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Author Topic: Tourist Visa DENIED Hate that Embassy!!!!!!!  (Read 52177 times)
Chris F
Guest
« on: August 02, 2004, 04:00:00 AM »

My girlfriend from Lima Peru attempted to get a Tourist Visa today. She has a good job for years and is going to school. I paid one hundred dollars for her appointment where she waited four hours for the U.S. Embassy to ask one question. "What kind of Visa do you want"  My girlfriend....."Tourist"  Embassy " NO."

That was it!!  One hundred bucks for one f@**ing qustion..and NO!!!!


The U.S. F&*@ing Embassy in Peru has got to be the most profitable business in Lima!!!

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kented
Guest
« Reply #1 on: August 05, 2004, 04:00:00 AM »

... in response to Tourist Visa DENIED  Hate that Embassy!!..., posted by Chris F on Aug 2, 2004

I'm going through the same incredible delays, indifference and intrasigency with my WIFE.  Expecting reason, rationality or fairness is an unrealistic expectating.  

Lo siento mucho!!!

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Pete E
Guest
« Reply #2 on: August 03, 2004, 04:00:00 AM »

... in response to Tourist Visa DENIED  Hate that Embassy!!..., posted by Chris F on Aug 2, 2004

Well,in a way its equal non opportunity.She would have zero chance in Bogota also.They have been told to give almost no visas,only in really extroadinary cases I think.
So dream on tourist visa seekers.Its not going to happen.No whinning if you lose your $100.I got taken by my girlfriends uncle to the tune of about $500 before I found out no way she was getting a tourist visa even if I did live in Colombia.He never even got everything together for our appointment.Plus I broke up with her anyway.I know you never see money back from a Colombian.I told her to try and get some of it back for herself,she will need it now without her sugar daddy,me.

Pete

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utopiacowboy
Guest
« Reply #3 on: August 03, 2004, 04:00:00 AM »

... in response to Tourist Visa DENIED  Hate that Embassy!!..., posted by Chris F on Aug 2, 2004

It is a complete mystery to me why you ponied up the $100 for the application. Of course it was going to be denied. They don't even look at the applications. Just as in Colombia, it is a complete lottery and they hand out a few to some lucky winners but nearly everyone else is turned down flat. Just about everyone in Latin America knows this.
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Heat
Guest
« Reply #4 on: August 02, 2004, 04:00:00 AM »

... in response to Tourist Visa DENIED  Hate that Embassy!!..., posted by Chris F on Aug 2, 2004

Remember what we told you.......
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Chris F
Guest
« Reply #5 on: August 02, 2004, 04:00:00 AM »

... in response to I hate to say this but.........We told ..., posted by Heat on Aug 2, 2004

Your right Heat.....Again...I am more pissed that  paid 100 bucks and for that she waited hours and hours for them to ask 1 question..

That is the the pisser

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Cali James
Guest
« Reply #6 on: August 02, 2004, 04:00:00 AM »

... in response to I hate to say this but.........We told ..., posted by Heat on Aug 2, 2004

[This message has been edited by Cali James]

Joe Sobran is one of my favorite political writers. He's from the old Taft wing of the Republican party which today seems more liberterian than what the republicans have now become.  In the 80's Sobran was the Senior Editor of National Review but had a falling out of sorts with Bill Buckley when the magazine began to change from more traditional conservative themes to a more neo-con view.  I remember Buckley was asked years ago, who his favorite writers were and he had mentioned Sobran in his short list.  The Conservative movement in the past was always held together under the threat of communism but now that this has gone, the divisions are clearly seen.  The neo-cons in the current administration were often times democrats in the 70's and 80's.  IMO they were never true believers if you will in the idea of limited government.  


TAKING THE BAIT
April 6, 2004

by Joe Sobran

    In 1956, the story goes, a little boy named Bobby
Fischer played for the U.S chess championship. In what
seemed to be the middle of the deciding game, he exposed
his queen to capture. His opponent, thinking this a kid's
blunder, grabbed the queen. A moment later Bobby was the
new champ.

    Fischer's queen sacrifice is remembered as one of
the most inspired moves in the history of chess. He had
laid a brilliant trap for his unsuspecting opponent, who
took the irresistible bait.

