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Legal immigant citizen


mrmackc

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VIETNAMESE IMMIGRANT -- Well Done  The difference between legal and illegal.  This is something everyone in America should read….  It looks like we did some good after all!

On Saturday, July 24th, 2010 the town of Prescott Valley, AZ, hosted a Freedom Rally. Quang Nguyen was asked to speak on his experience of coming to America and what it means. He spoke the following in dedication to all Vietnam Veterans. Thought you might enjoy hearing what he had to say:

Start Quote:

35 years ago, if you were to tell me that I am going to stand up here speaking to a couple thousand patriots, in English, I'd laugh at you. Man, every morning I wake up thanking God for putting me and my family in the greatest country on earth.  I just want you all to know that the American dream does exist and I am living the American dream. I was asked to speak to you  about my experience as a first generation Vietnamese-American, but I'd  rather speak to you as an American.

If you hadn’t noticed, I am not white and I feel pretty comfortable with my people. I am a proud U.S citizen and here is my proof
It took me 8 years to get it, waiting in endless lines, but I got it, and I am very proud of it.

I still remember the images of the Tet offensive in 1968, I was six years old. Now you might want to question how a 6-year-old boy could remember anything.  Trust me, those images can never be erased.  I can't even imagine what it was like for young American soldiers, 10,000 miles away from home, fighting on my behalf.

35 years ago, I left South Vietnam for political asylum. The war had ended  At the age of 13, I left with the understanding that I may or may not ever get to see my siblings or parents again.  I was one of the first lucky 100,000 Vietnamese allowed to come to the U.S. Somehow, my family and I were reunited 5 months later, amazingly, in California. It was a miracle from God.

If you haven't heard lately that this is the greatest country on earth, I am telling you that right now.  It was the freedom and the opportunities presented to me that put me here with all of you tonight.  I also remember the barriers that I had to overcome every step of the way. My high school counselor told me that I cannot make it to college due to my poor communication skills. I proved him wrong.  I finished college. You see, all you have to do is to give this little boy an opportunity and encourage him to take and run with it.  Well, I took the opportunity and here I am.

This person standing tonight in front of you could not exist under a socialist/communist environment. By the way, if you think socialism is the way to go, I am sure many people here will chip in to get you a one-way ticket out of here. And if you didn't know, the only difference between socialism and communism is an AK-47 aimed at your head. That was my experience.

In 1982, I stood with a thousand new immigrants, reciting the Pledge of Allegiance and listening to the National Anthem for the first time as an American. To this day, I can't remember anything sweeter and more patriotic than that moment in my life.

Fast forwarding, somehow I finished high school, finished college, and like any other goofball 21 year old kid, I was having a great time with my life I had a nice job and a nice apartment in Southern California. In some way and somehow, I had forgotten how I got here and why I was here.

One day I was at a gas station, I saw a veteran pumping gas on the other side of the island. I don't know what made me do it, but I walked over and asked if he had served in Vietnam. He smiled and said yes. I shook and held his hand. This grown man's eyes began to well up.  I walked away as fast as I could and at that very moment, I was emotionally rocked. This was a profound moment in my life. I knew something had to change in my life. It was time for me to learn how to be a good citizen. It was time for me to give back.

You see, America is not just a place on the map, it isn't just a physical location. It is an ideal, a concept. And if you are an American, you must understand the concept, you must accept this concept, and most importantly, you have to fight and defend this concept This is about Freedom and not free stuff. And that is why I am standing up here

Brothers and sisters, to be a real American, the very least you must do is to learn English and understand it well. In my humble  opinion, you cannot be a faithful patriotic citizen if you can't speak the language of the country you live in. Take this document of 46 pages - last I looked on the Internet, there wasn't a Vietnamese translation of the U.S. Constitution. It took me a long time to get to the point of being able to converse and until this day, I still struggle to come up with the right words. It's not easy, but if it's too easy, it's not worth doing

Before I knew this 46-page document, I learned of the 500,000 Americans who fought for this little boy. I learned of the 58,000 names inscribed on the black wall at the Vietnam Memorial. You are my heroes. You are my founders.

At this time, I would like to ask all the Vietnam veterans to please stand. I thank you for my life. I thank you for your sacrifices, and I thank you for giving me the freedom and liberty I have today. I now ask all veterans, firefighters, and police officers, to please stand. On behalf of all first generation immigrants, I thank you for your services and may God bless you all.
Quang Nguyen
Creative Director/Founder
Caddis Advertising, LLC
"God Bless America"
“One Flag, One Language, One Nation Under God”
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I love this.

My great grandfather came here with his wife and young child from Germany in the late 1930s. He forbade my grandfather from speaking German in the house. To him, speaking English was a way of taking pride in his American citizenship. My grandfather went on to serve in Korea, my uncle in Vietnam. American patriots the lot of them.

Maybe this is why I get so--offended? angry?--when I see people at work who are using our health system either for free through Medicare/Medicaid, or are simply not paying at all, and speak absolutely ZERO English (I work in healthcare if that wasn't obviously implied). I use interpreter services literally every day to provide care to people who are NOT citizens, have no intent on becoming citizens, and are reaping the rewards of our country without ever having given anything back in return.

Here's the thing though: I'm not anti-immigration. I think immigration is what our country is built on. I'd even go so far as to say that forcing illegal immigrants out will crash our economy. But would it be too much to ask that immigrants at least give it SOME effort? 

I'm sure I'm preaching to the choir here... but thanks for listening anyways. These aren't exactly the types of thoughts I can voice at work without becoming an outcast. And for the record, if God forbid I  ever moved to Vietnam, I would learn Vietnamese.

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1 hour ago, goinbroke said:

.... And for the record, if God forbid I  ever moved to Vietnam, I would learn Vietnamese.

I think that's pretty much a given...I don't know if you'd even have the option not to? You think they print everything in English and employ translators just in case some center of uranus American immigrant doesn't want to learn the language?

 

I get t for new immigrants, but if you've been here more than six months and haven't picked up a bit of the language-you ain't tryin. 

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Thats awesome mrmackc! ill forward that to the vet! 

I just left a store 10 min ago and the clerk explained to the individual you can get two for 3$ or pay 2$ for 1 item .. this went on for more than nessary. i finally herd no mas ono.. and the clerk said one? i said yes he only wants 1. and then he had to count the change after the transaction.. shits i need to learn spanish i guess so i can translate for a denero transfer of 20$ to change. haha!

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