Posted on 05/26/2006 8:00:06 PM PDT by SandRat
MARINE CORPS AIR GROUND COMBAT CENTER TWENTYNINE PALMS, Calif. (May 26, 2006) -- Mexican newspapers inadvertently planted a seed in a small boy, born in 1960 in the town of Cananea, Mexico, not far from the Arizona border.
In the newspapers in Mexico, they are more graphic than they are here, said Guadalupe Denogean, a retired master gunnery sergeant. I couldnt read, but I could see the pictures.
So he would ask his brother to read the stories to him, and they were always about the Marines, he said.
As that seed sprouted, Denogean, who moved to the U.S. but was not a legal citizen, chose to join the Marine Corps, fight for and defend the freedom of the United States.
It was something that was planted way back, and as soon as I turned 17, I signed up, he said.
During his time as a Marine, he also planted a seed for a simpler immigration process to be used in the military.
As Denogean lay in the National Naval Medical Center at Bethesda, Md., in 2003 from injuries suffered in Iraq, President George Bush, along with several high-ranking officers in the military, came to meet injured service members. The president asked each of them what they would like to see done in the military, said Denogean.
When it was Denogeans turn, he said he wanted one of his Marines meritoriously promoted for pulling him out of a burning vehicle in Iraq, and he also asked to become a citizen.
The next day, his Marine received a promotion, and three days later, with 25 years of military service, Denogean became a U.S. citizen.
It used to take two to three years to become a citizen, he said. The problem was every time you went to a new station, you submit an application, and you also had to pay the fees. If they called you up and you moved, you lost your money.
He brought the militarys attention to the current immigration process, and shortly after they began working on ways to improve it.
I dont want to say I was the reason, but they didnt realize what we were going through and why we were not citizens, he explained. I was in Desert Storm and I was in Operation Iraqi Freedom, and I guess he [Bush] was impressed. We were in two wars, and we were not citizens. Why are we doing it? For the love of freedom.
Thanks to the effort of Denogean and service members like him, today, it only takes a service member four to six months to complete their request for U.S. citizenship.
Denogean and his family immigrated to the United States in 1966. Growing up in Nogales, Ariz., he learned English through school but was unable to speak fluently before enlisting in the Marines when he turned 17. Without a full grasp of the English language, he faced many difficulties communicating in Boot Camp.
Even the most basic neccessities were hard to accomplish because of the language barrier, he said.
Regardless of not being a U.S. citizen, Denogean fought for Americans and their ideals he knew someone had to pay the price for freedom.
I enjoyed the freedoms that were offered to me and my family, said Denogean. For everything you do, there has to be a sacrifice. You have to pay the dues somebody does.
He also has a sister, Yolanda Colter, whos been in the Air Force for more than 28 years. Between the two of us, we have paid the dues for our family, he said.
Freedom is not free, is a phrase heard often on radio and television and written across car bumper stickers, but this phrase means more to those who werent handed freedom, but had to earn it.
If I give you a car, youre going to drive it and trash it. If you buy the car and you pay for it, youll take care of it. Its no different with the United States. If its just given to you, youll take it for granted, but if you pay for it, youll understand what its all about and youll cherish the freedoms that we have, he said.
While Denogean may not have directly influenced the creation of the easier immigration process the military uses today, his request to President Bush for citizenship certainly sparked an interest in improving it.
PATRIOT PING
This is actually something to consider. Illegals who serve in the military (with honor) should be granted citizenship.
25 years in the USMC is disgraced by not becoming a US Citizen at an earlier time. I am the son of 1st & 2nd generation legal immigrants and this feel good now, USMC bs is misdirected at best. Blow on big windy...
Absolutely! This is what it would mean for We The People to be granted the right to choose guidelines for our immigrants.
This is an example of a highly desireable group of immigrants.
We would also agree that it is unfair to lump them into the same category as border jumper, welfare cheats and reconquistadoras whose intentions are not honorable.
"25 years in the USMC is disgraced by not becoming a US Citizen at an earlier time"
not sure why you see this as being disgraced, there are a LOT of non-citizens in uniform today. Maybe I do not understand what you are saying about this guy? Are you saying he has disgraced himself?
So, you believe that after 25 yrs of US MIL service, it is honorable to finally request US Citizenship?
Yes. It should have happened 21 years ago for this Marine.
Hey WD123, even the FFLegion demands a declaration of citizenship by the "flagless." That this US Marine could not declare US Citizenship- during or soon after his first enlistment, much less for 25 yrs- is an indisputable travesty of Honor.
As that seed sprouted, Denogean, who moved to the U.S. but was not a legal citizen
There playing with semitics to manipulate the reader here... legal aliens are not legal citizen and are not illegal aliens
Legal aliens in the country have away been allowed to join but are not legal citizens
Tunnel vision? I am deeply familiar with the Naturalization process, and this article does not describe the reality for foreign born US Military Service Members.
lol...when you get off your emotional snit- you will see that I have never referred to this US Marine as an illegal alien. Perhaps then... you will have a cogent point about something remotely related to something, somewhere, sometime about something.
Good to hear from ya, TT. All the best to you and yours, my FRiend.
Unfortunately because your writing is unclear, no one can figure out whether you're insulting the Marine in the story, immigrants in general, illegal immigrants, the immigration and naturalization process, the US, or what. If you're going to make a comment, it would be useful to formulate your sentences clearly. As things are, you've simply stirred up ill feeling on the thread.
Thanks!
This can't be true. President Bush never visits with the wounded. <*sarcasm off>
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