Your arguments are very misleading. At one time, you say that the law does NOT even require you to work for the employer but you have to have the intention and later you say that use the 90 day rule to be safe. What is it?dsatish said:True even for those who haven't used AC21. Even the old law DOES NOT REQUIRE that you need to work for them after GC. It only requires that you need to have an intention of working for them. See the difference ?
Ofcourse, just to be safe, i won't suggest any one to change jobs without working for a single day. I have never advocated that. One should give atleast a month time in the worst case. It all depends on INS interprets this "intent" stuff . I guess that we better take th guidance of 30-60-90 ruling because that case is also about how to measure a person's intent ?
If the LAW DOES NOT REQUIRE ONE TO WORK FOR THE EMPLOYER BUT ONLY THE INTENTION (you might have the intention on the day it was adjudicated and not the next day?), why use 90 day rule at all?
If you don't know how USCIS is going to *interpret* it, then don't you think it's risky to quit after 3 months or even after 6 months? Why advocate the 90 day rule? You feel that 90 days is safe, JoeF thinks 6 months so does few lawyers and I have no idea what to think as unless someone is hit hard with this limit (if the GC is revoked by not staying longer), how can anyone advocate such a limit?
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