ok, but you're both skirting around the issue of:
1. the unilateral and
retroactive implementation of
'whatever it is they are so confident about' and applying it to someone who entered the country five years ago (not last month!), and
2.
transitional provisions regarding who is and is not covered by a new interpretation of the law some five years later. Why is there no respect in the refusal for this issue.
Can you comment on these two issues?
What I mean is this not about having to return a bottle of ketchup to the store because someone used to call it tomato sauce five years ago. This is as real as it gets, about human drama - families moving across the world, often with no means to reverse any decisions made - each decision a consequence of what the law told them at the time, in real time, about what they were and were not allowed to do. The process of migration involves many repeated, irreversible baby steps: taking a step, living with those consequences, then taking another step, living with those consequences, and so on....so we have taken steps A to Y. As we take step Z, we are told oops, sorry, despite being legal at step A for the last five years, we have now decided to call step A 'Ketchup' and not 'Tomato Sauce'....you, who are at step Z, are void, you no longer exist.
Think about it guys....this (so-called) law called 'Ketchup', was introduced on 25 November 2016. We entered and were accepted as 'Tomato Sauce' in Jan 2012.
Get out of your warm, comfy beds !
- and really think about what this refusal means in terms of 1 an 2 above. The Law at the time was followed, in real time, all the way from A to Z.