How to deal with despicable real estate agency?

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I appreciate the support from this forum about my situation. The agency is advertising, promoting, and cashing in on the "whoops I accidentally had my baby in America while visiting Disneyland, wink wink" craze. It's greedy and wrong and is simply another line of silk in the web of fraud.
 
I think the maximum stay is 6 months for a tourist visa which means the pregnant women would have been 4 months pregnant. Upon entering the country the custom agents do ask the women whether they are pregnant. Most of birth tourism mothers violate the term of their stay on an expired visa. In essence they are breaking a law in order to give birth to a legal anchor baby. We must revise our law that all mothers at the time of giving birth must have legal status. I know this law would risk the baby's life when the mothers choose early induce labor or by surgery.
 
irvinehomeshopper said:
I think the maximum stay is 6 months for a tourist visa which means the pregnant women would have been 4 months pregnant. Upon entering the country the custom agents do ask the women whether they are pregnant. Most of birth tourism mothers violate the term of their stay on an expired visa. In essence they are breaking a law in order to give birth to a legal anchor baby. We must revise our law that all mothers at the time of giving birth must have legal status. I know this law would risk the baby's life when the mothers choose early induce labor or by surgery.

All this talk about birth tourism is pointless without talking about the loopholes that allow this.  Its just like taxes, dont blame the people that take advantages of the loopholes, blame the people that allow or instituted the loopholes.

I do not blame the women who do this AT ALL.  They think their kids will have a better future as US citizens so they will do what they can.  All of us as parents would go to this extreme and some of us even further if we thought it would help our children.  Even in the USA, Ive seen the extremes that parents will go to for their children... for much less. 

If you think about this, the real problem is the 14th amendment and birthright citizenship.  If everyone was not given citizenship for simply being born in the USA, birth tourism would not exist.  To my knowledge the USA is one of few nations that allow this.  In fact I believe many other nations have recently repealed birthright citizenship.
 
meccos12 said:
If you think about this, the real problem is the 14th amendment and birthright citizenship.  If everyone was not given citizenship for simply being born in the USA, birth tourism would not exist.  To my knowledge the USA is one of few nations that allow this.  In fact I believe many other nations have recently repealed birthright citizenship.

I agree. Citizenship should be "jus sanguinis" instead of "jus soli"
 
Ready2Downsize said:
Moonbeam was the perfect governor to bring it to since he's got a long history of going for anything green. Dryers
Maybe the gov will sign a law allowing public urination? Will save tons of water in this drought stricken state and will be user friendly for PRC nationals.
 
Happiness said:
Ready2Downsize said:
Moonbeam was the perfect governor to bring it to since he's got a long history of going for anything green. Dryers
Maybe the gov will sign a law allowing public urination? Will save tons of water in this drought stricken state and will be user friendly for PRC nationals.

Actually, its not just PRC nationals.
While on vacation in various Southern European cities,I saw (or smelled evidence of) plenty of instances of public urination.
Same with laundry being hung out to dry on balconies, all over the place, southern France, Spain, Italy, Greece. Its common.
We in the US are really uptight about the use of drying racks. I kind of think people should be able to air dry. Of course, it would be more courteous if people did it in a private courtyard, away from full public view, or at least promptly removed their laundry once dry instead of leaving it out for days at a time.

 
nyc to oc said:
Happiness said:
Ready2Downsize said:
Moonbeam was the perfect governor to bring it to since he's got a long history of going for anything green. Dryers
Maybe the gov will sign a law allowing public urination? Will save tons of water in this drought stricken state and will be user friendly for PRC nationals.

Actually, its not just PRC nationals.
While on vacation in various Southern European cities,I saw (or smelled evidence of) plenty of instances of public urination.
Same with laundry being hung out to dry on balconies, all over the place, southern France, Spain, Italy, Greece. Its common.
We in the US are really uptight about the use of drying racks. I kind of think people should be able to air dry. Of course, it would be more courteous if people did it in a private courtyard, away from full public view, or at least promptly removed their laundry once dry instead of leaving it out for days at a time.

You are right, I see it all over the world. But when you add all the things that didn't happen before it is concerning.
 
I don't think anyone would care if they did it out of view in their backyard, after all, this is the Republic of Irvine, there are aesthetic standards to maintain. 
 
AW said:
I don't think anyone would care if they did it out of view in their backyard, after all, this is the Republic of Irvine, there are aesthetic standards to maintain.

Me and BB aka Jizz have been saying it all along. It's going down hill. The culture shift is changing.
 
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