Flagg's nightmare :)
#1
Posted 07 April 2011 - 05:25 PM
The presiding judge was great (a Bush appointee no less) seemed genuinely happy to be there, and conveyed the importance of it. She told us her life story (it's true I checked!). Her grandfather came to the USA from Czechoslovakia in 30s, stayed for a few years and then returned to his family. He and his wife had nine kids, they all died in concentration camps except for the youngest child who escaped, and was/is the judge's 94 year old mom - this is the judge:
http://en.wikipedia...._Renee_Mauskopf
3 /12 hours after arriving *promptly* as requested I was set free as an American. Went directly to USPS to apply for passport - an hour later I'd decided I might register for the Tea Party instead.
#9
Posted 07 April 2011 - 06:48 PM
Congrats!
My ex-mother in law came here, from Britain, in the 50s. I once ask her why she never applied for citizenship, and she was offended by the question... got all huffy and explained the benefits of being British.
Weird, you don't have to give up being British (in spirit or passport) to be a US citizen - neither have laws against dual citizenship. I'll always be from there, but this will most likely be my home for the rest of my life. That isn't a conflict.
#10
Posted 07 April 2011 - 06:54 PM
Can you really register as a communist? I know you were joking, but isn't that a question on the citizenship form?
There's a question about whether you ever joined the communist party on the citizenship application, not sure what happens if you say yes. At the ceremony you have to answer 8 questions about what you've done since interview - traveled, divorced/married, committed a crime, taken drugs, become a habitual drunkard or my favourite - practiced polygamy, etc etc as well as the communist party question.
They gave us a (separate) voter registration at the ceremony - we could register as Dem, GOP, Green, Independence and I think one other, or none from what I recall. Was definitely one of the positives that they pushed voting as a responsibility as well as a right. You couldn't register as communist.
#14
Posted 07 April 2011 - 08:02 PM
Congrats!
My ex-mother in law came here, from Britain, in the 50s. I once ask her why she never applied for citizenship, and she was offended by the question... got all huffy and explained the benefits of being British.
Weird, you don't have to give up being British (in spirit or passport) to be a US citizen - neither have laws against dual citizenship. I'll always be from there, but this will most likely be my home for the rest of my life. That isn't a conflict.
I can't remember the reasons???
Curiously, IIRC, natural born American citizens can't hold dual citizenship??? I don't know where I got that from, but it seems that I read somewhere long ago.
1 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users