Surely Nelson could help him out financially? And he can appeal the case if he really has a passport, with johnny helping him out.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Johnny Nelson's 63 y/o Brother On Verge Of Deportation After 53 Years In UK!
Collapse
-
-
Originally posted by soul_survivor View PostSurely Nelson could help him out financially? And he can appeal the case if he really has a passport, with johnny helping him out.
Comment
-
Originally posted by soul_survivor View PostSurely Nelson could help him out financially? And he can appeal the case if he really has a passport, with johnny helping him out.
Comment
-
Originally posted by FlatLine View PostIt might not necessarily be about the cash but more about the verdict of the appeal. If Nelson can bring a lot of exposure to the case through his "celebrity status" he might be able to affect the outcome of the appeal in his brother's favour, partly because the British government would want to avoid negative exposure in a "high profile" immigration case.
Comment
-
Originally posted by FlatLine View PostIt might not necessarily be about the cash but more about the verdict of the appeal. If Nelson can bring a lot of exposure to the case through his "celebrity status" he might be able to affect the outcome of the appeal in his brother's favour, partly because the British government would want to avoid negative exposure in a "high profile" immigration case.
My friend’s husband was allowed entry into the USA. She’s is Turkish but her husband is American and they have children. She had to leave the country upon arrival only to return two days later again. This was during the immigration ban which Turks weren’t on the list. So when you see mother in Texas who’s raised a family but then isn’t deported shows a fault in immigrant stati
Comment
-
Originally posted by Sir_Didymus View PostHis brother is technically not a citizen. He should have been made an official citizen IF they applied but they were sitting on it for 20 years. Why were the Nelson's not getting their shìt together? They had 20 year to pay just costs of £321 to apply for a Certificate of Entitlement and £75 to apply for a British passport. I would know. I've done this for someone before which is why I couldn't care less about Nelson the cùnt who is trying to get special privileges ahead of the normal person with zero profile.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Floyd's Mask View PostThe whole point of visa services in any country is association. With those having no association or “relative” is the open point for rejection. This is for any country. Obviously Nelson is making the point about recognition and status, affecting family members.
My friend’s husband was allowed entry into the USA. She’s is Turkish but her husband is American and they have children. She had to leave the country upon arrival only to return two days later again. This was during the immigration ban which Turks weren’t on the list. So when you see mother in Texas who’s raised a family but then isn’t deported shows a fault in immigrant stati
Comment
-
Originally posted by FlatLine View PostIt might not necessarily be about the cash but more about the verdict of the appeal. If Nelson can bring a lot of exposure to the case through his "celebrity status" he might be able to affect the outcome of the appeal in his brother's favour, partly because the British government would want to avoid negative exposure in a "high profile" immigration case.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Sir_Didymus View PostExactly. He doesn't want to even pay for his own brothers legal fees. He doesn't even need to! There's free specialist solicitors that work in immigration. He's been retweeting it to politicians to get special privileges whilst the normal person stuck in the same position is pushed to the back of the queue. He's being a snake as usual.
Comment
-
Originally posted by FlatLine View PostSo why not allow them the option to do that now, the guy has been there for 53 years, what's a few more weeks going to matter. Imagine if you had a family member who was about to be deported after 53 years in a country and you just found out about it. It's possible Johnny just heard the news himself and wasn't aware of what was happening in his brother's life but his brother may have reached out to him for help so his immediate response was to make it public due to the imminent deadline.
Nelson and his brother deserve the same rights given to everyone in the UK. Not more. Not less. Privileges are borderline illegal. Jumping the queue because of profile is a national debate waiting to happen.
Comment
Comment