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Veterans
Related: About this forumVeteran fighting deportation after 2 tours in Afghanistan
Hat tip number 1:
RT- Find a Trump supporting friend or family member, send this to them & ask if this is what they stand for?
Link to tweet
Hat tip number 2:
2 tours of duty in Afghanistan. Sustained a brain injury in an explosion. Now #Trump admin wants to deport him. http://abc7chicago.com/news/veteran-fighting-deportation-after-2-tours-in-afghanistan/1739129/
Link to tweet
Veteran fighting deportation after 2 tours in Afghanistan
Sunday, February 05, 2017
CHICAGO (WLS) --
A group of soldiers, family, and community members came together Saturday to fight a deportation order for a former U.S. soldier. ... Army Private 1st class Miguel Perez, Jr., was born in Mexico and grew up in Chicago. On Monday, Perez faces a deportation hearing because he committed a non-violent drug offense, his family said.
Perez represents thousands of green card veterans who face deportation, according to a press release by Ashley's Memory Project, which was started by the immigrant mother of a deceased veteran, and a local church. They said many enlist with the promise of citizenship. ... He served two tours of duty in Afghanistan and was injured in an explosion. He sustained a brain injury and suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder, his family said.
"He's more American than most of us standing here, because he did pick up arms to defend this country," his mother told reporters at Lincoln United Methodist Church in Pilsen. ... Perez's parents are both U.S. citizens.
The family said that Perez did not get the adequate medical attention when he returned home and turned to self medication with drugs and alcohol. ... His family said he joined the Army before he could go through the citizenship process.
Sunday, February 05, 2017
CHICAGO (WLS) --
A group of soldiers, family, and community members came together Saturday to fight a deportation order for a former U.S. soldier. ... Army Private 1st class Miguel Perez, Jr., was born in Mexico and grew up in Chicago. On Monday, Perez faces a deportation hearing because he committed a non-violent drug offense, his family said.
Perez represents thousands of green card veterans who face deportation, according to a press release by Ashley's Memory Project, which was started by the immigrant mother of a deceased veteran, and a local church. They said many enlist with the promise of citizenship. ... He served two tours of duty in Afghanistan and was injured in an explosion. He sustained a brain injury and suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder, his family said.
"He's more American than most of us standing here, because he did pick up arms to defend this country," his mother told reporters at Lincoln United Methodist Church in Pilsen. ... Perez's parents are both U.S. citizens.
The family said that Perez did not get the adequate medical attention when he returned home and turned to self medication with drugs and alcohol. ... His family said he joined the Army before he could go through the citizenship process.
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Veteran fighting deportation after 2 tours in Afghanistan (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Mar 2017
OP
niyad
(119,570 posts)1. and the hits just keep coming. truly deplorable.
Zoonart
(12,722 posts)2. Just WOW
E-N-O-U-G-H!
sdfernando
(5,363 posts)3. I'm confused about something
It says in the article he was born in Mexico but that "Perez's parents are both U.S. citizens. " That would make him a U.S. Citizen as well, even though he was born in another country (this is my situation). It doesn't explain in the article if he parents became U.S. Citizens after migrating to the U.S. or if they were always U.S. Citizens. I'm guessing the former, but why didn't they get him citizenship along with themselves?