u/ActualAd8045

▲ 8 r/AskUS

Should undocumented immigrants be judged by status or by character?

Hi,

I’m curious how people in the U.S. think about undocumented immigrants.

Should a person be judged mainly by immigration status, or by character and actions?

What do you think really pushes millions of people to leave their homes and come to the U.S.?

And do you think what happens to others eventually matters to you?

I’m asking sincerely and open to different opinions.

reddit.com
u/ActualAd8045 — 5 days ago

Hi everyone,

I hope this is okay to post here.

I’m an undocumented migrant who entered the U.S. through the Mexico border in 2022. I recently finished writing a memoir titled CROSSOVER: How Corruption, Disparity, and Inequality in the U.S. Fuel Undocumented Migration.

The book follows my journey through Latin America, the Darién Gap, refugee camps, corrupt checkpoints, Tapachula detention, and the final road toward Tijuana.

But the main focus is not only the journey itself. It is about the larger forces behind undocumented migration — how corruption, disparity, and inequality push millions of people into impossible choices, and how the same systems that condemn migrants often help create the crisis.

I’m looking for readers who may be interested in receiving a free PDF copy for honest feedback or review. If this sounds like something you’d like to read, please comment or DM me.

Thank you.

reddit.com
u/ActualAd8045 — 8 days ago

Hi everyone,

I hope this is okay to post here.

I’m an undocumented migrant who entered the U.S. through the Mexico border in 2022. I recently finished writing a memoir titled CROSSOVER: How Corruption, Disparity, and Inequality in the U.S. Fuel Undocumented Migration.

The book follows my journey through Latin America, the Darién Gap, refugee camps, corrupt checkpoints, Tapachula detention, and the final road toward Tijuana.

But the main focus is not only the journey itself. It is about the larger forces behind undocumented migration — how corruption, disparity, and inequality push millions of people into impossible choices, and how the same systems that condemn migrants often help create the crisis.

I’m looking for readers who may be interested in receiving a free PDF copy for honest feedback or review. If this sounds like something you’d like to read, please comment or DM me.

Thank you.

reddit.com
u/ActualAd8045 — 8 days ago
▲ 4 r/Memoir

Hi everyone,

I hope this is okay to post here.

I’m an undocumented migrant who entered the U.S. through the Mexico border in 2022. I recently finished writing a memoir titled CROSSOVER: How Corruption, Disparity, and Inequality in the U.S. Fuel Undocumented Migration.

The book follows my journey through Latin America, the Darién Gap, refugee camps, corrupt checkpoints, Tapachula detention, and the final road toward Tijuana.

But the main focus is not only the journey itself. It is about the larger forces behind undocumented migration — how corruption, disparity, and inequality push millions of people into impossible choices, and how the same systems that condemn migrants often help create the crisis.

I’m looking for readers who may be interested in receiving a free PDF copy for honest feedback or review. If this sounds like something you’d like to read, please comment or DM me.

Thank you.

reddit.com
u/ActualAd8045 — 8 days ago