Ying&John Posted April 30, 2006 Report Share Posted April 30, 2006 My fiancee just received her first letter from the embassy. They asked her to send them her work resume before setting up the k-1 interview. Is this a common request or is it something to worry about?Thanks,John Link to comment
Guest pushbrk Posted April 30, 2006 Report Share Posted April 30, 2006 My fiancee just received her first letter from the embassy. They asked her to send them her work resume before setting up the k-1 interview. Is this a common request or is it something to worry about?Thanks,John211089[/snapback]I have not heard of such a request. Perhaps others have. My first thought is that they are concerned her job will disqualify her in some way. Current membership in the Chinese Communist party would be a problem. So would work in certain security sensitive areas. If the above does not apply to her, it may be that she has the same name as somebody they are concerned about. Link to comment
georgeandli Posted April 30, 2006 Report Share Posted April 30, 2006 This is the first time I have heard of this. I hope that someone else can shed some light on this. Link to comment
Randy W Posted April 30, 2006 Report Share Posted April 30, 2006 Some others have reported that the VO would simply hand them a blue slip at the interview - a request for additional information. Maybe this is the start of a trend to avoid the agony and hardship that a blue slip often represents. No - I don't think we have heard of this before. Link to comment
coulter Posted April 30, 2006 Report Share Posted April 30, 2006 My fiancee just received her first letter from the embassy. They asked her to send them her work resume before setting up the k-1 interview. Is this a common request or is it something to worry about?Thanks,John211089[/snapback]I am very troubled by this GUZ request. The mere existence of this request strongly supports the conclusion that petitions are being reviewed (and potentially targeted for denial or a blue slip) before the actual interview takes place. Link to comment
Guest pushbrk Posted April 30, 2006 Report Share Posted April 30, 2006 My fiancee just received her first letter from the embassy. They asked her to send them her work resume before setting up the k-1 interview. Is this a common request or is it something to worry about?Thanks,John211089[/snapback]I am very troubled by this GUZ request. The mere existence of this request strongly supports the conclusion that petitions are being reviewed (and potentially targeted for denial or a blue slip) before the actual interview takes place.211105[/snapback]We are talking about a "visa PROCESS". I have always believed and certainly hoped that the cases are reviewed multiple times before the interview. The interview is the final step in the process, not the end in itself. As such I am very happy each time I see evidence of case review prior to interview. Link to comment
LeeFisher3 Posted April 30, 2006 Report Share Posted April 30, 2006 My fiancee just received her first letter from the embassy. They asked her to send them her work resume before setting up the k-1 interview. Is this a common request or is it something to worry about?Thanks,John211089[/snapback]I would wager that the name check showed up someone with the same name, not uncommon in China, and they are attempting to verify she is not the person that showed up in that process. Link to comment
hunter Posted April 30, 2006 Report Share Posted April 30, 2006 My fiancee just received her first letter from the embassy. They asked her to send them her work resume before setting up the k-1 interview. Is this a common request or is it something to worry about?Thanks,John211089[/snapback]I am very troubled by this GUZ request. The mere existence of this request strongly supports the conclusion that petitions are being reviewed (and potentially targeted for denial or a blue slip) before the actual interview takes place.211105[/snapback]We are talking about a "visa PROCESS". I have always believed and certainly hoped that the cases are reviewed multiple times before the interview. The interview is the final step in the process, not the end in itself. As such I am very happy each time I see evidence of case review prior to interview.211107[/snapback]A rhetorical figure in which incongruous or contradictory terms are combined Link to comment
hunter Posted April 30, 2006 Report Share Posted April 30, 2006 (edited) The interview is the final step in the process, not the end in itself the above mentioned is the difinition of oxymoron. how can something be the final step before the final step. Ok, i'm trying to be humourous. I hope its working hehe. Edited April 30, 2006 by hunter (see edit history) Link to comment
Guest pushbrk Posted April 30, 2006 Report Share Posted April 30, 2006 The interview is the final step in the process, not the end in itself the above mentioned is the difinition of oxymoron. how can something be the final step before the final step. Ok, i'm trying to be humourous. I hope its working hehe.211125[/snapback]Yeah, it's working. How about, "The interview is the last bite, not the whole enchilada." As far as I'm concerned, I want a whole lot of people looking at my case and making notes throughout the process, so that the interview itself becomes the anti-climax of a foregone conclusion. Link to comment
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