U.S. to Cambodia: Don't Jail, Deport Uighur Refugees, That's Our Job: The NY Times reports that Cambodia is deporti... http://bit.ly/78OsrNPosted 6 hours ago from Twitterview more
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Support the Dream Act: Read on Every year, thousands of undocumented American students graduate from college and high school, and face a roadblock to their dreams -- they can't drive, can't work legally, can't get loans or establish credit, can't further their education, and can't contribute to the economy. It is a classic case of lost potential and broken dreams.
Barack Obama has stated that undocumented students brought up in the United States are "American for all intents and purposes." Senator Richard Durbin has implored Congress to "give these kids a chance." Republican Sen. Orrin Hatch has said: “In short, although these children have built their lives here, they have no possibility of achieving and living the American dream. What a tremendous loss for them, and what a tremendous loss to our society.” Why penalize children for the actions of their parents? Why throw away the talent we have invested in from K-12 right when we can make use of it? Why deport students from the ONLY home they have ever known? Let's bring these students out of the shadows, out from underground. Tell President-Elect Obama to pass the DREAM Act in 2009. Talented students and their families living in fear of raids and ripped apart by deportations, cannot afford to wait for change.
DREAM Act (Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors Act), a bipartisan legislation that would permit a select group of undocumented students conditional legal status and eventual citizenship granted that they meet the following requirements
* Arrive to the U.S before the age of 16
* are below the age of 35
* have lived here continuously for five years
* graduated from a U.S. high school or obtained a GED
* have good moral character with no criminal record
* and attend college or enlist in the military at least 2 years.
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