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起诉的筒子们快去查邮箱吧,律师又来信了

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最近Tim不断来信,你们好像都没有收到,快换个海外邮箱收信吧!!!

Good day,


Here is a link to an article, summarising the speech the Minister for Citizenship and Immigration delivered.
http://thechronicleherald.ca/canada/71210-minister-all-options-table-when-it-comes-immigration

Next are the comments I gave to a reporter who asked for them. And below them is the entire text of the Minister's speech.


In case you wonder whether he has the power to so, here is the text of the amendment to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act giving rise his queue-jumping policy. It authorizes him to do anything he deems to be "efficient".


87.3 (1) This section applies to applications for visas or other documents made under subsection 11(1), other than those made by persons referred to in subsection 99(2), sponsorship applications made by persons referred to in subsection 13(1), applications for permanent resident status under subsection 21(1) or temporary resident status under subsection 22(1) made by foreign nationals in Canada and to requests under subsection 25(1) made by foreign nationals outside Canada.​

Attainment of immigration goals​

(2) The processing of applications and requests is to be conducted in a manner that, in the opinion of the Minister, will best support the attainment of the immigration goals established by the Government of Canada.​


* * *​

(7) Nothing in this section in any way limits the power of the Minister to otherwise determine the most efficient manner in which to administer this Act.​

Minister Kenney is dreaming in technicolour if he believes that the "arranged offer of employment" option is a raving success. First, while I have no doubt that those who come to Canada with a job waiting for them are likely to do well, many, if not the overwhelming majority, of those with "arranged offers of employment" actually do not have a real job waiting for them. All too many pay a fee to a "broker" who shares the fee with an employer to open this door to Canada with none of them expecting the immigrant to fill the position offered. Of those who do have real jobs, many would have had them in any event because the employer is a relative (or a friend).


Second, the real way to use this route is to bring in workers on work permits, which may be processed within a month, as opposed to as immigrants. However, visa posts stall and stall and stall such applications. When I complained to Ottawa about the Embassy in Abu Dhabi taking well more than six months to process such applications, Kenney's minions said, in effect: "too bad, so sad" but its the visa office's decision on how long they want to take to process applications. Employers in need of workers do not want to wait three months to get permission to import the worker and another eight months for the visa post to get around to issuing the visa -- or maliciously refusing it on the grounds that the officer is not satisfied that (a) the job still exists or (b) the worker will not use the job as a means to immigrate to Canada. And, applicants from from the Persian Gulf have been working in English and have demonstrated an ability to establish themselves in a foreign land. Rather than encourage such immigration, CIC officials are sabotaging it. In other words,Clearly someone needs to knock a few heads together in the field.


Third, the Minister has rightly complained about the fraud involved in this route he is now patting himself on the back for having pursued; i.e., selecting applicants on the basis of their claimed intended destination or job offer. The means for reducing the fraud drastically is to attach "terms and conditions" to both. For example, those who immigrate under a provincial program should be required to live there for two years or be subject to deportation. Those who immigrate on the basis of "arranged employment" should be required to work on the job for at least one year or face deportation and the employers, required to pay the salary they promised or be prosecuted for fraud. If such terms and conditions were imposed and enforced, immigration by misrepresentation would decline dramatically.


Four, the Minister's claim that his Occupation List has been crafted to bring in only those whose occupations which are in high demand is not supported by the facts. Of the 29 such occupations, 18 require licensing before the being permit to practice the trade or profession. Does the Minister really believe that imported doctors are going to be practicing medicine shortly after their arrival? Moreover, the Department's own studies show that only 36% of immigrants follow their "intended occupation". When the Minister mentioned that IT specialists found themselves lost when the IT bubble burst, he should have come to the conclusion that jerry-picking applicants on the basis of the occupation du jour is a fools errand. Those with experience in more than one occupation are more versatile, but that that reality appears to have escaped the Minister's gurus' attention.


The Minister's positing allowing provincial bureaucrats and employers to troll through immigrant visa applications to find those whom they would see be issued immigrant visas is both unrealistic and illegal. If it were so easy, why has CIC refused to process older files from applicants with experience in an occupation on the Occupation List? Nurse, for example, have been on both lists, and thousands of nurses are stuck in pre-Bill C-50 backlog (those who applied before 27 February 2008) and in the second backlog (27 February 2008 to 25 June 2010). Why not pull out those files and process them?



Moreover, allowing provincial bureaucrats to troll through federal skilled worker applications because they have a yen to do so, or to allow employers to do so, would be illegal. The Privacy Act forbids government departments from sharing confidential information with other entities, be they federal, provincial or private, without the written, informed consent of the person. It would be the same if the Minister decided to allow the poorer provinces to pour through the income tax returns of Canada's millionaires to see whom they would like to invite to move to their province. Any takers for that idea?


