J suffered from persecution in his country of origin, but he was given a rejected decision after the hearing. It made him feel depressed. As this reason ,J think the appeal would be unfair as well.
So he left Canada for the USA, to seek his American dream
j gets it. I crossed from the states to canada and now i wanna find my way back to the states. canada is lovely, but the states is overall better #unpopularopinion
J suffered from persecution in his country of origin, but he was given a rejected decision after the hearing. It made him feel depressed. As this reason ,J think the appeal would be unfair as well.
So he left Canada for the USA, to seek his American dream
J was so lucky by getting his hearing within a year. There are people waiting for years to get their decisions. And also there are people who are in appealing process after had received their rejection in the first place. Whoever, says IRB is unfair! actually demands to get positive decision unfairly.
Think there have been close to 40k people who have walked across the border from the US to Canada whether at Roxham road or a park in B.C. or a farmer’s field in Manitoba. Works both ways
Definitely not 6000. There are currently 1500 crossing measures monthly at Roxham rd. For 3 years it has been 500-1500 monthly crossing just at Roxham Rd so that doesn’t equal 6000.
I was writing something similae but didn't hit post. As a country who actually granted you asylum versus the US you could show a bit of gratitude. You would likely still be waiting for asylum in the US.
You're not wrong. again i'm grateful for the oppurtunities canada gave me. I see beyond country this or that. I think of where I can build wealth and live more comfortably. both countries are great. each had its own thing going on for it
I respect your opinion though I'd never ever use Canada to immigrate to the states. I still remembered the day I came to Canada and the way I was treated here by having free food, shelter and legal aid which was impossible for me to get it in the states and most important thing is you have been granted asylum which was not possible for you to get it in the states the way you got here, you might waited for years to get your first hearing.
Canada is a great county and so is the us. I think countries, passposts, boarders and nationalism as a social construct not a sacred principal. I go wherever prosperity is. I have experienced both worlds and have my preferences
I was writing something similae but didn't hit post. As a country who actually granted you asylum versus the US you could show a bit of gratitude. You would likely still be waiting for asylum in the US.
Show gratitude? as in be an outstanding citizen and pay a lot of taxes and donate to the poor? if that's what you mean then done. if you mean I should worship the queen and the land labeled as Canada then not my thing.
I don't understand why people are roasting J. If canada rejects his refugee hearing, how do you expect him to survive without any papers in canada? He's lucky to find his way back to USA cos he could still survive as an illegal there compared to canada. How he managed to find his way back, I can't explain. And would usa offer him any papers after being rejected in canada? That's 1percent chance. Well, good luck with J. Better he doesn't claim asylum in USA but get a lawyer on how to go about a different kind of visa.