    Assuming the official story of 9/11 is more or less
correct, Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda may have been
laying a trap for President Bush, who took the bait. And
is still taking it.

    Most of us assumed, as Bush did, that the 9/11
attacks were, like Pearl Harbor, the beginning of a war,
in which more such attacks would follow quickly. We
debated all kinds of measures to prevent another 9/11:
arming airline pilots, sealing our homes with duct tape,
invading Afghanistan and Iraq. We even talked about
terrorists "conquering" the United States.

    But there has been no repetition of 9/11. Why should
there be? Our friend Osama planned a brilliant crime on
the cheap, and got a lot of bang for his buck. The U.S.
Government overreacted wildly, striking at the wrong
targets from the U.S. Constitution to Baghdad. Meanwhile,
the Muslim world is inflamed against us, while most of
the West looks at us with misgivings.

    Is Osama disappointed today? Aren't this American
freak-out and global uproar just what he must have
foreseen, expected, and therefore intended? Isn't Bush
really serving Osama's purposes even now? The crimes of
9/11 are still paying rich dividends.

    For the first time, I really wish Bill Clinton were
still president. As a good Southern politician, he would
have asked himself a savvy question immediately after
9/11: "What do these Muslim sonsabiches want me to do?"
Then he would have avoided the obvious gut reaction and
tried to do something else. As in, don't do just what
your enemy is counting on your doing.

    Using the ancient Arab technique of jiu-jitsu, Osama
has provoked the United States to use its own power
against itself. Bush has mistaken a test of intelligence
for a test of will; and he has shown a lot more of the
latter than the former. He has even been outsmarted by
his underlings, who steered him into the war with Iraq
they wanted all along.

    Does Bush really think he hurt Osama by overthrowing
his enemy Saddam Hussein? Does he suppose that Osama is
shaking his head sadly over the chaos in Iraq today? Has
it occurred to Bush that he may be following the script
Osama has written for him?

    When you find yourself in a hole, they say, stop
digging. But the American way is to keep digging (we call
it "resolve"), say the hole is a tunnel, and assure
everyone that you can already see the light at the end of
it.

    Bush predicted that the overthrow of Saddam would
bring on a contagious spread of democracy in the Arab
world. Well, democracy seems to be running a little
behind schedule. It doesn't appear likely to arrive in
Baghdad by June 30.

    Someone has challenged me, since I don't care for
Bush's approach, to offer my own "solution" for
terrorism. I wish I had one. But I think of James
Burnham's maxim: "When there's no solution, there's no
problem." Not every evil is a "problem"; some evils just
have to be coped with.

    As long as America is determined to be the global
superduperpower, it can expect global resistance, from
both determined enemies and reluctant "allies." Is it
worth the price? At what point will this country stop
blustering and decide to come to terms with its enemies?

    The Soviet Union began with a grand dream of
abolishing private property. It tried, hard, by making
all sorts of normal economic exchange ("capitalism")
illegal. But black markets thrived, and the rulers were
soon forced to come to terms with them or face mass
starvation.

    Some forms of behavior simply can't be suppressed
for long. Given the way the world is now organized, what
we call terrorism may be one of these. Or, from another
point of view, terrorism may be a "solution" to the
problem of the state.

    In Iraq, Bush has tried to decapitate the Hydra by
ousting Saddam. As usual, the Hydra has only sprouted
more heads. With an enemy like Bush, does Osama need
friends?

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Craig
Guest
« Reply #7 on: August 02, 2004, 04:00:00 AM »

... in response to Re: The war against terror did not begin..., posted by Cali James on Aug 2, 2004

What's the alternative spineless Democratic party thinking?

He's a most notable coward, an infinite and endless liar, an hourly promise breaker, the owner of not one good quality.
- William Shakespeare,

All's Well That Ends Well

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Cali James
Guest
« Reply #8 on: August 02, 2004, 04:00:00 AM »

... in response to Re: Re: The war against terror did not b..., posted by Craig on Aug 2, 2004

I went back and added the top paragraph because after reading your post, I think you're mistaking me for the democrat I'm not.  I think these debates are always seen as either black or white, with me or against me etc..    There's a different "Republican" view about the war that has a tradition much longer and older than the neo-cons (who are late to the party) who more or less run foreign policy in the Bush administration.

