Don't trip dudes i got deported too after 18 years in the usa since i was 6 . Life is great here too i got a new family.Now am a true mexican again,GOD IS GREAT!!
Brother e vivido toda mi vida en usa 🇺🇸 y no tengo papeles y me asusta k me devuelvan es bueno mexico 🇲🇽 I want to back I’m cansado de pensar si un día no vuelvo a casa
I did 12 years in prison from 18-30 Got deported to a city I was a stranger to Worked my ass off now I’m a training director for a big company that has a satellite office here in TJ, I’m married with a 2 year old son, this city gave me a 2nd opportunity at life, love this city. ❤
I'm glad to hear you did that That's great because that's what it's about You learned your lesson You took that and you made a great life That's what these people need to do and congratulations
I know a couple homies that got sent to Tijuana. Spoke both languages perfect. Saved enough money to get to Mazatlan the other Zihuatanejo. With nothing but a backpack each. They both now run bars at top notch all inclusive resorts making mad money. Found love and have kids. Keep y’all heads up. Find the positive find the light. It’s always shinning. Love.
How is Guadalajara these days? I spent a couple of months there during the pandemic by marketa San Juan de Dios. Some lovely chicas malas nearby. Malas pero buenas.
I was deported in 2011 to Mexico and the last time I was here was when I was 4 years old ,didn’t even know the language. But now I love it here now and I don’t want too go back to the USA .
yeah i was never deported but a family member passed and left me some land so i went back to claim it, turns out cost of living is super cheap in mexico especially if you earn american dollars. since i work in IT i was able to find remote work and ive been living here since 2009 with no reap reason to ever go back. keep in mind this, yes with a advanced degree in america you will make alot of money, *but* you will also loose alot of that in taxes, housing, food, transportation ect ect just general cost of living. now yes we have all those expenses here too but since i work for a company in germany doing IT work the europe is waaay more then the peso so i do more then well for myself here. if you speak english well and are going to go back to mexico trust me the locals know you got a leg up and they are mad about it.
Exactly! He probably assumed that his parents secured U.S citizenship or U.S permanent residency for him when he was a child.He also probably felt that he had citizenship because he served in the US Military .
@@leesenger3094 they didn’t offer to make me a citizen, why would I risk my life for a country that doesn’t want me? So I can make videos complaining? lol I’m sure you have served and I’m sure it paid off for you. Thanks for your input
Got deported after living in the US for almost all my life (24 years roughly), landed in Juarez worked remotely there for 2 years finished a coding boot camp for web development, met a girl online through a language app and thanks to my remote job skills and better pay I was able to fly to Spain and relocate there to meet her, i now live here in a beautiful Mediterranean beach town , living with her and i am now a year away from becoming a European resident. I guess I can say life gave me a second chance.
@@sierra5713 Alicante, I survive with 1200 dollars. It’s more than enough. But once I get my work permit next month I’m gonna start applying for web dev jobs earning euros.
It’s a blessing in disguise. I’m a U.S. citizen of Mexican parents. Planning on moving to Mexico next year. Life in US is slavery,it’s more dangerous in some areas than Mexico believe it or not
@ it depends. My family has a house out in Guadalajara that just sits there. Gonna leave all the blue collar work behind. I deliver fuel and work 12 hour days but I notice everyone else works online and is living it up…gonna take that route.
@@jcsgrl359 oh yes, I agree. All of the Venezuela gangs have come here to the US. It’s very very dangerous. You can be raped or murdered in an instant. Mexico is much safer some of these people on this video you people are protected more than here in the United States, your places are nicer than our people they’re living on the streets
This happened to two of my employees. Shipped back to the Philippines, born there but left very early. Had no idea what to do. Lucky for me I hired them in my call center.
I Was Deported In 05 I Was Born In Romita,Guanajuato And My Parents Took Me To The US When I Was About 2 Years Old. I Lived My Teen Years In Salinas Ca. I GotcIn Alot Of Trouble Growing Up Even Though I Had My Both Parents With Me. I Did Alot Of Stupid Shit. And Until I Landed In Juvenile Hall In Salinas The Judge Said Enough Is Enough Im Sending You Back Home. Linving Here Since Back In My Rancho And Feel Free I Started Learning Cutting Hair Here In Mexico And Know I Have My Own Barber Shop, Thanks To My Parents Who Supported Me All The Way From Cali🙏🏼
I was 2 years old when when when I was brought to the United States and honestly I didn't think like that like being born in Mexico was the furthest thing from my mind tell me I'm from over the U.S. I never became a US citizen I was at 35 year resident same laws don't apply so any one who not a United States citizen and you're smoking weed or a little bit of anything else you can lose your status fuck suck. the only person I had in Mexico was my brother was one years old he he was brought to the US but he deported 10 years before me about 3 years ago he went missing I tried to do everything I could to try to find him to add insult to injury I was advised to stop. Or else. 😢
I was deported at age 18 back to Mexico after being working in the fields for 4 years . Married with a family in Mazatlan , life is very good here . We have food , a roof and good friends ... life is great here in Mexico ...
I love the older gentleman who feels Mexican and is adapting and being positive towards his situation, that's the best you can do. I commented you for that.
You don't know how Mexican people work we hustle and make money however we have to let me ask you some how did your white ass culture came over here huh how come you didn't learn the native American language how come you didn't learn that huh
She knows the language quite well. She applied for a job at a call center because she speaks a little English. Many Mexicans tend to stay in areas with large Mexican communities and don't often venture outside their comfort zones.
Having lived in the US since I was 4 years old until i was 22. Never went to Mexico in that time. I was removed from the US under voluntary departure. There seem to be a lot of ignorant people commenting on both sides of the scope. Its been 12 years since I came back to Mexico with my broken Spanish. Mexico is what you make it. If you live your life dreaming and needing to go back to the US you are in for a hard time here. For those that just came back, or will be coming back in the future by their choice or not. Do something with your life. Finish school. With the level of English most people come back with they can find a decent job. Add a higher education to that like a degree Mexico will be alright for you. I came back. Hated it but I picked my ass up and finished school, I sought out higher education and now I live a pretty decent life here. "El perico donde sea es verde."
“El que es perico donde quiera es Verde..Y el que es tarugo donde quiera pierde” You are doing a great job..should be proud of what you have accomplished!!!
My grandpa brought the whole family and my grandma to the U.S. illegally from Mexico when they were around 30 years old and my mom, aunts, and uncles were teenagers. All of them worked hard and never got in trouble with the law, they went to school and did their citizenship test and all of them passed even my grandma whom didn't know english. Now my whole family are U.S. citizens.
My mother said these days would come 35 years ago. She preached it so much that she had me preaching it to my friends growing up in the hood of San Diego. My mom completed her ESL classes and got her citizenship in 1990 I remember going to her ceremony. She always told me how proud she was of my achievements and now I tell her that I’m proud of how she took care of business because I have peace that she can’t be deported. So many people spent their years drinking and partying and not doing the leg work.
I've been here for 34years illigally. I married a US citizen and have a child. It's not easy as just fill out the paperwork, if it was, I would have been a citizen yesterday. Your mom is one of the lucky ones, others do the "leg work" and still get deported regardless
@@dihe1392That’s not luck, that’s her doing what she needed to do in a timely manner. You have also been here 34 years, so you were here well before 9/11. When did you start your citizenship process?
Blessed to all our brothers in arms that got deported. We used to adapt and overcome, to live a place where you’re not used to is hard but we never give up, we give it all to achieve our goals. Great video. Thanks for sharing.
As an immigrant myself, we all know very well if you’re NOT a citizen one day your luck will run out specially if you commit crimes. This people never hear about saving money when the day comes?
Man my step dad got deported! And he’s been away from us for 7 years already we really miss him and need him back in our life’s! Still have contact with him but it’s just not the same without him! Stepping up to take care of me and my brother 💯 always been a good dad!
10:29 You didn’t just enter “without papers”, you entered illegally. As awful as I feel for this woman’s family, I also don’t believe she was just picked up for crossing the border illegally decades prior. Was she using someone else’s identification to work? That alone could get you deported.
As a Mexican-American, this broke my heart and made me cried for these human beings. It’s so sad that they’ve lived pretty much most of their lives in the US and get deported especially the veteran. Very heartbreaking documentary. I’m grateful to be in the US thanks to my parents 💝🙏🏽
My parents are from Mexico and came here legally and followed the rules so they would not get sent back. I have many acquaintances who are undocumented, and they have never randomly had a knock on the door from ICE for no reason. Most undocumented people don't get deported just because - there is always a reason. Our actions have consequences. You are here as an uninvited guest - just follow the rules and stay under the radar. Second, being here illegally IS breaking the law. There is nothing legal about that. Try that in any other country, and you'll go to jail.
Being here illegally is against the law?? WOW, thanks for that genius. It's common sense you dope, that's why there's a border. And what rules are you talking about? Unless you never leave your house, your always at risk. I know you want to sound smart, but your not my friend. Oh, and ICE doesn't need a reason to deport you. 🙄
I don’t believe that mother was deported out of the blue! She’s been here illegally for decades but has built a business, family & son in the U.S. military. They aren’t just going to knock down her door for no reason. I’ve had friends growing up where one of their parents, siblings or other family members were deported & none were just random deportations for being here illegally. Crimes were usually drug related but my friends mom was deported when she used another family members passport to fly back to Columbia to visit her daughter (who was deported 7 years prior) because she was having another baby. I had another friend whose uncle was deported for selling SS# & other identifications. I feel really bad for the family members left behind & I can understand their anger but if you’re aren’t a citizen, legally or unlawfully here, you can get deported for any reason.
