Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Canada still bars generational citizenship, correct? Ex: OP's grandfather was Canadian, and she's helping her mother obtain certificate of citizenship (Canada already considers Mom a citizen) but OP is not eligible for Canadian citizenship.
Is that correct? Or has anyone with a Canadian grandparent & dual parent been able to obtain citizenship?
I am the OP. I believe you are correct that just because my mom is/becomes a citizen, does not mean I automatically get it too.
It also doesn't mean that I am "not eligible" however. I can still apply. Having a Canadian parent should not be to my detriment.
Anonymous wrote:Canada still bars generational citizenship, correct? Ex: OP's grandfather was Canadian, and she's helping her mother obtain certificate of citizenship (Canada already considers Mom a citizen) but OP is not eligible for Canadian citizenship.
Is that correct? Or has anyone with a Canadian grandparent & dual parent been able to obtain citizenship?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because Justin Trudeau is better than the Orange Menace?
Only if you don't want to hang onto your own money.
Ah, classic american line to justify why you live in a second world country. If you're middle class or a "rich" wage earner (as in, someone whose income comes primarily from earned wages, and not from investments), your effective tax rate in the US is like 2-3% less than in Canada. Now add up everything you pay for healthcare out of pocket, private preschool, private schools (if your kids go - much less common in canada where almost all public schools are pretty good paths to university), college for you and/or your kids, grad school for you and/or your kids.... throw in the general stress of wondering how you're going to pay for all those things, and then tell me if you'd just rather have them all covered by your extra 2-3% taxes.
If you're warrant buffett, you're much better off in the US.
I've met people who have fled Canada to come and work and live in the U.S. because our healthcare is so much better. The Canadian healthcare system is not good.
These are wives tails. I grew up in canada. My family and all my childhood friends are in canada. No one flees canada for US healthcare. People end up coming to the US for a variety of reasons and some like to bitch about healthcare when they leave. It's not why they left canada.
Then do tell us the real reasons these folks are leaving Canada. The people I spoke to talked about long waits to see doctors among other problems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because Justin Trudeau is better than the Orange Menace?
Only if you don't want to hang onto your own money.
Ah, classic american line to justify why you live in a second world country. If you're middle class or a "rich" wage earner (as in, someone whose income comes primarily from earned wages, and not from investments), your effective tax rate in the US is like 2-3% less than in Canada. Now add up everything you pay for healthcare out of pocket, private preschool, private schools (if your kids go - much less common in canada where almost all public schools are pretty good paths to university), college for you and/or your kids, grad school for you and/or your kids.... throw in the general stress of wondering how you're going to pay for all those things, and then tell me if you'd just rather have them all covered by your extra 2-3% taxes.
If you're warrant buffett, you're much better off in the US.
I've met people who have fled Canada to come and work and live in the U.S. because our healthcare is so much better. The Canadian healthcare system is not good.
These are wives tails. I grew up in canada. My family and all my childhood friends are in canada. No one flees canada for US healthcare. People end up coming to the US for a variety of reasons and some like to bitch about healthcare when they leave. It's not why they left canada.