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Heat
Guest
« Reply #9 on: August 03, 2004, 04:00:00 AM »

... in response to Re: Re: Re: The war against terror did n..., posted by Cali James on Aug 2, 2004

I think you're mistaking me for the democrat"""

I would say if you think that crap is true then you're a just as good as a democrate.  Get your head out of the sand and be a man.

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Cali James
Guest
« Reply #10 on: August 03, 2004, 04:00:00 AM »

... in response to Re: Re: Re: Re: The war against terror d..., posted by Heat on Aug 3, 2004


Why am I not surprised by your response.  I guess any view different from yours, makes a person a democrat.  I think you'll find that many conservatives aren't too comfortable with the war in Iraq.  Even Buckley himself, said if he knew a year ago what he knows now, he wouldn't have supported the war.

I think it's pretty clear that Wolfowitz and his pals at The Project for a New American Century, want a foreign policy that's proactive.  They'd been pushing the idea of war with Iraq for quite some time and 9/11 was a perfect opportunity to push it on the American people.   Your original post admits that they've essentially lied to the American public and have not come forth with the real reasons they went to war. I think you used the word skirted, which sounds like a euphimism for lie.  Anyway, the administration would have been wise to take their REAL case before the American people and then let congress decide about going to war as it's provided for in the Constitution.  They didn't do this and now that the truth about their original intentions is becoming more clear, they really have only themselves to blame when people aren't lining up in support.


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Heat
Guest
« Reply #11 on: August 03, 2004, 04:00:00 AM »

... in response to The war against terror did not begin on ..., posted by Cali James on Aug 3, 2004

I think you used the word skirted, which sounds like a euphimism for lie. Anyway, the administration would have been wise to take their REAL case before the American people and then let congress decide about going to war as it's provided for in the Constitution.""


Don't put words in my mouth.  Show me where I used the word "skirted"  You are wrong.

As to the congress, just what did Kerry and Edwards vote for?

Is that the sound of one hand claping?

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Cali James
Guest
« Reply #12 on: August 03, 2004, 04:00:00 AM »

... in response to Re: The war against terror did not begin..., posted by Heat on Aug 3, 2004


"As to the congress, just what did Kerry and Edwards vote for?"

I'm glad you asked this question. Kerry and Edwards voted for a resulotion granting the President the authority to declare war as he determines necessary.   The resolution  stated "The President is authorized to use the Armed Forces of the United States as he determines to be necessary and appropriate in order to 1) defend the national security of the United States against the continuing threat posed by Iraq; and 2) enforce all relevant United States Security Council resolutions regarding Iraq".  Congress can not give it's exclusive power to declare war to the President anymore than it can pass a resolution giving the president the right to levy taxes as he determines appropriate.  The power to declare war and to levy taxes rests with congress only and the constitution is clear on this point.  This may seem like semantics to some but these are important distinctions that the founders were aware of.

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Heat
Guest
« Reply #13 on: August 03, 2004, 04:00:00 AM »

... in response to Re: Re: The war against terror did not b..., posted by Cali James on Aug 3, 2004

Ok, dude pay attention

That is the  Constitution.  We all know that If we studied it at any depth.

However idots like you wont vote for the guy that has the best chance of defending it.  

You vote for liberals and far left wackos like Kerry.  Or PJB and his nut cases.  Or not at all.

Thus we end screwed by the people who say it's a "Living"
Constitution.  The far left and liberals.

Like sKerry and the trial lawyer Edwards.  

And we all lose.  Because these want hight taxs, no guns and other crap that screws the little guy.

So go ahead and vote for whoever.  Stand on priciple.

Elect sKerry.

I sure he'll keep your goverment check coming.

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Cali James
Guest
« Reply #14 on: August 03, 2004, 04:00:00 AM »

... in response to Slap your self.., posted by Heat on Aug 3, 2004

[This message has been edited by Cali James]


I never said I was voting for Kerry (never voted for a democrat in my life) and as typical your reaction is overstated.
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