My mother tried to help two people who were deported, we live in Tijuana. My mother found them jobs, she helped them process their documents so they could work. She rent them a room at home, So that they wouldn't live on the street. Everything was fine for a while, one of them left, hedidn't pay rent and he took things that didn't belong to him. The other lived there almost two years before he started using Drugs and trying to hurt my mom. I understand that not everyone is the same, many people are very good but others not so much. And there are people like my mother who try to help and in the end they end up Disappointed.
@@EbK_KJx17 I'm not trying to demonize them, I'm just explaining what happened. People often complain that they don't have opportunities in Mexico and when they do, they waste them.
Unfortunately, unless you’re an American citizen, you’re not legally an American. Doesn’t matter if you’ve been in the US one year or 50 years. And if you’re being deported because you committed a crime, you don’t have have the same rights.
Absolutely you cannot be a criminal and live in the United States and I agree with that. I don’t like people being deported if they are a productive member of society.
i dont disagree but uh, Gaining citizenship isnt as simple as waiting 5-10 business days for a letter in the mail. Its a long ass process. Uneasonably long in far too many cases. a lot of cases. 11 years and more. Citizenship should be an immigrants first priority and if the government was actually concerned about it, dont you think they would do everythin g possible to make it quick and painless?? Either its not a problem, or they dont care. People can blame Biden, Trump, or whoever but this has been a porblem well before any current or recent administration.
It stood out to me how the guy went from saying how much he missed his wife, to cheesing all in a new ladies face at his new job. Meanwhile his wife is crying on the phone, professing her love and how she would give anything to be with him. If I was her and seen this…. I would’ve been embarrassed, feel betrayed and hurt. At this point I’m like let him be…. He’s probably for the streets
They don't want to be together or else THEY WOULD. If one of us has to go, we all have to go, that's all there is to it. If we're gonna be miserable in separate countries, we might as well be miserable TOGETHER in the same country. Family is family, you stay together at ANY cost. No job nor house is worth being separated from your children or spouse. That's not love.
This is my dad and my family's story... he was deported in 2008... nothing was ever the same.. our family remains fragmented, there's layers to this... grandma was devastated, my sister has no memories of her dad in the states, parents relationship never recovered... hes still there.. his connection with us is confined to the internet (chats and videos), he could not attend my college graduation and watched it online. The border not only defines geographical boundaries but it has also shaped and defined me... its a grief for a living person that not many people understand, that empty chair at la mesa stays there for years, dejando una huella imborable. Nothing about this path has been easy.
I'll never understand families who stay separated just to keep one foot in the USA. Mexico is never so bad that they can't take the family with them when they get deported.
I’m so sorry i gave birth alone in the hospital because my sons dad was taken at a checkpoint for 🪪 it’s devastating and the ice detainer was something u had not heard of being as an American 🇺🇸 so my question is did you guys get a lawyer? I ended up having to and this was august of 2009 when I experienced the nightmare
@@NotTheExfacts and they are growing the peso and using resources for electricity ⚡️ better than usa 🇺🇸 i learn a lot from Tabasco my husband’s native land in 🇲🇽
@@NotTheEx what’s seen here and in many people’s lived experience including mine is 2 things: the majority of the family is already settled in the US including extended family, and the deportee is the only one in Mexico. So uprooting the entire family especially if they’re not geographically close to Mexico is not easy. 2. some of these cases involve the complex disease of alcoholism. Where folks lose their papers because of DUIs or substance related charges. My family in fact did try the “let’s live in Mex to keep our family approach”. My dad lost his citizenship due to alcoholism and unfortunately us living there with him didn’t make it go away either. He’s paying the ultimate price and I wish I could say 16 years later he’s found sobriety but as u see with the men featured here. They drink to cope with the loneliness and separation.
It's easy to blame people. I only imagine how terrible Mexico is for their parents to smuggle their own kids in. I pretty sure the parents wanted better for their own. But they messed up and back to where you were born.
@@kaisersv they loved them so much they failed to legalize them while living in the United States illegally .. the parents put them in that position. It’s their fault it’ll continue to be their fault because they bring them here illegally and they don’t legalize them nor themselves lol gmafb
The worst part is that people, including some "criminals" from around the world, are entering the U.S. illegally through the Mexico border as if it’s effortless. They are impacting the economy and contributing to crime. Meanwhile, those who want to live here legally, have served in the U.S. military, follow the laws, and pay taxes are being forced to leave the country.
Buy, obey, consume, watch TV, follow orders, deny reality, turn in your neighbor, do social media, do not question authority, inform, marry, and reproduce.
I have a couple of cousins who've been deported and living in Baja California for several years now. Initially it was very difficult, and they would have done anything to return, but once they accepted their new reality, they were able to adapt and eventually learned to make a decent living down there. They've both said they'd still love to come back to the U.S, BUT only to visit, not to live.
Both countries have good and bad things. I’m Mexican-American and after 10 years to live in US I decided to back to México with my gringa family. Now is time to live the Mexican dream. So come on guys México is also a great country to have a good life quality of yo do the right things😊😊
I was an immigrant. If you're illegal you're illegal which means can and should be deported no matter if you grew up in the US all your life unless you become a permanent resident via US citizen marriage, etc.
Thats not how it works for mexicans though, the "american" illegally crossed into mexico and refused to learn the language. They ignored the law and invaded the country and decided to steal it what wasn't there's. I get if you're from the middle east, asia or some other part of the world. You should come legally here because you don't hold no ground on this land because you cant go back that far into the Nations History.
I got deorted in 2012, worked my ass off from construction to Uber driver and in real estate, I have a nice big house in playas de tijuana, i live good here, but you must work hard and have a goal in life
👍🏽 family support is a must to make it, it's easy to get lost in filth alcohol depression if you don't have a clear head a hustler can, I met so many guys from LA my ex started tripping using drugs plus down there way to crazy. I loved playaz 🌸👍🏽 I came back, he's deported I had to cut that out. Rest Till Paradise to the Senior for your son 🫂💙🙏🏽 .. Best wishes to everyone. (I haven't been up and down since 2018 🤦🏽)
😂😂😂 look at you, wouldn't have made anything out of your if you weren't deported or you're just lying. Didn't make it America, didn't make it in Mexico, here lying 🤥
These people love to play the victim but if you are just minding your business staying in line why would anyone bother you? Im sure there are cases where really innocent people get picked for deportation too but the great majority have commited some kind of crime or misdemeanor, so don't feel too bad for them.
If you're 18-25 years old speak decent English, in decent physical shape, and are motivated to honorably serve something greater than yourself, go to the US embassy and tell them you want to enlist in the US military for 4 years and make sure to tell them you want your citizenship started as soon as you take the oath and sign on the dotted line. I proudly did it and it'll stay that way forever. Case closed.
I see a few of these deportados in small towns in Mexico. Most can’t even speak Spanish or Spanish broken Spanish. Most of them have criminal records in the USA. The reason a USA resident green card holder gets deported is that they didn’t apply for citizenship or they didn’t think they could be sent back to their country of birth. It’s all in the small print when you get your green card. It means that you can be sent back if you commit a felony. Many people I know that have a green card but don’t apply for citizenship is because they have committed a crime or dwi . When you apply for citizenship you have to get a background check, pass a test, get interviewed by immigration and go to the ceremony. Some people can’t afford to pay the fee. Some people can’t pass the English language test.
I don’t speak Spanish because I’m mixed and my mom is Russian and my dad is Mexican and Apache Native American. Some of us didn’t learn because of racism and assimilation to American culture.
I'm a white American, and I want to speak Spanish. I like the language. I speak some Spanish not very well. My own culture is not very supportive to learning a new language. I guess because it's difficult and they are afraid of looking stupid for trying. It can be uncomfortable. I'm also well traveled. I've been to foreign countries and struggled with language. It gives you a different perspective. Americans should travel more and maybe learn something.
I grew up in Chicago all my life from age 1-24 when I was deported. I am now 33 and was able to buy some land and build my own home here near the Laguna of Chapala en Jalisco MX. It's a beautiful country. I wish I had been deported sooner😂
What do you like the most over living in Chicago? I grew up in that area too. Long cold miserable winters, I will never live that north again if I can help it. And IL is stupid expensive just to have place to live. Is it easier down there? God bless
It’s interesting how so many Hispanic people specially teenagers wave that Mexican flag around and older people always complain about tha united state of America but when people get deported it hits different. Let that be a lesson to all specially those with green . Behave….
As a Mexican myself, I always say the same thing, they are always waving the Mexican flag there but they dont want nothing to do with the real Mexico, all they do is brag about how great they are there in the US.
I have a 75 year old friend who came to US at the age of 30. He married an American, worked all his life and was retired and drawing SS. He got busted with weed, spent some time in jail and then was deported to Mexico with nothing but the jumpsuit he was wearing in the ICE detention center. He's old alone and sick. I know there are people out there who would say that's what he gets and I have to just shake my head. He was a good husband and father, he paid into the system many years and in his case I don't see the fairness.
@@jennymcdonough2095 Still not an excuse. Most Asian parents work hard and still secure their own and their kids' legal status. Life is tough for all. Also, if he has been contributing to his own legit SS, he can still get his SS checks in Mexico.
@@korsakoff76 You CAN NOT draw ss if you are not a citizen of the US. They dump a sick old man in the heart of Mexico after 45 years of residency with nothing but the clothes on his back and if you don't have a problem with that there is something wrong with YOU.
@@jennymcdonough2095 My mom was an immigrant and got her citizenship and did it legally. It didn't take her 45 years. She did it in about 10 years after coming here. My mom worked and had two jobs, working a job and taking care of a home and child are two jobs. There is no excuse... they thought they could be lazy and live here forever as a foreigner with no legal standing... those days are over.
When I graduated from college, I had the chance to stay and work in the US with an H1B, but I decided to go back to my home country, best decision so far. At first I felt bad because I loved being in the US during college, I had a girlfriend who's a US citizen. I could have married her long ago and become a citizen but I decided not to because I didn't want to live in the States, so I don't regret that I forfeited the opportunity to stay. I think I have a better life right now, than the one I could have had, if I stayed in the States.