Even worse than the mess CIC has made of the skilled worker stream is what they have done to those who want to immigrate in the business class, either by opening a business and hiring Canadians or by lending $400,000 interest free for five years. For 2012, CIC has reduced the number of such immigrants from 6,000 last year to 4,300 out of the 96,085 waiting to make these investments. What is the Minister thinking?


What the Minister has acknowledged, mirroring Minister Diane Finley February 23rd speech to Canadian Club, is that, our ageing population means that our immigration program is for the benefit of Canadians even more so than for the immigrants themselves. If we do not have working age immigrants, we will not have a tax-base from which to draw to cover CPP and OAS benefits or to fund our healthcare system. A Parliamentary Report found that the healthcare costs of seniors exceeds the national average by three to five times. So, instead of immigrant bashing, the Government should be selling the immigration program to Canadians as a means for preventing us from going the route of Greece.

Finally, the problem is not lack of funds. Justice Kelen found in 2003, based upon the figures CIC provided to the Court, that CIC had made a profit of $25 million in 2001 from visa applicants; i.e., the difference between the amount collected ($310 million) and the amount allocated for visa processing ($185 million). So, the money is there. Moreover, the fees could always be increased and tied to a processing standard. No cost to taxpayers at all. Thus, a fair means for reducing the backlog exists; what does not exist is a will do so in a fair-minded, "Canadian" manner.



2012/3/7

[FONT='Calibri','sans-serif']Hi,[/FONT]
[FONT='Calibri','sans-serif'][/FONT]
[FONT='Calibri','sans-serif']Would you care to respond to any point(s) made by Min. Jason Kenney for publication in Desi Times Weekly?[/FONT]
[FONT='Calibri','sans-serif'][/FONT]
[FONT='Calibri','sans-serif']Manjeet Singh Atthwal[/FONT]
[FONT='Calibri','sans-serif']Desi Times Weekly[/FONT]
[FONT='Calibri','sans-serif']7655 Cordner, LaSalle[/FONT]
[FONT='Calibri','sans-serif']QC H8N 2X2[/FONT]
[FONT='Calibri','sans-serif']514-827-2929[/FONT]
[FONT='Calibri','sans-serif']www.desitimes.ca[/FONT]


[FONT=Tahoma,sans-serif]From: Prime Minister's Office[/FONT][FONT='Tahoma','sans-serif']
Sent: March-07-12 2:37 PM
To:
Subject: FW: Transcript : Speaking notes for The Honourable Jason Kenney (Economic Club of Canada) - Notes en vue d’une allocution de l’honorable Jason Kenney, C.P., député, ministre de la Citoyenneté, de l’Immigration et du Multiculturalisme[/FONT]


[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Speaking notes for The Honourable Jason Kenney, P.C., M.P. Minister of Citizenship, Immigration and Multiculturalism[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']At the Economic Club of Canada Event[/FONT][FONT='Verdana','sans-serif'][/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Ottawa, March 7, 2012[/FONT][FONT='Verdana','sans-serif'][/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Check against delivery[/FONT][FONT='Verdana','sans-serif'][/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Thank you all for coming, and thank you to the Economic Club of Canada for providing a valuable forum in which to discuss important issues of public policy.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']This is my third opportunity in the past year and a half to address members of the Economic Club, and I am very pleased to speak about an issue that is central to our country’s economic prospects: The fair and effective management of Canada’s immigration system.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']I like to say that “Immigration is the sincerest form of flattery”.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Indeed, when we contemplate the sheer number of people from around the world that would like to move to our country at least 2 billion people, according to a 2010 Ipsos poll Canadians should be proud that this country stands as such a beacon to so much of the world. [/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Canada is that beacon thanks to our tradition of ordered liberty, and because our market economy offers opportunities for those who want to work hard.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Because so many people from around the world want to come to Canada, it is critical that our immigration system functions fairly, effectively, and in the best interests of Canada.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Canadians are understandably concerned about how the uncertain global economy will affect not only our country’s future, but also their family finances, their jobs, their investments, and their businesses.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']At the same time, there are some indications that Canadians are feeling cautiously optimistic about the future. In fact, an Ipsos Reid poll of Canadians released at the very beginning of this year found that 88 per cent of respondents anticipated 2012 would be a good year for them.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Why? One explanation may be that Canada has weathered the economic storm of the last few years better than most advanced economies. [/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']The rest of the world has noticed our accomplishments:[/FONT]

