Anonymous wrote:More than one shows lack of commitment to any country and undependable. They should enforce the usa citizenship requirement of denouncing all other country allegiance m
Anonymous wrote:My husband and kids have EU passports. I don’t. Kids have found it useful for study and currently for travel. We talk a lot about the family story that led their grandparents here and are planning a family trip to the home country but want to get some genealogy help lined up before we go. Given the way the US is going I’d especially like my daughter to have the option to leave if the US becomes intolerably inhospitable to women.
Anonymous wrote:If you hold multiple passports, how are you contributing to all of your countries?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have three. I think it is dumb to live just with one passport, but most of Americans never have been through hardship caused by the government, so they would not understand the need to be ready to leave at any time.
I’d love another passport. My relatives have been in this country since before 1850 though, so what options do I have? A quick google search says Poland requires emigration after 1920, Germany 1870, only applies one generation out for England and two generations for Ireland.
To say I’m dumb because I don’t have a simple link to another country seems a bit short sighted.
The position of the ppp is exactly the mentality that I’m hearing from multi-passport holders.
Slo, for Poland. You generally need an ancestor who emigrated after 1950 if you’re trying to obtain citizenship by ancestry. You can still go through the naturalization process if you want it that badly.
And if your grandparents or great grandparents were Polish Jews, forget it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have three. I think it is dumb to live just with one passport, but most of Americans never have been through hardship caused by the government, so they would not understand the need to be ready to leave at any time.
I’d love another passport. My relatives have been in this country since before 1850 though, so what options do I have? A quick google search says Poland requires emigration after 1920, Germany 1870, only applies one generation out for England and two generations for Ireland.
To say I’m dumb because I don’t have a simple link to another country seems a bit short sighted.
The position of the ppp is exactly the mentality that I’m hearing from multi-passport holders.
Slo, for Poland. You generally need an ancestor who emigrated after 1950 if you’re trying to obtain citizenship by ancestry. You can still go through the naturalization process if you want it that badly.
Anonymous wrote:My husband and kids have EU passports. I don’t. Kids have found it useful for study and currently for travel. We talk a lot about the family story that led their grandparents here and are planning a family trip to the home country but want to get some genealogy help lined up before we go. Given the way the US is going I’d especially like my daughter to have the option to leave if the US becomes intolerably inhospitable to women.
Anonymous wrote:My moms family has been here since the 1600s and my dads family is French Canadian and here since the late 1800s but I don’t qualify for Canadian citizenship. I travel plenty and have not felt the need for another passport. I feel American through and through.