Sad situation for them but the law has been in place for decades if you’re convicted of a felony you’re getting deported after you complete your sentence‼️💯
The grass ain't always greener on the other side. Every city got it's "undesirable" section You can't escape the struggle, you got to survive and overcome it 🙏 Smiles are universal
@talos2373 I'm an American citizen by birth right, Mexican Citizen by blood right. The fent jacks the prices up on your side 🤣 There is definitely no human fecal matter on the streets here 🇲🇽 ##staycation
So, according to your thinking, if you break the law for so many years in a country that it’s not your country, you expect authorities to look the other way and not enforce the law, only because you can’t understand that the laws are made to enforce them?…how that works?
Falsified enlistment is a crime, he should have got 10yrs in the brig! No sympathy for persons disregarding US LAWS he took a spot from a REAL citizen...
There is no path for foreigners to directly obtain a US citizenship. They must first obtain a green card and hold it for 3-5 years being good permanent residents before getting eligible to apply for a citizenship. While holding a green card, the foreigner must be deported if he/she commits a felony or more serious crime. If these guys didn’t commit felony crime they could have become US citizens and would be still living here. That’s the deal they signed up for when they entered the US military but they broke the deal themselves.
I dont understand why this video portrays this grim living in México. plenty of mexican emigrants, expats, and daily border commuters that tell the opposite. There is a reason this is the most crossed border in the world. This video just makes victims. Most immigrants legal or not, are proud they overcame adversity, not highlight victimhood. How about highlighting and recognising the ones that succeded after being deported or returning to Mexico and starting busineses. a couple advantages these people have are they are fluent in english and they have friends and family in the US.
it's the media it same with UK it's made out to be the end of the rainbow where the streets are paved with gold. They are on the contrary not and it's tough to live in UK unless you are earning at least £50-60,000 per year and that's for a single person with no dependents.
Because the place is beautiful but people can be evil, there's this thing call classists, preference over social status, workers treated like crap even by U.S companies that have installed themselves here for cheap labor, made to work 6 days a week 9hrs a day, Sundays through Saturdays, and the day workers mondays through Saturdays, sometimes made to work 20 hrs straight if they tell you to do overtime. We have laws but there's no justice, there is corruption. Sad thing is it can't change because people are afraid to speak up, feel over power. Aside average salary compared to rent is crap, monthly rent is $10,000 when average salary is $4,800 a month, at the most $10,000 if have a higher education. Basic education is expensive regardless of it been public. Etc. etc. It's changing slowly thanks to certain programs but there's still so much injustices, it's like we have rules and laws only as decorations and they try to gaslight or set a group against one when speak up. One is only lucky if one is middle class, rich or a foreigner. Though do have to say at the least I'ved never heard gun shots.
I promise you’ll hate Mexico 6 months in, then you could get used to it. 2 months in you’ll love it. When nothing important is in the U.S… it’s fine but when your life was here… it suck’s
The rent for a good apartment in Mexico is like 2k pesos, which is like 100 dollars. They can easily get their mom one. I bet they spend more money on McDonald's per month.
@@Lggc2726 my family moved to the US when I was 3 years old I was practically raised in a small town in Arizona. So when I said home town I was referring to where I was raised. No I was not born in Arizona, so would need my passport to visit, which I'm in the process of getting now .
@@FatBoy55294 ahhhhh ok ok, you mean a USA Visa, best of luck to you, visiting other contries with your Mexcian pasport will give you a better opportunity and money in the bank with a credit card.
Americans don't realize that Mexico in many ways is better overall than the US. Everyone acts as if it is some type of curse to be sent to Mexico, but in fact, it is a blessing.
Can you be more specific instead of vague? I am sure you can point out things that are better but let’s be honest, majority of folks if given the choice would definitely stay in the US.
If these people lived in the United States for OVER 30 yrs Illegally, then there is Absolutely Zero excuse for them not to have gone through the proper legal process to become a naturalized citizen. We are a country of immigrants and always will be. There will also always be a process to become an American. If they can't be bothered to go through the naturalization process within a 30 yrs period, I have zero sympathy
I don't feel sorry for these people, for the simple reasons. My grandparents h ad to go through the FRONT DOOR. THEY HAD TO WAIT FOR ALMOST A WEEK, RIDE 3 MONTHS ON A BOAT, THAT HAD RATS WALKING OVER THEM CONSTANLY. LOTS WERE DEAD IN THE MORNING.!!! DON'T TELL ME, OH POOR ME. THIS CALL CENTER , IS A USA BORN COMPANY, SO AMERICA IS STILL CARING FOR YOU. IF YOU WOULD HAVE COME RIGHT WAY,YOU WOULD NOT HAVE TO BE DEPORTED.
Why do you always show older people, you show the worst places in TJ and then act like the USA is the problem. You break the law, you get what you get. Where are the younger deportee's? You are not telling the whole story.
This is sad all of my tios got deported to tijuana they were raised in L.A once they got deported they fell in to depression it was so hard kn them they became alcoholics and got into drugs there dead now😢 i miss them so much 😢.. to everyone deported please keep ur head up dknt trust no one and dont take drugs God Bless u all
I worked for an immigration attorney for almost a year, when I lived in the RGV in South Texas, the amount of people getting deported because they did something stupid was very high. Lots of them weren't born here and committed a crime that was the impediment for them to fix their status, USCIS is tough with people with criminal records even if they served for our military.
I 've lived here in USA. For 24 yrs illegally. i was brought here when i was 14 since then i have tried to be a good citizen i went to school i have been working 2 jobs and paying taxes for 24 yrs. My brother who is a US citizen filed a petition for me to become legal resident and i was told i had to wait 25 yrs for immigration to revise my case. I will be over 50 yrs old when they get to my case. Immigration laws need to be readjusted.
He should have got 10yrs in military prison for falsified enlistment and taking a spot from a REAL Citizen... Deportation is not a crime, but he entered illegally then joined the country probably with a fake SSN#. No sympathy.
No americans politicians don't want that. And serving the military of another country is seen as treason. How would you feel if americans serve another country? They are seen as traitors. In my country you can only serve the military when you have the citizenship.
This lady that got deported has like 4 kids. An they have her living deep in Tijuana in a shithole. It cost $800 a month to rent a 1 bedroom apartment in a nice building in zona rio. I feel bad for her but at the same time WTH her kids need to do better.
Can someone please help me. If you enter a country illegally or remain in the country after legally being there. What is expected. This documentary is not saying what were these people doing for the Time in the USA to deal with their legal status and what were they doing when deportation happened?
I cannot imagine being born in a country where, it appears, that you are surrounded by everyone longing to be a part of another country. That sounds miserable.
I guess the lesson is, if you come here illegally, you don’t have any rights as a citizen of the United States. It doesn’t matter how many years you’ve been here, if it isn’t legal, you shouldn’t assume you can stay.
I'm totally against deporting a Vietnam veteran with an addiction to drugs, that committed a non-violent crime!! Their sacrifice and service warrants expanded consideration.
Same. Combat vets usually come back from war as a different person. Drugs & alcohol are used to help their PTSD from the battlefield, which usually ends badly. These are US soldiers that fought for this country but if they commit a crime, they need to punished but definitely not deported!!
I feel sad for them, and even more so for the children they took with them, but I mean what did you expect? You can’t enter a country illegally and expect to be granted citizenship. Still though if you’ve served you absolutely shouldn’t be deported.
This is breaking my heart to watch... Jesus Christ that scene with the lady talking to her grand babies on FaceTime got me in tears. I'm a naturalized citizen from the caribbean and I could not imagine my mom having to go back after all these years working, paying taxes and doing the right things. All I can do is pray that the US recognize and fix this.
@kedah2398 I don't understand people like you she broke the law, she knew it when she did it long ago. When you break the law you get separated from family that's just fact whether jailed or deported. People leave Mexico because they want a better life and we have decent lives in America because most people respect the law and they do not in Mexico because the country is corrupt.
@@hockeyplayersnetwork3307 What is there not to understand? Having empaty for a family in a hard situation legal or illegal? You and your kind yap, yap, yap listen you were fortunate to be born here weather you're poor or rich, they're tons of opportunity in this nation, why not live and let live? Pretty soon you're going to be dead, rotting in a box and all the laws and land you're fighting for you can't take with you. While you at it why don't you go tell big Pharma stop selling shit that kills people, tell the FDA the food they selling full of sugar etc... Bet you wouldn't say that but you're the first to thump your Chinese made Trump bible bout thet law and the law... F outta here!
The US is doing the right thing by deporting people who entered the country illegally. We have laws and if you break them, you are subject to the punishment the court deems appropriate. Don't put yourself in that position in the first place. Apply for legal immigration, wait your turn, and come in when you are accepted, it's very simple, really. What's sad is that people make the choices that they do then suffer from them and blame others.
The dye is cast the minute someone decides to illegally enter a country. The US should go after employers who hire non-citizens and end birthright citizenship for children of people illegally in the country. Basically, end the incentives.
@@hockeyplayersnetwork3307her kid served in the army. Not only did she giver her money to the US but she was willing to sacrifice her only son to the military. Do you even know anything about patriotism or sacrifice?
One never appreciates what they have, until they lose it. I see & hear so many Mexicans in my community with their allegiance & love for Mexico 🇲🇽 and badmouth the U.S. like it’s a piece of garbage. I guess being banned from entry fixes that on the spot. I love America 🇺🇸 I love being an American 🇺🇸 I wouldn’t want to live anywhere else in the world. People should unite and fight for their own countries. You would think that, if so many people are fleeing to the U. S., that their own governments would want to replicate what the United States 🇺🇸 is doing, but they don’t.