<LI style="BACKGROUND: white" class=MsoNormal>[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Both the IMF and the OECD forecast that Canada will have some of the strongest economic growth in the G7 over this year and next.[/FONT]<LI style="BACKGROUND: white" class=MsoNormal>[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']For the fourth year in a row, the World Economic Forum rated Canada’s banking system as the world’s soundest. [/FONT]<LI style="BACKGROUND: white" class=MsoNormal>[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']In its annual review of the best countries for business, Forbes magazine ranked Canada as number one. [/FONT]<LI style="BACKGROUND: white" class=MsoNormal>[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']And three credit-rating agencies Moody’s, Fitch and Standard and Poor’s reaffirmed their top ratings for Canada. [/FONT][FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']For our part, the Government of Canada is committed to sticking with our low-tax plan for jobs and growth. We introduced Canada’s Economic Action Plan three years ago, in the midst of a global recession. Since that time, Canada has recovered more than all of the output and more than all of the jobs lost during that recession.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']All of this good news should not distract us from the very real challenges we still face. The global economy has slowed, and there remain risks to the short-term outlook, particularly from the situation in Europe. Canada is not immune to these international developments. [/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']That is why our Government’s economic leadership will continue as we implement Economic Action Plan 2012.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']The Prime Minister was clear in outlining our approach in Davos, when he said:[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']“We did not reduce immigration or give in to protectionism. Instead, we have maintained the highest levels of immigration that our aging labour force of the future will require”[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']“We will ensure that, while we respect our humanitarian obligations and family reunification objectives, we make our economic needs the central goal of our immigration efforts in the future” [/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']And how does immigration fit into the Government’s economic focus?[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']In my view, it fits naturally.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Immigration is vital to Canada’s long-term economic health and to our international competitiveness.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Those of you in this room who are immigrants yourselves, or who are the children of immigrants, or who employ immigrants, or who are employed by immigrants, know from experience this is true.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Even in a time of global economic uncertainty, Canada still needs a robust immigration system to keep our workforce strong.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']As with other countries with aging populations and low birth rates, in the not-too-distant future, Canada will not have enough people to keep our workforce growing. With Baby Boomers beginning to retire, our economy now relies increasingly on immigration for labour force growth. In fact, we are already facing large and growing labour shortages. Based on current trends, many studies have estimated a shortage of hundreds of thousands of workers within a decade.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Canada has welcomed an annual average of 254,000 immigrants since 2006. This is the highest sustained level of immigration in Canadian history.[/FONT]

[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']To ensure that immigration will fuel our future prosperity, we need to select immigrants who are ready, willing, and able to integrate into Canada’s labour market and fill roles in our economy where we have existing skills shortages. We have to make sure the skilled immigrants we choose are the ones Canada needs, and are the most likely to succeed when they get here, rather than being underemployed, stuck in survival jobs. [/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']We have a number of programs that are designed to do just that. For example, we have introduced a program called the Canadian Experience Class, which provides a straightforward process for retaining both high skilled Temporary Foreign Workers, as well as international students who graduate from Canadian colleges and universities and have already demonstrated that they have what it takes to succeed in Canada.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']We also have Provincial Nominee Programs, where we work with our partners in Canada’s provinces and territories to help identify acute job-market demands in their jurisdictions and fill them with qualified immigrants. This has led to a much better distribution of newcomers across Canada. For example, immigration to the prairies has tripled over the past few years.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']There are several other economic immigration programs, but the largest one we run is the Federal Skilled Workers Program, which is the main avenue to permanent immigration to Canada. Its [FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']raison d’être[/FONT] is to select immigrants with flexible skills to become economically established in Canada.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Flexibility and adaptability to changing job markets will be key to success in the Canadian economy of the future.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']There was a time when we didn’t appreciate that enough in this country. One example: During the IT boom of the 1990s, we welcomed many immigrants to Canada who had very specific IT skills, and they thrived here as long as the boom lasted. But when the bubble burst, they were lost in the new job market. They didn’t have skills that were adaptable to changing economic realities.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']So now, when it comes to our Federal Skilled Workers Program, we do things differently and better than before.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']We now evaluate all applicants to this program on a modernized grid that better captures what we broadly call human capital, which measures the long-term potential of economic immigrants in an increasingly complex labour market and a knowledge-based economy.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']This grid weighs the points accorded for criteria such as Official Language ability, education, work experience, and age, so as to ensure those arriving will have the full skill set needed to adapt to changing circumstances in a modern economy. [/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']In 2010, we completed an extensive evaluation of the Federal Skilled Workers Program. It showed that, on the whole, the program is working well and selecting immigrants who perform well economically. It also showed that selecting applicants based on human capital criteria has led to improved outcomes.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']The report found that 89 per cent of federal skilled workers were employed or self-employed three years after arriving. As well, 95 per cent of employers surveyed indicated that federal skilled workers were meeting or exceeding their expectations. The evaluation showed a strong and continuing need for skilled immigrants in Canada.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Here is what is most impressive: we also found that those skilled workers who already had a job waiting for them on arrival in Canada were earning, on average, an annual salary of more than $79,000 after three years, well above the average Canadian salary.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']This means that our arranged employment stream under the Federal Skilled Workers Program is a huge success. But with only a few thousand employers using it, I know we need to do more and work better with Canadian employers to promote it.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Because the Federal Skilled Workers Program is so important to our immigration goals, we regularly look at how well it works and how it can function more fairly and more effectively. It is all part of our ongoing efforts to modernize our immigration system to make it even more nimble and responsive to labour market needs. [/FONT]

