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Filed: Other Timeline
Posted (edited)

My attorney said my husband who’s a US citizen that lives in the US and I can both move to Canada temporarily and it shouldn’t affect our case. (I gotta move since I’m having tough time in my country where I’m at now.) He just needs to keep his house there. Is it ok to trust him? He’s a licensed attorney and has lots of great reviews. But I need Canadian Attorney to help me get temporary visa but the Canadian Attorney shouldn’t mess anything up?

Edited by ManamiDogFan
Posted

I don't know anything about, and this just my personal opinion, or more like my mind drifting on that subject. But if someone is moving to a different country with the US citizen, and both manage to build a life there with normality, even when we talk about Canada, we are referring to  great high standards for living, what other grounds would your husband use to prove extreme hardship?

Filed: Other Timeline
Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, ASMS said:

I don't know anything about, and this just my personal opinion, or more like my mind drifting on that subject. But if someone is moving to a different country with the US citizen, and both manage to build a life there with normality, even when we talk about Canada, we are referring to  great high standards for living, what other grounds would your husband use to prove extreme hardship?

That’s exactly what I was thinking. What should we do? I’m having tough time living in my country but if I move to Canada, it shouldn’t affect but if he did then I don’t know how to prove extreme hardship. I emailed our attorney about that and asked about that. Even if my attorney says it’s safe to do that, would it be risky?

Edited by ManamiDogFan
Posted

You are filing a hardship waiver for multiple reasons and most especially that your U.S citizen spouse is having a hard time here in the united states without you here and he cannot move to live with you where you are and keep same standard of living.

 

So, if he/she now moves to another country where he/she no longer have that hardship, it means you will need to wait out the full ban before you apply for re-entry into the U.S....

 

I have seen someone who moved and got her spouses application expedited and approved quickly because of the situation of the country and place the U.S citizen spouse was living with the applicant and their U.S citizen children when she moved to be with her spouse because the children wanted to be with their father and she could also no longer take care of them alone here in the U.S. 

 

I do not think moving to a similar country like the U.S is a good plan in my opinion, it has to be like the one i just sited and you need to have strong evidence of the country situation and your living situation there.

Filed: Other Timeline
Posted
1 hour ago, Franco007 said:

You are filing a hardship waiver for multiple reasons and most especially that your U.S citizen spouse is having a hard time here in the united states without you here and he cannot move to live with you where you are and keep same standard of living.

 

So, if he/she now moves to another country where he/she no longer have that hardship, it means you will need to wait out the full ban before you apply for re-entry into the U.S....

 

I have seen someone who moved and got her spouses application expedited and approved quickly because of the situation of the country and place the U.S citizen spouse was living with the applicant and their U.S citizen children when she moved to be with her spouse because the children wanted to be with their father and she could also no longer take care of them alone here in the U.S. 

 

I do not think moving to a similar country like the U.S is a good plan in my opinion, it has to be like the one i just sited and you need to have strong evidence of the country situation and your living situation there.

Would it be ok if myself, (non-US Citizen) move to Canada temporarily? It shouldn’t affect? I’m in Japan now and I’m having tough time here that’s why

Posted
4 minutes ago, ManamiDogFan said:

Would it be ok if myself, (non-US Citizen) move to Canada temporarily? It shouldn’t affect? I’m in Japan now and I’m having tough time here that’s why

You can move to anywhere you want to, but keep in mind that you will not use country situation as a reason why your spouse cannot move to live with you if you are living in a country like Canada or Japan as the U.S do not see these countries as third world countries. 

 

No wars, no medical outbreaks, no terrorist issues and so on...... 

 

In the example i gave earlier, the USC got hers expedited due to she left the U.S with her USC children to go live in a country where it is one terrorist attack or the other, there are no adequate medical resources and other issues as well.

She had no choice because that is where her spouse lives and was able to prove all that was going on in that country through U.S Dept. of State website publications she printed and pictures of their living situation amongst other paperwork.

 

 

Filed: Other Timeline
Posted (edited)
19 minutes ago, Franco007 said:

You can move to anywhere you want to, but keep in mind that you will not use country situation as a reason why your spouse cannot move to live with you if you are living in a country like Canada or Japan as the U.S do not see these countries as third world countries. 

 

No wars, no medical outbreaks, no terrorist issues and so on...... 

 

In the example i gave earlier, the USC got hers expedited due to she left the U.S with her USC children to go live in a country where it is one terrorist attack or the other, there are no adequate medical resources and other issues as well.

She had no choice because that is where her spouse lives and was able to prove all that was going on in that country through U.S Dept. of State website publications she printed and pictures of their living situation amongst other paperwork.

 

 

Now I understand better. In your opinion, if he move to japan with me, it might also affect our case because there wouldn’t be any separation left? And if I move to Canada myself then do you think it shouldn’t affect our case? I can’t trust my lawyer because he said it wouldn’t affect our case if my husband and I both move to Canada, he said it’s ok as long as we keep his US address. I’m a Japanese citizen but it’s difficult to get a good job out here for me and that’s why I want to move to Canada. 

Edited by ManamiDogFan
Posted
3 minutes ago, ManamiDogFan said:

Now I understand better. In your opinion, if he move to japan with me, it might also affect our case because there wouldn’t be any separation left? And if I move to Canada myself then do you think it shouldn’t affect our case? I can’t trust my lawyer because he said it wouldn’t affect our case if my husband and I both move to Canada, he said it’s ok as long as we keep his US address. 

Remember the U.S do not like fraud and if you do that you are trying to defraud the system. 

 

You can move to Canada and your spouse can always visit you while he still lives and work here in the U.S Just my opinion.

Filed: Other Timeline
Posted
1 minute ago, Franco007 said:

Remember the U.S do not like fraud and if you do that you are trying to defraud the system. 

 

You can move to Canada and your spouse can always visit you while he still lives and work here in the U.S Just my opinion.

Thank you so much for your opinion..that’s what I had in mind. I should move to Canada and he visits me. Thank you for your opinion. 

 
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