I’m pretty sure close community I live They all got nervous Trump. I have grandson bi racial Hispanic. Her BF families seem concerned- with Trump- I’m not sure Suppodaly in process with papers. 🤔🤔
This is what happens when you break the law. The children have to suffer because their parents decided to break the law. It may seem like a dream. But can’t live somewhere illegal for years and not face consequences. I feel bad but every country has laws, his parents put that on him to bare.
if you are Illegal you are Illegal and you know it, try to get your paper work done, either get a visa or marry a us citizen, all countries have laws, follow them.
biggest bootlicker statement I have read. If you lived in the 60's you'd probably suck dat boot of using the restroom assigned to you because "it was the law" LOL
Yo tengo 3 familiares deportados. La andaban cajeteando. No valoraron su residencia. Pero están bien dentro de lo que cabe. Lo bueno que somos de la frontera y todavía tenemos familia en Mexico.
My dad immigrated to America and he waited seven years and did all the proper paperwork got to America when he was 28 and he has been here since he was 63 years old now. People just need to have some patience. He didn’t go up rich. He lived in a very poor community struggled every day, but still did it. Some people are just trying to do with the easy way, but then you’re looking over your shoulder every day, even if you are successful getting into the country.
Call center treat the employees bad, there a high turnover in America. This is why these jobs get sent overseas. It sucks, this is why i never shop on line!
Please, with the ladies, neither one or her daughters cared enough to petition their mother’s residency? The minute they turned 18 they could have and the process would have taken 10 years but no one cared now they get upset because it’s not “fair”. Well yes it is fair because it’s the law, you had such a long time to get your papers together stop victimizing yourselves and complaining for something that is 100% your fault. The daughters look like they’re in their freaking 30. 🙄 The other guy, well they won’t deport you if you’re a citizen but it seems like he never followed through with his citizenship so he remained a resident and if with that you have to mess up so many times for they to finally to revoke your residency so again it’s a YOU problem. You’re given such a freaking opportunity for years and you mess it up, that’s being stupid. As soon as I could apply for my residency I did and I’m as soon as I could apply to my citizenship I did as well. And the entire time I worked hard and never once did anything that would jeopardize my residency and chances of becoming a citizen. Take accountability for your actions and stop being such a drama queen people. We were given such an opportunity to be in this country don’t waste it like clowns
No, thats not how US immigration law works though yours is a common misunderstanding. If their mother entered the US illegally she would have to go back to Mexico for 10 years FIRST and only then could her daughters petition for her to then come back legally as an immediate relitive of US citizens.
This was very well done. I live in San Diego and go to TJ on a regular basis. I can do that because I also have the SENTRI card which helps cross very fast. This video just reminds me that there are many unfortunate people that I probably run into like in your video. I wish them the best.
Dude Mexico is better then America US now soo why even worry gas is like 2.75 a gallon.. Tacos are cheap women are plenty why you crying LOL. But if you were a vet you should have access to the US without any F questions..Goes to show you the BS loyalty of this country...Its all BS
@@jeffalbillar7625 Indeed, Mexico will never be better than America if Mexico improves, America will sabotage it to avoid competition, and yeah, I said America
@@mariananev-xk8tw Dont have to I have property in Mexico now too!!! Oh and multiple homes in the US. I can be everywhere ...Grabbing my balls I hold a piece of both sucker
Don't trip dudes i got deported too after 18 years in the usa since i was 6 . Life is great here too i got a new family.Now am a true mexican again,GOD IS GREAT!!
It’s crazy that people walk in heat cross rivers pay lots of money to get to the USA. FOR WHAT. STAY HOME IN YOUR COUNTRY
Yea I met many guys who were deported back to Mexico and enjoying life. Make the best of what you have. Sometimes the simple life is better
And I'm a gringo that became legally Mexican and live in Mexico.
Brother e vivido toda mi vida en usa 🇺🇸 y no tengo papeles y me asusta k me devuelvan es bueno mexico 🇲🇽 I want to back I’m cansado de pensar si un día no vuelvo a casa
@@jtclark877your not afraid their going to deport you back to USA?
I did 12 years in prison from 18-30
Got deported to a city I was a stranger to
Worked my ass off now I’m a training director for a big company that has a satellite office here in TJ, I’m married with a 2 year old son, this city gave me a 2nd opportunity at life, love this city.
❤
I'm glad to hear you did that That's great because that's what it's about You learned your lesson You took that and you made a great life That's what these people need to do and congratulations
saludos desde mazatlan, love TJ
Love to hear these success stories… ✌️
Is your company hiring? My brother was deporting couple years ago to Tijuana and he's been struggling.
Keep it going my boi. May you keep getting blessed and your fam as well
I know a couple homies that got sent to Tijuana. Spoke both languages perfect. Saved enough money to get to Mazatlan the other Zihuatanejo. With nothing but a backpack each. They both now run bars at top notch all inclusive resorts making mad money. Found love and have kids. Keep y’all heads up. Find the positive find the light. It’s always shinning. Love.
Way to go ! 😊
When there is nothing else to do, do the best you can and adapt. Love to hear the success!
🙏
@@IamPistoG what resorts
I guess if they wanted they could come back now.
That is disgusting that a military vet that fought for our country was deported back to Mexico after living in this country since the age of one.
This happened a lot when Trump was president.
Right!!!
@@tanyaarmendariz4047 don't forget Obama... They used to call him deporter in chief
While Biden lets millions in for free
@@tanyaarmendariz4047 I hope Trump is re-elected.
it's been six years since i was deported. I just got to Guadalajara 8 days ago. Blessing Blessings to everyone stay strong.
Stay strong bro 🙏🏼
God bless you, brother, on your journey
How is Guadalajara these days? I spent a couple of months there during the pandemic by marketa San Juan de Dios. Some lovely chicas malas nearby. Malas pero buenas.
Guadalajara has a lot of opportunities for bilingual people, good luck
Bro, i live there. If u need something Dm
I was deported in 2011 to Mexico and the last time I was here was when I was 4 years old ,didn’t even know the language. But now I love it here now and I don’t want too go back to the USA .
you can't 🤣
Because you can’t 😅
Thank 😊 God your happy 🎉
yeah i was never deported but a family member passed and left me some land so i went back to claim it, turns out cost of living is super cheap in mexico especially if you earn american dollars. since i work in IT i was able to find remote work and ive been living here since 2009 with no reap reason to ever go back.
keep in mind this, yes with a advanced degree in america you will make alot of money, *but* you will also loose alot of that in taxes, housing, food, transportation ect ect just general cost of living. now yes we have all those expenses here too but since i work for a company in germany doing IT work the europe is waaay more then the peso so i do more then well for myself here. if you speak english well and are going to go back to mexico trust me the locals know you got a leg up and they are mad about it.
If you didn’t commit a felony, it was probably some bad, you would still be in the USA
If you served in the U.S. Military as a non-Citizen, you should be granted immediate U.S. Citizenship.
Exactly! He probably assumed that his parents secured U.S citizenship or U.S permanent residency for him when he was a child.He also probably felt that he had citizenship because he served in the US Military .
A deal that should have been worked out and finilized BEFORE serving someone else’s country.
@@Gudgurl28 So says someone whom has not served I’m sure
@@leesenger3094 they didn’t offer to make me a citizen, why would I risk my life for a country that doesn’t want me? So I can make videos complaining? lol I’m sure you have served and I’m sure it paid off for you. Thanks for your input
@@Gudgurl28don’t wanna hear that. The United States knew he wasn’t a citizen and still let him served. They should’ve naturalized him
Got deported after living in the US for almost all my life (24 years roughly), landed in Juarez worked remotely there for 2 years finished a coding boot camp for web development, met a girl online through a language app and thanks to my remote job skills and better pay I was able to fly to Spain and relocate there to meet her, i now live here in a beautiful Mediterranean beach town , living with her and i am now a year away from becoming a European resident. I guess I can say life gave me a second chance.
👏👏👏👏
What part of spain did you move to? What's your monthly income there?
@@sierra5713 Alicante, I survive with 1200 dollars. It’s more than enough. But once I get my work permit next month I’m gonna start applying for web dev jobs earning euros.
@@sierra5713 something like 2000 to 3000 euro s a month.
For reals how did you did that
It’s a blessing in disguise. I’m a U.S. citizen of Mexican parents. Planning on moving to Mexico next year. Life in US is slavery,it’s more dangerous in some areas than Mexico believe it or not
Nice! All the best to you in Mexico. IDK how you equate living in the US to slavery but Mexico must be better than we think it is💁🏾♀️
@ it depends. My family has a house out in Guadalajara that just sits there. Gonna leave all the blue collar work behind. I deliver fuel and work 12 hour days but I notice everyone else works online and is living it up…gonna take that route.
@@jcsgrl359 oh yes, I agree. All of the Venezuela gangs have come here to the US. It’s very very dangerous. You can be raped or murdered in an instant. Mexico is much safer some of these people on this video you people are protected more than here in the United States, your places are nicer than our people they’re living on the streets
Mexico has more crime bud 😂
This happened to two of my employees. Shipped back to the Philippines, born there but left very early. Had no idea what to do. Lucky for me I hired them in my call center.
I Was Deported In 05 I Was Born In Romita,Guanajuato And My Parents Took Me To The US When I Was About 2 Years Old. I Lived My Teen Years In Salinas Ca. I GotcIn Alot Of Trouble Growing Up Even Though I Had My Both Parents With Me. I Did Alot Of Stupid Shit. And Until I Landed In Juvenile Hall In Salinas The Judge Said Enough Is Enough Im Sending You Back Home. Linving Here Since Back In My Rancho And Feel Free I Started Learning Cutting Hair Here In Mexico And Know I Have My Own Barber Shop, Thanks To My Parents Who Supported Me All The Way From Cali🙏🏼
Family is everything bless up
Whenever I become rich..I will help you out brother...