[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']As part of our ongoing efforts, we conducted nationwide consultations last year on proposals to improve the program further. We received a lot of helpful feedback. Based on this, we are considering a number of changes to the human capital criteria we use to evaluate potential immigrants.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']For example, since proficiency in English or French is one of the most important determinants of an immigrant’s future economic success in Canada, we are looking at the possibility of introducing minimum Official Language thresholds for applicants, and giving English or French proficiency more weight in determining successful applications.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Another change we are considering is giving more points to younger applicants, who will be active members of the Canadian workforce for much longer than older immigrants. We are looking at the possibility of changing the system to favour those who will make a contribution to the Canadian economy over a longer term.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']I said right at the outset of this speech that it is critical for our immigration system to function fairly, effectively and in a way that best responds to Canada’s interests. I am proud of the changes we have put in place over the last few years that have improved that system.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']But challenges remain.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']For the immigration system in general and especially for the skilled worker program possibly the biggest challenge is the large backlog of applications that have accumulated in the system. A huge chunk of that backlog pre-dates the recent changes I have mentioned.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']So we are left with many applicants who initially applied under older criteria which were not as responsive to Canada’s changing economic needs.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']We are grappling with the best way to eliminate that backlog. We have managed to make some progress, but until it is completely gone, we can’t get to where our economic immigration system needs to be.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']We welcome all creative ideas that will help us eliminate the backlog better and faster.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']The fact is that backlogs simply are not fair. They are unfair to the applicants themselves, who must wait for years for a decision on whether or not they can come to Canada, with all of the frustrations and life pressures that entails.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Backlogs are also unfair to Canadian society in general. They hurt our economy. We need fast and straightforward procedures to help ensure Canada remains a destination of choice for top talent.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Backlogs slow down the system and make it much less effective and much less responsive to rapidly changing labour market needs. There are people from all over the world with skills our economy needs now, and they want to come to Canada now. But we can’t welcome them now if we are busy processing people who have skills we needed five years ago, or may not have needed even back then.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']And if we agree that it is in our national interest to welcome younger skilled immigrants to Canada, then making applicants wait in line for years works against that interest.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']If our processing system is slower than the pace of change of the labour market, then we risk finding ourselves in a situation where we may be rewarding the longest-standing applicants over the best applicants.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']We recognized the backlog problem several years back, and have taken actions to eliminate it as quickly as possible, including our 2008 Action Plan for Faster Immigration. We’ve made some progress on that.[/FONT]

