[chorus singings:] roundup i m the protector of my patio. killing weeds where they grow. a barrier forms so weeds can t appear - serious weed prevention up to a year. [chorus singings:] roundup max control 365 so i m fighting weeds on opening day and preventing weeds while i get away. weeds stay dead as we carve this beast, and they still aren t back when i cook this feast. [chorus singings:] roundup max control 365 one more time let me make it clear. with no more weeds it s your year. adam is facing deportation. he was born in korea but the only country he knows is the united states. adopted when he was just 3 years old, adam s abusic adoptive parents never filed for his
every night and i can t imagine being separated from them. i spend every day with them. i watch them grow, i watch them learn every day and i can t imagine being away from them for a day. adam you have survived so much and the idea of that our immigration policy makes you vulnerable to this is stunningly inhumane. i home your story getting out there means we can get real policy change. thank you for joining us today. here in new york thank you to the panel. up next, the author of the new book on first lady michelle obama. the new s6 hits the stores and i m like. whoa. open the box and. (sniffing) new phone smell. jump on a video chat with my friend. he s a real fan boy, so i can t wait to show this off.
citizenship. now at age 40 immigration seeks to send him back to korea, a country he doesn t know. the case exposed a major loophole in immigration law. two senators are pushing to amend the child citizenship act of 2000 to grant automatic u.s. citizenship to international adoptees regardless of age. it includes citizenship for those like adam. adam is part of the 16% of korean-born adoptees without a country. they were never naturalized as u.s. citizens and no longer korean citizens. joining me from oregon is adam. we want to note we re having audio difficulty and that s why adam has put on the orange head phones for us. so can you hear me? i can, good morning. good morning. can you talk to me. what was your reaction when i.c.e. knocked on your door and said they were opening these deportation proceedings? i was mortified. i didn t even know what to think.
about those experiences? yes, i speak every day to a gentleman in south korea who was deported back in 2009. first and foremost, he served in the u.s. military. he s about five years older than me but he went through almost exact ly exactly the same stuff i did. i couldn t believe it when i heard his story. adam, pause for a minute. he served his country in the u.s. military and was deported for these same reasons? yes, yes, he served in the u.s. military. after the military he was driving truck and his truck driving partner set him up and put some contraband in the truck and e he got stopped in a check point. that s what he was deported for. he deals with the physical
the xc60 crossover. from volvo. lease the well equiped volvo xc60 today. visit your local volvo showroom for details. imagine that everything about your life is about to change. you re going to get on a plane, fly to a country where you do not speak the language where you have no family, don t know anyone, have no job prospects at all. now imagine you can never come back. that is the fate that may meet adam any day now. in 1979 at the age of 3, he and his sister arrived in the united states as korean adopt dees. they were placed in a home where they were beaten viciously. adam and his sister were abandoned six years later when the adoptive parents relinquished them to the state. he was separated from his sister