I was 2 years old when when when I was brought to the United States and honestly I didn't think like that like being born in Mexico was the furthest thing from my mind tell me I'm from over the U.S. I never became a US citizen I was at 35 year resident same laws don't apply so any one who not a United States citizen and you're smoking weed or a little bit of anything else you can lose your status fuck suck. the only person I had in Mexico was my brother was one years old he he was brought to the US but he deported 10 years before me about 3 years ago he went missing I tried to do everything I could to try to find him to add insult to injury I was advised to stop. Or else. 😢
The Salad Bowl. Shit was the craziest city in the country back in the 90’s.
There's consequences for everything we do young man
I was deported at age 18 back to Mexico after being working in the fields for 4 years . Married with a family in Mazatlan , life is very good here . We have food , a roof and good friends ... life is great here in Mexico ...
THATS WONDERFL
What do you do in MX?
Mazatlan is beautiful!
I love the older gentleman who feels Mexican and is adapting and being positive towards his situation, that's the best you can do. I commented you for that.
Commented? Did you mean commend?
The lady lived in the United States for 31 years and never learned the language.. how did they get by???
You don't know how Mexican people work we hustle and make money however we have to let me ask you some how did your white ass culture came over here huh how come you didn't learn the native American language how come you didn't learn that huh
She knows the language quite well. She applied for a job at a call center because she speaks a little English. Many Mexicans tend to stay in areas with large Mexican communities and don't often venture outside their comfort zones.
Having lived in the US since I was 4 years old until i was 22. Never went to Mexico in that time. I was removed from the US under voluntary departure. There seem to be a lot of ignorant people commenting on both sides of the scope. Its been 12 years since I came back to Mexico with my broken Spanish. Mexico is what you make it. If you live your life dreaming and needing to go back to the US you are in for a hard time here. For those that just came back, or will be coming back in the future by their choice or not. Do something with your life. Finish school. With the level of English most people come back with they can find a decent job. Add a higher education to that like a degree Mexico will be alright for you. I came back. Hated it but I picked my ass up and finished school, I sought out higher education and now I live a pretty decent life here. "El perico donde sea es verde."
Exactly !!! take action instead of complaining. That's not going to solve your situation.
Awww God bless you
Congrats bro
“El que es perico donde quiera es Verde..Y el que es tarugo donde quiera pierde” You are doing a great job..should be proud of what you have accomplished!!!
Great! Sounds like a blessing as opposed to to living around a bunch of racists.
My grandpa brought the whole family and my grandma to the U.S. illegally from Mexico when they were around 30 years old and my mom, aunts, and uncles were teenagers. All of them worked hard and never got in trouble with the law, they went to school and did their citizenship test and all of them passed even my grandma whom didn't know english. Now my whole family are U.S. citizens.
This is not the way, but acceptable. I hate the ones who do nothing and say after so many years.
My mother said these days would come 35 years ago. She preached it so much that she had me preaching it to my friends growing up in the hood of San Diego. My mom completed her ESL classes and got her citizenship in 1990 I remember going to her ceremony. She always told me how proud she was of my achievements and now I tell her that I’m proud of how she took care of business because I have peace that she can’t be deported. So many people spent their years drinking and partying and not doing the leg work.
I've been here for 34years illigally. I married a US citizen and have a child. It's not easy as just fill out the paperwork, if it was, I would have been a citizen yesterday. Your mom is one of the lucky ones, others do the "leg work" and still get deported regardless
@ my mom did the leg work in 80’s. She said it would get harder. She has good intuition.
@@conquerunderstanding7517 exactly, she got lucky because before the 9/11 attack it was way easier to apply for a green card
@@dihe1392That’s not luck, that’s her doing what she needed to do in a timely manner. You have also been here 34 years, so you were here well before 9/11. When did you start your citizenship process?
100%! Yes! No one is saying in the documentary that they had years in the U.S. to make things right and obviously they never bothered.
Nobody is gonna talk about how that ladies social security number was vocally said on the video for everyone too hear 😂😂😂🤦🏻♂️🤦🏻♂️
lmao RIGHT
They didnt say all of it, its missing 2 digits
FOR REAL 😭
Blessed to all our brothers in arms that got deported. We used to adapt and overcome, to live a place where you’re not used to is hard but we never give up, we give it all to achieve our goals. Great video. Thanks for sharing.
As an immigrant myself, we all know very well if you’re NOT a citizen one day your luck will run out specially if you commit crimes. This people never hear about saving money when the day comes?
They play the victim card once over here. But when their in the state's they feel unstoppable..😂
Tijuana ain’t pretty but yes Mexico like Guadalajara Oaxaca DF are beautiful 🤩
@@JosePerez-wj4qu
Sue your grade school English teachers.
@@sohd2283Oaxaca is one of the poorer states in mexico bud
Well done documentary.
Man my step dad got deported! And he’s been away from us for 7 years already we really miss him and need him back in our life’s! Still have contact with him but it’s just not the same without him! Stepping up to take care of me and my brother 💯 always been a good dad!
god bless him, not many men left in this world, but it sounds like he is one of them. i hope he is ok
@ he is thank god‼️🙏🏼still talk to him, but it’s just not the same
@@19Escobar98 iknow, not the same t all
Keep your head up bro and keep fighting determination won’t let you down and soon hopefully you can reunite with your fam
@ appreciate it bro 🙏🏼 and that’s for sure, will never stop praying !
10:29 You didn’t just enter “without papers”, you entered illegally. As awful as I feel for this woman’s family, I also don’t believe she was just picked up for crossing the border illegally decades prior. Was she using someone else’s identification to work? That alone could get you deported.
THIS isn’t talked about enough
As a Mexican-American, this broke my heart and made me cried for these human beings. It’s so sad that they’ve lived pretty much most of their lives in the US and get deported especially the veteran. Very heartbreaking documentary. I’m grateful to be in the US thanks to my parents 💝🙏🏽
My parents are from Mexico and came here legally and followed the rules so they would not get sent back. I have many acquaintances who are undocumented, and they have never randomly had a knock on the door from ICE for no reason. Most undocumented people don't get deported just because - there is always a reason. Our actions have consequences. You are here as an uninvited guest - just follow the rules and stay under the radar. Second, being here illegally IS breaking the law. There is nothing legal about that. Try that in any other country, and you'll go to jail.
Thank you!
You're right. Many illegal immigrants think they have rights to stay in The US, but not they were fault at begin.
Being here illegally is against the law?? WOW, thanks for that genius. It's common sense you dope, that's why there's a border. And what rules are you talking about? Unless you never leave your house, your always at risk. I know you want to sound smart, but your not my friend. Oh, and ICE doesn't need a reason to deport you. 🙄
Most of them came to the US as children, they had no other choice.
I don’t believe that mother was deported out of the blue! She’s been here illegally for decades but has built a business, family & son in the U.S. military. They aren’t just going to knock down her door for no reason.
I’ve had friends growing up where one of their parents, siblings or other family members were deported & none were just random deportations for being here illegally. Crimes were usually drug related but my friends mom was deported when she used another family members passport to fly back to Columbia to visit her daughter (who was deported 7 years prior) because she was having another baby. I had another friend whose uncle was deported for selling SS# & other identifications.
I feel really bad for the family members left behind & I can understand their anger but if you’re aren’t a citizen, legally or unlawfully here, you can get deported for any reason.
My mother tried to help two people who were deported, we live in Tijuana. My mother found them jobs, she helped them process their documents so they could work. She rent them a room at home, So that they wouldn't live on the street. Everything was fine for a while, one of them left, hedidn't pay rent and he took things that didn't belong to him. The other lived there almost two years before he started using Drugs and trying to hurt my mom. I understand that not everyone is the same, many people are very good but others not so much. And there are people like my mother who try to help and in the end they end up Disappointed.
sorry to hear that, that is sad, they should be ashamed of themselves
@@susansparanormalpennsylvan81 thank you, it was very scary he held my mom at gunpoint. She's ok now, it was two months ago.
Thank you for sharing saludos desde queretaro.
Why are you trying to demonize them being immigrants though? People do drugs Mexicans and Americans has nothing to do with the immigration status
@@EbK_KJx17 I'm not trying to demonize them, I'm just explaining what happened. People often complain that they don't have opportunities in Mexico and when they do, they waste them.
I came back to Mexico after 10 years living in USA, now I have a good job, a family, my own house, retirement plan, Infonavit, so don’t be afraid
I been there 😵
I never gave up
Got my case vacated
And now im going back legally
GOD BLESS AMERICA 🇺🇸 🙏
GOd isnt blessing this Godless Nation. Hes done....His reach is further in Mexico.
Congratulations 🎉
Unfortunately, unless you’re an American citizen, you’re not legally an American. Doesn’t matter if you’ve been in the US one year or 50 years. And if you’re being deported because you committed a crime, you don’t have have the same rights.
Absolutely you cannot be a criminal and live in the United States and I agree with that. I don’t like people being deported if they are a productive member of society.
Once you come to the USA with a green card your PRIORITY SHOULD BE GETTING YOUR CITIZENSHIP!!
i dont disagree but uh, Gaining citizenship isnt as simple as waiting 5-10 business days for a letter in the mail. Its a long ass process. Uneasonably long in far too many cases. a lot of cases. 11 years and more. Citizenship should be an immigrants first priority and if the government was actually concerned about it, dont you think they would do everythin g possible to make it quick and painless?? Either its not a problem, or they dont care. People can blame Biden, Trump, or whoever but this has been a porblem well before any current or recent administration.
Very true because if you get a DUI or go to jail they will take it away and deported your ass.
Real easy for you to say. TRY PUTTING YOURSELF IN PEOPLE SHOES.
How about just don’t commit any crimes while here on a visa?? Or any crimes for that matter?
