States. Your reporter Casey Wian�

    LOU DOBBS: Wian.

    JUAN GONZALEZ: Wian, I�m sorry�described the visit as a, quote, �Mexican military incursion.� This aired on May 23, 2006.

    CASEY WIAN: This Mexican military incursion was fully authorized. A Mexican air force jet carrying President Vicente Fox was not just invited to Utah, but encouraged to visit by Governor John Huntsman.

    PRESIDENT VICENTE FOX: We fully support the businessmen from Utah and Mexico�

    CASE WIAN: It�s estimated Utah has about 100,000 illegal aliens, and the number is growing rapidly. Utah is also a part of the territory some militant Latino activists refer to as Aztlan, the portion of the Southwest United States they claim rightfully belongs to Mexico.

    You could call this the Vicente Fox Aztlan tour, since the three states he�ll visit�Utah, Washington, and California�are all part of some radical group�s vision of the mythical indigenous homeland, Lou.

    LOU DOBBS: Casey, thank you very much.

    JUAN GONZALEZ: The Southern Poverty Law Center criticized CNN for airing that report, in part because, as your reporter Casey Wian spoke, a graphic appeared on the screen. It was a map of the United States highlighting the seven Southwestern states that Mexico supposedly covets and calls Aztlan. The map was prominently sourced to the Council of Conservative Citizens, which is considered by many to be a white supremacist hate group.

    AMY GOODMAN: Your response, Lou Dobbs?

    LOU DOBBS: You know the response, and you know the reality. That�how long was that screen up? How long was that map up?

    AMY GOODMAN: Enough to see it.

    JUAN GONZALEZ: A few seconds.

    LOU DOBBS: The field producer who�did you know it was from the CCC? Which is a hate group.

    AMY GOODMAN: It�s attributed right there. It says Council of Conservative Citizens.

    LOU DOBBS: Right. And it couldn�t be clearer, could it? I mean, we weren�t hiding anything. We had no idea what they were. The field producer who used it went on the web, pulled�did a �grab,� as it�s called, and put it up. And she was suspended for a day for doing so.

    Did you guys know that we have sent our producers and our reporters down to the Southern Poverty Law Center years ago to make certain this sort of thing doesn�t happen? That�s how seriously we take the issue. And for you to talk about the incursion, you forgot to point out that that was coming out of rather jocular discussion of the incursions by Mexican forces along the border and the response of the US government.

    JUAN GONZALEZ: But�

    LOU DOBBS: And, I mean, are you offended?

    AMY GOODMAN: Lou, did you say you have no idea what the Council of Concervative Citizens is?

    LOU DOBBS: Did I say I don�t?

    AMY GOODMAN: Yes.

    LOU DOBBS: I certainly do now. Absolutely. What did I�you didn�t hear what I just said?

    AMY GOODMAN: I just want to�

    LOU DOBBS: They�re acknowledged as a hate group. Absolutely.

    JUAN GONZALEZ: See, but the problem, this�

    LOU DOBBS: What is the problem here?

    JUAN GONZALEZ: Projecting the image to your viewers that there�s a Mexican desire to reconquer, the Reconquista of the Southwestern United States, does create images�and especially in people who are not necessarily as intelligent as you necessarily or who have studied as much as you have�

    LOU DOBBS: Thank you for conceding that.

    JUAN GONZALEZ: �that the country is under siege.

    LOU DOBBS: My god, are you so self-important that you don�t think people have a sense of humor when Casey Wian says this is an authorized incursion by the Mexican government? You don�t think people have a sense of humor about that? The reality is, I think most people do. The other thing is, who are you trying to protect America from? I�m a little confused, because the reality is that there is a strong radical group of Reconquistas and Aztlan aficionados, and I have had them demonstrating against me in a couple of cities over the past few weeks. Don�t sit here being disingenuous�

    JUAN GONZALEZ: I�m not.

    LOU DOBBS: �and sanctimonious, because, let me tell you something�

    JUAN GONZALEZ: I�m not being disingenuous.

    LOU DOBBS: �there are many idiots on either extreme of this debate, and don�t kid yourself�

    AMY GOODMAN: But, Lou, I think what�s important here�

    LOU DOBBS: �and you know it.

    AMY GOODMAN: �once again, is the pattern. It�s the pattern�

    LOU DOBBS: The pattern�come on, please.

    AMY GOODMAN: No, let me make my point, because what I talk about is facts.

    LOU DOBBS: OK, let�s look at the pattern. The pattern is, for five years, we�ve been reporting on illegal immigration. The pattern is that we have been reporting on the impact of illegal immigration. It doesn�t suit your partisan views�and that�s understandable�or your ideological views. But don�t get carried away with yourselves, for crying out loud!





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  • danu2007
    11-10 10:40 PM
    Recieved a standard reply letter stating, thank you for your inquiry and you can track your inquiry through our tracking system. It is dated Nov 06 2008 A.M 01 and is attached to the letter we sent along with the envelope. I don't know if anybody else has recieved the same reply. We will have to see what we receive from other centers if we receive one. Thanks

    I got the same reply from texas service center!!





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  • willwin
    08-07 03:58 PM
    I was double minded to do porting or not. Now I am considering it very seriously. Got a green signal from my current EMPLOYER to go ahead for EB2.

    Is it possible to change category to EB2 with same employer/same job?





    SunnySurya
    08-07 10:09 AM
    These are the red dots and comments I have got so far:
    Calling US educated and... 08-07-2008 10:54 AM anti-immigrant in the making
    Calling US educated and... 08-07-2008 10:30 AM
    Calling US educated and... 08-07-2008 10:24 AM Selfish!!!
    Calling US educated and... 08-07-2008 09:37 AM very disappointing post.
    Calling US educated and... 08-07-2008 03:12 AM From your post one thing is clear, you are an embodiment of selfishness. Oh by the way, I am also an EB2 guy who could benefit from your proposal. After GC, what is next stop? NumbersUSA ?





    kumar1
    03-26 11:44 AM
    I agree with you 100%

    I understand. For an analogy consider theft. You might not know who did it but you lodge a complaint with the police. Its their job to investigate. Sometimes they are successful, sometimes they are not.

    In this case if the govt gets lot of complaints, and find a pattern they will investigate and find the dirt.

    All I and a few others are saying, discriminating EADs is illegal, and there is a govt. agency to deal with these things. So, if anybody is a victim contact the govt. agency. By being quite we are not helping ourselves.



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