On Aug 6, 5:50 am, Pheng Kim Ving <[email protected]> wrote: > Dear kangaroo, > > In the 1st post of this discussion, In Camdisc, signed Savun, > complains that Obama and the Democrats protect the criminals (I think > he means the South Americans) who crossed the border illegally but not > the Cambodian criminals who came to the US legally as a child as young > as 2 years old and later on committed crimes. He considers crossing > the border illegally as also a crime. See, the Americans have mercy or > compassion for those South American criminals, but not for those > Cambodian criminals. >
Both of these people are criminials in nature. Both of them committed offenses against the laws of this nation. There is no compassionate about it. As far as I know today, Obama government has deported more people of all races than their previous administration. Please don't try to be compassionate about those who committed crimes. The laws don't have eyes or discriminate against anyone. People would be punished, I emphasize on WOULD be punished, if they committed crimes against the society. If they happen to be an alien, legal or illegal, they would be deported. > Bill Clinton visited Vietnam once as the president of the US. George W > Bush visited Vietnam once as the president of the US. Hillary Clinton > just last month visited Vietnam as the secretary of state (foreign > minister) of the US. However no US persident or federal secretary has > ever visited Cambodia. I feel puzzled and sad about this affair. > What does Cambodia have to offer to Cambodia? My friend Vietnam has established their foundation as a nation with a certain type of policy. Cambodia today is still searching for their own identity. They really don't know what they want to be. Actually, they want to be in power for their own individual so they can practice the culture of impunity over no one but their own people in their own country. Then they blame everything on someone else. > The law is the law. But it has exceptions and even loopholes. A judge > who has compassion for a criminal for whatever reason, or just a > willingness to give the criminal a second chance, can find and utilize > those exceptions and/or loopholes at his/her discretion to not deport > the criminal (just put in jail is enough). > There is no exception in the law book. It means what it says. Loopholes are not exceptions. Judges have some rooms to play. Yet they have to follow some guideline in their profession. > The Americans have no compassion for the Cambodian criminals and no > willingness to give them a second chance. > That's no true. They treat Cambodian criminals as well as any other criminals. > As for Cambodian criminals blaming their crimes on the Khmer Rouge, a > couple years ago I read a story happening in the US (either on the > internet or in a magazine, I forget) in which the parents of Cambodian > teenagers who dropped school and committed crimes blamed their > children's crimes on their victimization by the Khmer Rouge. Their > blame couldn't be substantiated, as those teenagers were born after > the Khmer Rouge regime collapsed, some were even born in the US. What > made me even more embarassed was that the director of the community > agency that assisted those Cambodian families was a Korean man who > declared that it was ridiculous to blame the failures and > criminalities of those teenagers on the Khmer Rouge regime, an entity > long gone. And he seemed to ridicule those parents. > Responsibility is the name of the game. If they choose to commit crimes, they must repay to the society when they get caught. it doesn't matter whether they are black, blue, green or whatever. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org" group. This is an unmoderated forum. Please refrain from using foul language. Thank you for your understanding. Peace among us and in Cambodia. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/camdisc Learn more - http://www.cambodia.org