It stood out to me how the guy went from saying how much he missed his wife, to cheesing all in a new ladies face at his new job. Meanwhile his wife is crying on the phone, professing her love and how she would give anything to be with him. If I was her and seen this…. I would’ve been embarrassed, feel betrayed and hurt. At this point I’m like let him be…. He’s probably for the streets
Exactly. He doesn't miss his wife. He just misses the intimacy. It doesn't have to come from the same person so he gushes at new women.
My heart goes out to every person separated from their family members, I hope things get better for them. God bless.
Amen amen 🙏
They don't want to be together or else THEY WOULD. If one of us has to go, we all have to go, that's all there is to it. If we're gonna be miserable in separate countries, we might as well be miserable TOGETHER in the same country. Family is family, you stay together at ANY cost. No job nor house is worth being separated from your children or spouse. That's not love.
Bravo!!! Por fin termine de verlo todo y es la 4ta vez que me obligo a eacribir un comentario. Grande documental!!! Bravo
This is my dad and my family's story... he was deported in 2008... nothing was ever the same.. our family remains fragmented, there's layers to this... grandma was devastated, my sister has no memories of her dad in the states, parents relationship never recovered... hes still there.. his connection with us is confined to the internet (chats and videos), he could not attend my college graduation and watched it online. The border not only defines geographical boundaries but it has also shaped and defined me... its a grief for a living person that not many people understand, that empty chair at la mesa stays there for years, dejando una huella imborable. Nothing about this path has been easy.
My father was deported in 2013. I feel your pain it's a wound that never heals.
I'll never understand families who stay separated just to keep one foot in the USA. Mexico is never so bad that they can't take the family with them when they get deported.
I’m so sorry i gave birth alone in the hospital because my sons dad was taken at a checkpoint for 🪪 it’s devastating and the ice detainer was something u had not heard of being as an American 🇺🇸 so my question is did you guys get a lawyer? I ended up having to and this was august of 2009 when I experienced the nightmare
@@NotTheExfacts and they are growing the peso and using resources for electricity ⚡️ better than usa 🇺🇸 i learn a lot from Tabasco my husband’s native land in 🇲🇽
@@NotTheEx what’s seen here and in many people’s lived experience including mine is 2 things: the majority of the family is already settled in the US including extended family, and the deportee is the only one in Mexico. So uprooting the entire family especially if they’re not geographically close to Mexico is not easy. 2. some of these cases involve the complex disease of alcoholism. Where folks lose their papers because of DUIs or substance related charges. My family in fact did try the “let’s live in Mex to keep our family approach”. My dad lost his citizenship due to alcoholism and unfortunately us living there with him didn’t make it go away either. He’s paying the ultimate price and I wish I could say 16 years later he’s found sobriety but as u see with the men featured here. They drink to cope with the loneliness and separation.
A lot of these people come here as children because their parents bring them here illegally. I blame the parents.
It's easy to blame people. I only imagine how terrible Mexico is for their parents to smuggle their own kids in. I pretty sure the parents wanted better for their own. But they messed up and back to where you were born.
@@deniser45and who do we blame
For your beauty
Blame them for what? Parents took their kids with them because they love them , don't you understand that?
@@kaisersv they loved them so much they failed to legalize them while living in the United States illegally .. the parents put them in that position. It’s their fault it’ll continue to be their fault because they bring them here illegally and they don’t legalize them nor themselves lol gmafb
Yeah, but imagine this: you're come to America when 5, deported at 35, haven't done a thing with your life IN AMERICA 😂😂 joke
Stay strong brothers, México will be with arms open for everyone ALWAYS! Welcome back! ❤😢
Ask the Guatemalans about Mexico’s “open arms.” Mexico is very harsh about their immigration enforcement, especially in regard to Central Americans.
The worst part is that people, including some "criminals" from around the world, are entering the U.S. illegally through the Mexico border as if it’s effortless. They are impacting the economy and contributing to crime. Meanwhile, those who want to live here legally, have served in the U.S. military, follow the laws, and pay taxes are being forced to leave the country.
Buy, obey, consume, watch TV, follow orders, deny reality, turn in your neighbor, do social media, do not question authority, inform, marry, and reproduce.
I have a couple of cousins who've been deported and living in Baja California for several years now. Initially it was very difficult, and they would have done anything to return, but once they accepted their new reality, they were able to adapt and eventually learned to make a decent living down there. They've both said they'd still love to come back to the U.S, BUT only to visit, not to live.
Both countries have good and bad things. I’m Mexican-American and after 10 years to live in US I decided to back to México with my gringa family. Now is time to live the Mexican dream. So come on guys México is also a great country to have a good life quality of yo do the right things😊😊
Only if got the dollars in the bank
I was an immigrant. If you're illegal you're illegal which means can and should be deported no matter if you grew up in the US all your life unless you become a permanent resident via US citizen marriage, etc.
Thats not how it works for mexicans though, the "american" illegally crossed into mexico and refused to learn the language. They ignored the law and invaded the country and decided to steal it what wasn't there's. I get if you're from the middle east, asia or some other part of the world. You should come legally here because you don't hold no ground on this land because you cant go back that far into the Nations History.
🎯💪👍
I got deorted in 2012, worked my ass off from construction to Uber driver and in real estate, I have a nice big house in playas de tijuana, i live good here, but you must work hard and have a goal in life
👍🏽 family support is a must to make it, it's easy to get lost in filth alcohol depression if you don't have a clear head a hustler can, I met so many guys from LA my ex started tripping using drugs plus down there way to crazy. I loved playaz 🌸👍🏽 I came back, he's deported I had to cut that out. Rest Till Paradise to the Senior for your son 🫂💙🙏🏽 .. Best wishes to everyone. (I haven't been up and down since 2018 🤦🏽)
There’s Uber there ? Can u Uber in Mexico
😂😂😂 look at you, wouldn't have made anything out of your if you weren't deported or you're just lying. Didn't make it America, didn't make it in Mexico, here lying 🤥
@@PandaHead602😂😅😢Almost everything is in Mexico 🇲🇽
Immigration gave my wife a hard time even with two children and myself citizens.... we self deported and never looked back. Viva Mexico Cabrones!
These people love to play the victim but if you are just minding your business staying in line why would anyone bother you? Im sure there are cases where really innocent people get picked for deportation too but the great majority have commited some kind of crime or misdemeanor, so don't feel too bad for them.
If you're 18-25 years old speak decent English, in decent physical shape, and are motivated to honorably serve something greater than yourself, go to the US embassy and tell them you want to enlist in the US military for 4 years and make sure to tell them you want your citizenship started as soon as you take the oath and sign on the dotted line. I proudly did it and it'll stay that way forever. Case closed.
I see a few of these deportados in small towns in Mexico. Most can’t even speak Spanish or Spanish broken Spanish. Most of them have criminal records in the USA. The reason a USA resident green card holder gets deported is that they didn’t apply for citizenship or they didn’t think they could be sent back to their country of birth. It’s all in the small print when you get your green card. It means that you can be sent back if you commit a felony. Many people I know that have a green card but don’t apply for citizenship is because they have committed a crime or dwi . When you apply for citizenship you have to get a background check, pass a test, get interviewed by immigration and go to the ceremony. Some people can’t afford to pay the fee. Some people can’t pass the English language test.
All of those things are their problems . They want to have their cake and eat it too
@@txJoJo55where’s your empathy karen?
@@fairoadiary Many of these people hate blacks
Ha! Ha! Things here now in USA are where in my job l am having to learn Spanish to help customers and to keep being frustrated
@@txJoJo55agree … why we need to go check story of everyone .. want to live here .. make yourself legal.. its not out of the world..
I don’t speak Spanish because I’m mixed and my mom is Russian and my dad is Mexican and Apache Native American. Some of us didn’t learn because of racism and assimilation to American culture.
I'm a white American, and I want to speak Spanish. I like the language. I speak some Spanish not very well.
My own culture is not very supportive to learning a new language. I guess because it's difficult and they are afraid of looking stupid for trying. It can be uncomfortable.
I'm also well traveled. I've been to foreign countries and struggled with language. It gives you a different perspective. Americans should travel more and maybe learn something.
I grew up in Chicago all my life from age 1-24 when I was deported. I am now 33 and was able to buy some land and build my own home here near the Laguna of Chapala en Jalisco MX. It's a beautiful country. I wish I had been deported sooner😂
😂😂😂 so happy for you
You don’t have another choice 😂
What do you like the most over living in Chicago? I grew up in that area too. Long cold miserable winters, I will never live that north again if I can help it. And IL is stupid expensive just to have place to live. Is it easier down there? God bless
@@TruthTeller8888fucking troll callese alv
@@TruthTeller8888 OFC they do Genius, get real.
Usa is not the land it used to be. Everything is expensive and life is harder now. You can make a living somewhere else dont be afraid
It’s interesting how so many Hispanic people specially teenagers wave that Mexican flag around and older people always complain about tha united state of America but when people get deported it hits different. Let that be a lesson to all specially those with green . Behave….
Do you say the same thing when other nations waive their flag in America?
*especially
They don’t get food stamps and a free check in Mexico .
As a Mexican myself, I always say the same thing, they are always waving the Mexican flag there but they dont want nothing to do with the real Mexico, all they do is brag about how great they are there in the US.
A green card isn’t citizenship, and most folks don’t realize that. So they mess up, and they’re back.
I have a 75 year old friend who came to US at the age of 30. He married an American, worked all his life and was retired and drawing SS. He got busted with weed, spent some time in jail and then was deported to Mexico with nothing but the jumpsuit he was wearing in the ICE detention center. He's old alone and sick. I know there are people out there who would say that's what he gets and I have to just shake my head. He was a good husband and father, he paid into the system many years and in his case I don't see the fairness.
He was here 45 years... why didn't he get his citizenship during clinton or obama administration?
@@kd5inm I have no idea. I do know he was working 2 jobs and taking care of his family.
