Considering it is your conscious decision to stay blind and deaf to reality with your mantra of "Dey took er jerbs", I'm glad to have made you look into the mirror at last. You're welcome.Rob wrote: You make the IQ studies real for me, bub.
I'm talking about having to threaten to sue in order to get "your" government (notice that you're the one who started putting the possessives in this conversation, btw) to stop dragging their feet, giving ambiguous excuses about a priority date "being on review" limbo, and screwing people for over a decade *AFTER* they qualify for permanent residence BY THE RULES; so please tell me how is that fair (of course, you're probably going to say that it keeps legal aliens from spreading their "Employment Distortion Field" to protect American workers from harm, right?).Rob wrote:Rules and conditions - oh so unfair. There is nothing unfair about the rules and conditions 'our' government has set if you are here. Unfair would be a major improvement.
And no, don't give me the "Maybe they did something wrong" or "Well, that's the way things have to be if you want to stay here" excuses, because I seriously doubt anyone has to wait a decade or more to get the benefits they got notified about qualifying for in 2004, and needing to get legal counsel involved. It happened, and it's real.
Except that the host shouldn't ask the guest to hover over the ground to avoid using the gravity of their house after taking off those shoes, cook the food they were invited to partake in, and pay for the air they're breathing "Because uh... reasons" with a threat of keeping the shoes for 10 years if they decide to leave the house.austere wrote:I don't know dude, if I go over to a friend's they have some house rules like taking off shoes, I respect those and do so. As a guest, it should be distasteful to you to even think about complaining about it. America's house, America's rules.