[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']In 2008, we had a backlog of more than 640,000 people in the Federal Skilled Worker Program. If we had not acted, that number would have swelled to more than 800,000 by today, with wait times in excess of seven years. Instead, as of June of last year, there were roughly 480,000 applicants in line. We celebrated an important milestone last year when the number of federal skilled worker applications received before February 2008 was reduced by more than 50 per cent two years ahead of schedule. [/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']But to put all that in perspective, we plan to welcome 55,000 to 57,000 Federal Skilled Workers into Canada this year. That’s a considerable amount, but it is only a small portion of the backlog. If current admission rates remain steady, the remaining backlog will not be eliminated before 2017.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']We are exploring ways to reduce the backlog further. For example, we are launching a pilot project that will allow provinces and territories to “mine the backlog” in other words, to review the applications in the backlog and nominate those applicants they think their economies need now. We are also informing some applicants stuck in the federal skilled workers backlog about possible opportunities under the Provincial Nominee Program.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']We are also considering ways to obtain consent from applicants in the backlog to be considered directly by Canadian employers for employment. With job offers in hand, applicants would see their applications processed on a priority basis.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']New Zealand and Australia countries with immigration systems similar to ours have already gone even further and introduced changes to their systems that make them nimbler, more flexible and more reflective of modern labour-market realities than what came before.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']New Zealand legislated an end to its backlog in 2003 and put in place a system where prospective applicants can be selected from a pool made up of all persons who have applied. Rather than wasting time and energy processing old applications, their resources can now be put towards actively matching the best qualified applicants to current economic needs.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']In recent months, Prime Minister Harper has spoken about doing more in the economy of the future than just passively accepting applications. He has talked about the need to actively recruit people to come to Canada to fill specific skills shortages.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']There are exciting possibilities before us when it comes to the future of economic immigration to Canada. But of course, the first step is to eliminate this unfair backlog as soon as we can. Again, we are open to all creative suggestions about the best way to do it.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']In fact, in my remaining minutes with you, I would like to speak more broadly about our public consultations and how employers can become more proactively involved in the economic immigration system.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Many of you here today are employers yourselves, and you know better than anyone how important it is for our rapidly-changing economy that our immigration system remains responsive to our labour market needs.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']You have a role to play in ensuring that it does, and we welcome your involvement.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']I am always eager to consult with those who have first-hand knowledge of the economic impacts of our immigration policies. I am always pleased to see employers who are actively engaged in integrating skilled workers into Canadian society.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']In fact, my Deputy Minister, Neil Yeates, has begun a series of face-to-face roundtable meetings with employers across the country in recent weeks. This is part of Citizenship and Immigration Canada’s efforts to ensure our economic immigration initiatives are always in sync with employers’needs in every part of the country.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']I believe it is important for the Government of Canada to be more directly engaged with employers across Canada on immigration issues.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Likewise, Citizenship and Immigration Canada is eager to help employers who want to inform themselves about and frankly, take advantage of the flexibility we have built and will continue to build into economic immigration system.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif'][FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']We have created a new section on our Department’s website cic.gc.ca titled, simply, “Employers”. In that section, you will find information about hiring temporary foreign workers, about hiring skilled workers and supporting their permanent immigration, and about all of the various economic immigration programs available across the country.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']The information has been recently updated, and we will continue to look at tools we can add to help you navigate our immigration system.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']If you want to help bring internationally trained workers into the Canadian labour market as I hope many of you do cic.gc.cais the best place to get practical information about doing so.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']In conclusion, this is a partnership. Together with those who employ skilled immigrants, the Government of Canada recognizes the importance of immigration to our economic health and values the contribution of skilled immigrants who add to our international competitiveness.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']We are [FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']all[/FONT]committed to facilitating the arrival of the best and the brightest to our country now and in the future.[/FONT]
[FONT='Verdana','sans-serif']Thank you. [/FONT]
[/FONT][FONT='Verdana','sans-serif'][/FONT]
 

萨达牧

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回复: 起诉的筒子们快去查邮箱吧,律师又来信了

你这个律师的信就别再贴了,起诉没错,但是这个律师的确让人很反感;诉求不明不说,还老骗人,很没有职业道德。。。
 
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回复: 起诉的筒子们快去查邮箱吧,律师又来信了

律师的思路和辩论很对; 但关键是这信息是否已经给了法院, 是否已经给了康妮. 法院和康妮有什么辩论呢? 律师不会给出解决方案, 只能对康妮的解决方案从律师的角度辩驳对 申请人有利的决策.

如果真的从立法上取消, 律师是否有足够的理由阻止呢! 这个很关键. 当年澳洲取消所有申请, 就是因为在此之前是有立法的.
 
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回复: 起诉的筒子们快去查邮箱吧,律师又来信了

你这个律师的信就别再贴了,起诉没错,但是这个律师的确让人很反感;诉求不明不说,还老骗人,很没有职业道德。。。
同意!这律师91和227一起代理,只为图钱,完全不把委托人的利益当回事!如果能找到2003年的那位律师,我想能凝聚更多的人来参与起诉CIC。
 
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回复: 起诉的筒子们快去查邮箱吧,律师又来信了

同意!这律师91和227一起代理,只为图钱,完全不把委托人的利益当回事!如果能找到2003年的那位律师,我想能凝聚更多的人来参与起诉CIC。
支持#7楼!
 
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回复: 起诉的筒子们快去查邮箱吧,律师又来信了

同意!这律师91和227一起代理,只为图钱,完全不把委托人的利益当回事!如果能找到2003年的那位律师,我想能凝聚更多的人来参与起诉CIC。
支持#7楼!


2003年的律师不只一个,TIM就是其中一个主要的,多伦多星报报道TIM了
 

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