@@jennymcdonough2095 Still not an excuse. Most Asian parents work hard and still secure their own and their kids' legal status. Life is tough for all. Also, if he has been contributing to his own legit SS, he can still get his SS checks in Mexico.
@@korsakoff76 You CAN NOT draw ss if you are not a citizen of the US. They dump a sick old man in the heart of Mexico after 45 years of residency with nothing but the clothes on his back and if you don't have a problem with that there is something wrong with YOU.
@@jennymcdonough2095 My mom was an immigrant and got her citizenship and did it legally. It didn't take her 45 years. She did it in about 10 years after coming here. My mom worked and had two jobs, working a job and taking care of a home and child are two jobs. There is no excuse... they thought they could be lazy and live here forever as a foreigner with no legal standing... those days are over.
There are many expatriates from America who prefer Mexico over America these days. Rejection may be a blessing.
Expats, have dollar in the bank and other nationalities are free to roam Mexico without worrying ( unless they are in Mexico for diferente reason ).
When I graduated from college, I had the chance to stay and work in the US with an H1B, but I decided to go back to my home country, best decision so far. At first I felt bad because I loved being in the US during college, I had a girlfriend who's a US citizen. I could have married her long ago and become a citizen but I decided not to because I didn't want to live in the States, so I don't regret that I forfeited the opportunity to stay. I think I have a better life right now, than the one I could have had, if I stayed in the States.
You're lying to not only yourself, but everyone who reads that crap.
@@willankhatter it's not a lie. There's a world out there, and opportunities can be far better than the ones you can find in the US.
@@lrzero1362 I thought we were talking about Mexico, but you're talking about the world, no fvcks given...
Sad situation for them but the law has been in place for decades if you’re convicted of a felony you’re getting deported after you complete your sentence‼️💯
Let's deport trump to Scotland. He has been convicted of felonies and after he serves his time we can deport him.
No shit why wouldn't you
@@buildyourself4075
🦀
@@buildyourself4075 :
🧀
The grass ain't always greener on the other side.
Every city got it's "undesirable" section
You can't escape the struggle, you got to survive and overcome it 🙏
Smiles are universal
Your grass will be cheaper on your side GOOD RIDDANCE!
@talos2373
I'm an American citizen by birth right,
Mexican Citizen by blood right. The fent jacks the prices up on your side 🤣
There is definitely no human fecal matter on the streets here 🇲🇽
##staycation
So, according to your thinking, if you break the law for so many years in a country that it’s not your country, you expect authorities to look the other way and not enforce the law, only because you can’t understand that the laws are made to enforce them?…how that works?
That's how democrats teach them to think as long as you don't get caught you can get away with being here illegally.
Not for nothing but serving your country should get you IMMEDIIMMEDIATE citizenship
I think that the US government should had helped him and granted him citizenship for serving our country. This disturbs me how he was deported.
That not how it works just because you are from Mexico and join the US military don't make you a citizen
Falsified enlistment is a crime, he should have got 10yrs in the brig! No sympathy for persons disregarding US LAWS he took a spot from a REAL citizen...
There is no path for foreigners to directly obtain a US citizenship. They must first obtain a green card and hold it for 3-5 years being good permanent residents before getting eligible to apply for a citizenship. While holding a green card, the foreigner must be deported if he/she commits a felony or more serious crime. If these guys didn’t commit felony crime they could have become US citizens and would be still living here. That’s the deal they signed up for when they entered the US military but they broke the deal themselves.
@@Niakammueller I think he meant it should automatically qualify you for citizenship.
I dont understand why this video portrays this grim living in México. plenty of mexican emigrants, expats, and daily border commuters that tell the opposite. There is a reason this is the most crossed border in the world. This video just makes victims. Most immigrants legal or not, are proud they overcame adversity, not highlight victimhood. How about highlighting and recognising the ones that succeded after being deported or returning to Mexico and starting busineses. a couple advantages these people have are they are fluent in english and they have friends and family in the US.
Why do they make Mexico feel like the worst place wen it's beautiful
5 month old bot.
it's the media it same with UK it's made out to be the end of the rainbow where the streets are paved with gold. They are on the contrary not and it's tough to live in UK unless you are earning at least £50-60,000 per year and that's for a single person with no dependents.
Because the place is beautiful but people can be evil, there's this thing call classists, preference over social status, workers treated like crap even by U.S companies that have installed themselves here for cheap labor, made to work 6 days a week 9hrs a day, Sundays through Saturdays, and the day workers mondays through Saturdays, sometimes made to work 20 hrs straight if they tell you to do overtime. We have laws but there's no justice, there is corruption. Sad thing is it can't change because people are afraid to speak up, feel over power. Aside average salary compared to rent is crap, monthly rent is $10,000 when average salary is $4,800 a month, at the most $10,000 if have a higher education. Basic education is expensive regardless of it been public. Etc. etc. It's changing slowly thanks to certain programs but there's still so much injustices, it's like we have rules and laws only as decorations and they try to gaslight or set a group against one when speak up. One is only lucky if one is middle class, rich or a foreigner. Though do have to say at the least I'ved never heard gun shots.
I promise you’ll hate Mexico 6 months in, then you could get used to it. 2 months in you’ll love it. When nothing important is in the U.S… it’s fine but when your life was here… it suck’s
😂
The rent for a good apartment in Mexico is like 2k pesos, which is like 100 dollars. They can easily get their mom one. I bet they spend more money on McDonald's per month.
I got deported 10 years ago. I now own my own home, I also have a real I.D. I love my life and now I hope to get my passport to go visit my hometown.
Why would you need your passport to visit your home town??? If you're in Mexico, you can travel with just your ID. Animo.
👊🏽
@@Lggc2726 my family moved to the US when I was 3 years old I was practically raised in a small town in Arizona. So when I said home town I was referring to where I was raised. No I was not born in Arizona, so would need my passport to visit, which I'm in the process of getting now
.
@@FatBoy55294 ahhhhh ok ok, you mean a USA Visa, best of luck to you, visiting other contries with your Mexcian pasport will give you a better opportunity and money in the bank with a credit card.
@@FatBoy55294 ahhh ok, got confused as you said passport you need a VISA to enter the US.
Americans don't realize that Mexico in many ways is better overall than the US. Everyone acts as if it is some type of curse to be sent to Mexico, but in fact, it is a blessing.
Can you be more specific instead of vague? I am sure you can point out things that are better but let’s be honest, majority of folks if given the choice would definitely stay in the US.
stop, spreading fake news, colonizer
Americans aren't stupid. We understand what's going on in the world. And we do not want to be in Mexico LOL
Yea stop crossing the boarder thinking US is better
Then don’t come here anymore!
If these people lived in the United States for OVER 30 yrs Illegally, then there is Absolutely Zero excuse for them not to have gone through the proper legal process to become a naturalized citizen. We are a country of immigrants and always will be. There will also always be a process to become an American. If they can't be bothered to go through the naturalization process within a 30 yrs period, I have zero sympathy
Yeah bud they came illegally nothing they can do most of the time
enlighten us how to get legal by process?
@@tobyk5149 he cant say how cause that dosnt exist
@@tobyk5149something only illegals need to research
Please elaborate on the process of how to become a US citizen if one is illegal.
I don't feel sorry for these people, for the simple reasons. My grandparents h ad to go through the FRONT DOOR. THEY HAD TO WAIT FOR ALMOST A WEEK, RIDE 3 MONTHS ON A BOAT, THAT HAD RATS WALKING OVER THEM CONSTANLY. LOTS WERE DEAD IN THE MORNING.!!! DON'T TELL ME, OH POOR ME. THIS CALL CENTER , IS A USA BORN COMPANY, SO AMERICA IS STILL CARING FOR YOU. IF YOU WOULD HAVE COME RIGHT WAY,YOU WOULD NOT HAVE TO BE DEPORTED.
Great filming and production.
Why do you always show older people, you show the worst places in TJ and then act like the USA is the problem. You break the law, you get what you get. Where are the younger deportee's? You are not telling the whole story.
In California , where he’s from. People are rarely arrested and deported for no reason. They are usually arrested for a felony.
They even get drivers license for ID. in CA
This is sad all of my tios got deported to tijuana they were raised in L.A once they got deported they fell in to depression it was so hard kn them they became alcoholics and got into drugs there dead now😢 i miss them so much 😢.. to everyone deported please keep ur head up dknt trust no one and dont take drugs God Bless u all
I worked for an immigration attorney for almost a year, when I lived in the RGV in South Texas, the amount of people getting deported because they did something stupid was very high. Lots of them weren't born here and committed a crime that was the impediment for them to fix their status, USCIS is tough with people with criminal records even if they served for our military.
Very well made! It breaks my heart seeing this happening to so many good people who deserve to live in the U.S. It’s so sad…and not right!
I 've lived here in USA. For 24 yrs illegally. i was brought here when i was 14 since then i have tried to be a good citizen i went to school i have been working 2 jobs and paying taxes for 24 yrs. My brother who is a US citizen filed a petition for me to become legal resident and i was told i had to wait 25 yrs for immigration to revise my case. I will be over 50 yrs old when they get to my case. Immigration laws need to be readjusted.
Go back.
@@Zimmytimmy I will wait for immigration come and take me lol.
@@TiroArribaZacatecas what’s your name and address so I can call them.
@@TiroArribaZacatecas😅
@@TiroArribaZacatecasgood luck to you!!!🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽
anyone that fights for this country deserves to stay
He should have got 10yrs in military prison for falsified enlistment and taking a spot from a REAL Citizen... Deportation is not a crime, but he entered illegally then joined the country probably with a fake SSN#. No sympathy.
Not really
That’s the way it was. That’s how we fought the civil war.
No americans politicians don't want that. And serving the military of another country is seen as treason. How would you feel if americans serve another country? They are seen as traitors. In my country you can only serve the military when you have the citizenship.
I am an immigrant n a war vet and I don’t agreed. Commit crimes and found out
Although I feel for these folks, the fact of the matter is that if they had entered the United States legally they wouldn't be in this situation.
Did they just share a SS number? That illegal.
omg
They shared most of it, but not all 9 digits
This lady that got deported has like 4 kids. An they have her living deep in Tijuana in a shithole. It cost $800 a month to rent a 1 bedroom apartment in a nice building in zona rio. I feel bad for her but at the same time WTH her kids need to do better.
Tiene usted toda la razón! La familia de esa mujer no pueden ayudarle para pagar algo mejor. Pero andan manejando una buena SUV!
I was thinking the same thing! If my mom was deported I'd make sure she's in a safe, clean apartment.
2 bedrooms for 500 a month in Rio Tijuana. They can rent their mom a apartment easily
@@nay5715pesos or dollars?
@@jaylumantti6 4 kids and is poor.🧐
Can someone please help me. If you enter a country illegally or remain in the country after legally being there. What is expected. This documentary is not saying what were these people doing for the Time in the USA to deal with their legal status and what were they doing when deportation happened?
Que chulada viejones. Les deseo lo mejor en sus vidas. A mi me toco vivir lo mismo en el 2010 en Juarez
Y que hiciste? Como saliste adelante?
I cannot imagine being born in a country where, it appears, that you are surrounded by everyone longing to be a part of another country. That sounds miserable.
Sounds like a lot of Americans now lol
I guess the lesson is, if you come here illegally, you don’t have any rights as a citizen of the United States. It doesn’t matter how many years you’ve been here, if it isn’t legal, you shouldn’t assume you can stay.
I'm totally against deporting a Vietnam veteran with an addiction to drugs, that committed a non-violent crime!! Their sacrifice and service warrants expanded consideration.
@joeykitty2892 Crime is crime Sir.
He needed help with his addiction, so maybe someone can start a humanitarian project for people like him are many.
Same. Combat vets usually come back from war as a different person. Drugs & alcohol are used to help their PTSD from the battlefield, which usually ends badly. These are US soldiers that fought for this country but if they commit a crime, they need to punished but definitely not deported!!
This brakes my heart ❤
What about places like Mexico City ? World class. There is a good life in Mexico. Move to a thriving city. Make a good life for yourself.
@aclem8246
in theory, it’s a great idea to send them to mexico city, but the cost of living there is far more expensive than other towns and cities.
Brilliantly crafted vid thanks
I feel sad for them, and even more so for the children they took with them, but I mean what did you expect? You can’t enter a country illegally and expect to be granted citizenship. Still though if you’ve served you absolutely shouldn’t be deported.
This is breaking my heart to watch... Jesus Christ that scene with the lady talking to her grand babies on FaceTime got me in tears. I'm a naturalized citizen from the caribbean and I could not imagine my mom having to go back after all these years working, paying taxes and doing the right things. All I can do is pray that the US recognize and fix this.
@kedah2398 I don't understand people like you she broke the law, she knew it when she did it long ago. When you break the law you get separated from family that's just fact whether jailed or deported. People leave Mexico because they want a better life and we have decent lives in America because most people respect the law and they do not in Mexico because the country is corrupt.
@@hockeyplayersnetwork3307 What is there not to understand? Having empaty for a family in a hard situation legal or illegal? You and your kind yap, yap, yap listen you were fortunate to be born here weather you're poor or rich, they're tons of opportunity in this nation, why not live and let live? Pretty soon you're going to be dead, rotting in a box and all the laws and land you're fighting for you can't take with you. While you at it why don't you go tell big Pharma stop selling shit that kills people, tell the FDA the food they selling full of sugar etc... Bet you wouldn't say that but you're the first to thump your Chinese made Trump bible bout thet law and the law... F outta here!
The US is doing the right thing by deporting people who entered the country illegally. We have laws and if you break them, you are subject to the punishment the court deems appropriate. Don't put yourself in that position in the first place. Apply for legal immigration, wait your turn, and come in when you are accepted, it's very simple, really. What's sad is that people make the choices that they do then suffer from them and blame others.
The dye is cast the minute someone decides to illegally enter a country. The US should go after employers who hire non-citizens and end birthright citizenship for children of people illegally in the country. Basically, end the incentives.
@@hockeyplayersnetwork3307her kid served in the army. Not only did she giver her money to the US but she was willing to sacrifice her only son to the military. Do you even know anything about patriotism or sacrifice?
One never appreciates what they have, until they lose it.
I see & hear so many Mexicans in my community with their allegiance & love for Mexico 🇲🇽 and badmouth the U.S.
like it’s a piece of garbage.
I guess being banned from entry fixes that on the spot.
I love America 🇺🇸
I love being an American 🇺🇸
I wouldn’t want to live anywhere else in the world.
People should unite and fight for their own countries.
You would think that,
if so many people are fleeing to the U. S., that their own governments would want to replicate what the United States 🇺🇸 is doing,
but they don’t.
I’m pretty sure close community I live They all got nervous Trump. I have grandson bi racial Hispanic. Her BF families seem concerned- with Trump- I’m not sure Suppodaly in process with papers. 🤔🤔
No one should go, stay in a country illegally, period. If you do so you must be deported, it doesn’t matter how many years!
So you dont supports vets who served? w o w
You came from somewhere. Somebody was illegal in your family at some point.
@@talivatoNot necessarily. Laws weren’t in place for this then
You did commit a crime when choose to enter illegally and not pursue citizenship
This is what happens when you break the law. The children have to suffer because their parents decided to break the law. It may seem like a dream. But can’t live somewhere illegal for years and not face consequences. I feel bad but every country has laws, his parents put that on him to bare.
I can’t judge.
Sad but true. Well said.
Exactly
They should not have entered the US in the first place. All the sufferings and losses are self-imposed, as I see it.
if you are Illegal you are Illegal and you know it, try to get your paper work done, either get a visa or marry a us citizen, all countries have laws, follow them.
biggest bootlicker statement I have read. If you lived in the 60's you'd probably suck dat boot of using the restroom assigned to you because "it was the law" LOL
It doesn't matter what you've done or how long you've been in the states. Are you here legally? No? Bye!!!
what is scary having a call center in other countries you'll never if the private info given will be safe and not used fraudulently.
B.S.
Even if the information never leaves the country you still never know if it's secure.
That can happen here just as easily as it can happen anywhere else.
Lmao 😂 if anyone wanted your information and you were truly concerned you would not own a cell phone.
Your SSN is nothing anymore! They got illegals handling your loans... LOL
Something is fishy here . i dont think were getting the whole story .
Which story?
Yo tengo 3 familiares deportados. La andaban cajeteando. No valoraron su residencia.
Pero están bien dentro de lo que cabe. Lo bueno que somos de la frontera y todavía tenemos familia en Mexico.
Great documentary. Thanks for the upload.
My dad immigrated to America and he waited seven years and did all the proper paperwork got to America when he was 28 and he has been here since he was 63 years old now. People just need to have some patience. He didn’t go up rich. He lived in a very poor community struggled every day, but still did it. Some people are just trying to do with the easy way, but then you’re looking over your shoulder every day, even if you are successful getting into the country.
Lol
@@eboyd2478 I know it’s hilarious
Yup I had to do it thr right way and it worked out ppl just want hand outs
@@eboyd2478 I don’t know why it’s funny to you. Sorry my dad did not break the law.
Haha
Call center treat the employees bad, there a high turnover in America. This is why these jobs get sent overseas. It sucks, this is why i never shop on line!
Please, with the ladies, neither one or her daughters cared enough to petition their mother’s residency? The minute they turned 18 they could have and the process would have taken 10 years but no one cared now they get upset because it’s not “fair”. Well yes it is fair because it’s the law, you had such a long time to get your papers together stop victimizing yourselves and complaining for something that is 100% your fault. The daughters look like they’re in their freaking 30. 🙄
The other guy, well they won’t deport you if you’re a citizen but it seems like he never followed through with his citizenship so he remained a resident and if with that you have to mess up so many times for they to finally to revoke your residency so again it’s a YOU problem.
You’re given such a freaking opportunity for years and you mess it up, that’s being stupid.
As soon as I could apply for my residency I did and I’m as soon as I could apply to my citizenship I did as well. And the entire time I worked hard and never once did anything that would jeopardize my residency and chances of becoming a citizen.
Take accountability for your actions and stop being such a drama queen people. We were given such an opportunity to be in this country don’t waste it like clowns
No, thats not how US immigration law works though yours is a common misunderstanding. If their mother entered the US illegally she would have to go back to Mexico for 10 years FIRST and only then could her daughters petition for her to then come back legally as an immediate relitive of US citizens.
This was very well done. I live in San Diego and go to TJ on a regular basis. I can do that because I also have the SENTRI card which helps cross very fast. This video just reminds me that there are many unfortunate people that I probably run into like in your video. I wish them the best.
Everyone, this guy right here is what privilege looks like.
Everyone, this guy right here is what privilege looks like.
You say that because you know me right?!
Everyone look, this is the definition of an IDIOT that thinks he knows everyone or everything!
Dude Mexico is better then America US now soo why even worry gas is like 2.75 a gallon.. Tacos are cheap women are plenty why you crying LOL. But if you were a vet you should have access to the US without any F questions..Goes to show you the BS loyalty of this country...Its all BS
Mexico will never be better than America.
And yeah, I said America.
@@jeffalbillar7625 Indeed, Mexico will never be better than America if Mexico improves, America will sabotage it to avoid competition, and yeah, I said America
@@jeffalbillar7625 SouthWest is Mexico dummy Yes In America North Mexican land...and Native land...
Move there, then. 😊
@@mariananev-xk8tw Dont have to I have property in Mexico now too!!! Oh and multiple homes in the US. I can be everywhere ...Grabbing my balls I hold a piece of both sucker
There's life after deportation... The world will keep turning. Make the best of everything